Perhaps this is why David Cameron got out this week? Yes, all but one them voted for it at the time. But we all know who else did not. And Patrick Wintour writes:
David Cameron’s intervention in
Libya was carried out with no proper intelligence analysis, drifted into an
unannounced goal of regime change and shirked its moral responsibility to help
reconstruct the country following the fall of Muammar Gaddafi, according to a scathing
report by the foreign affairs select committee.
The
failures led to the country becoming a failed a state on the verge of all-out
civil war, the report adds.
The
report, the product of a parliamentary equivalent of the Chilcot inquiry into
the Iraq war, closely echoes the criticisms widely made of Tony Blair’s
intervention in Iraq, and may yet come to be as damaging to Cameron’s foreign
policy legacy.
It concurs with Barack Obama’s
assessment that the intervention was “a shitshow”, and repeats the US
president’s claim that France and Britain lost interest in Libya after Gaddafi was overthrown.
The
findings are also likely to be seized on by Donald Trump, who has tried to
undermine Hillary Clinton’s foreign policy credentials by repeatedly condemning
her handling of the Libyan intervention in 2011, when she was US secretary of
state.
Libya is
currently mired in political and economic chaos with competing factions
fighting for control of the key oil terminals and no nationwide support for the
UN-recognised government based in Tripoli.
Tens of thousands of refugees are
entering Libya with impunity from the rest of Africa and sailing to Europe on perilous
journeys.
Cameron, who stood
down as an MP on Monday, has refused to give evidence to the select
committee.
In one of his few reflections on his major military intervention, he
blamed the Libyan people for failing to take their chance of democracy.
The
committee, which has a majority of Conservative members, did not have
Chilcot-style access to internal papers, but took voluminous evidence from
senior ministers at the time, and other key players such as Tony Blair, the
chief of the defence staff Lord Richards and leading diplomats.
The result
of the French, British and US intervention, the report finds, “was political
and economic collapse, inter-militia and inter-tribal warfare, humanitarian and
migrant crises, widespread human rights violations, the spread of Gaddafi
regime weapons across the region and the growth of Isil [Islamic State] in
north Africa”.
It adds:
“Through his decision-making in the national security council, former prime
minister David Cameron was ultimately responsible for the
failure to develop a coherent Libya strategy.”
In his evidence, Richards made
clear he opposed the politicians’ decision to switch the strategic goal of the
intervention from the protection of the people of Benghazi, threatened by
Gaddafi, to regime change.
The report finds: “If the primary object of the
coalition intervention was the urgent need to protect civilians in Benghazi,
then this objective was achieved in March 2011 in less than 24 hours.
“This
meant that a limited intervention to protect civilians drifted into an
opportunist policy of regime change by military means.”
The report
says in future military and intelligence officials should be given a formal
right to register dissent at meetings of the national security council, and so
require formal instruction to act by their political leaders.
The then
defence secretary, Liam Fox, told the committee that the strategic goals never
changed, that it was legitimate to target Libyan command and control
headquarters, and that it was bad luck if Gaddafi was inside one of them.
Currently
international trade secretary, Fox’s claim is in effect rejected.
The report
cites Obama’s disappointment that the UK and France did not exercise leadership
on stabilisation and reconstruction.
In an
interview with the Atlantic published in March this year, Obama
said: “I had more faith in the Europeans, given Libya’s proximity, being
invested in the follow-up.”
He added
that Cameron stopped paying attention and became “distracted by a range of
other things”.
The report says it is difficult to disagree with Obama’s
assessment, given in the interview, that the war was “a shitshow”.
Sir Alan
Duncan, a serving Foreign Office minister, is quoted as describing the plans
for postwar planning as fanciful rot and an unrealistic desktop exercise.
He
adds that the postwar planners did not know what was happening on the ground.
The
committee concurs, saying: “The possibility that militant extremist groups
would attempt to benefit from the rebellion should not have been the preserve
of hindsight.
“Libyan connections with transnational militant extremist groups
were known before 2011, because many Libyans had participated in the Iraq
insurgency and in Afghanistan with al-Qaida.”
The report
says: “We have seen no evidence that the UK government carried out a proper
analysis of the nature of the rebellion in Libya.
“It may be that the UK
government was unable to analyse the nature of the rebellion in Libya due to
incomplete intelligence and insufficient institutional insight, and that it was
caught up in events as they developed.
“It could not verify the actual
threat to civilians posed by the Gaddafi regime; it selectively took elements
of Muammar Gaddafi’s rhetoric at face value; and it failed to identify the
militant Islamist extremist element in the rebellion. UK strategy was founded
on erroneous assumptions and an incomplete understanding of the evidence.”
It finds
the UK’s plans for reconstruction were founded on the same incomplete and
inaccurate intelligence that informed the initial military intervention.
It
says political engagement might instead “have delivered civilian protection,
regime change and reform at lesser cost to the UK and to Libya.
“If political
engagement had been unsuccessful, the UK and its coalition allies would not
have lost anything”.
In response to the report, a
Foreign Office spokesman said: “The decision to intervene was an international
one, called for by the Arab League and authorised by the United Nations
security council.
“Gaddafi
was unpredictable, and he had the means and motivation to carry out his
threats. His actions could not be ignored, and required decisive and collective
international action.
“Throughout the campaign we stayed within the United
Nations mandate to protect civilians.
“After
four decades of Gaddafi misrule, Libya undoubtedly faces huge challenges.
“The
UK will continue to play a leading role within the international community to
support the internationally recognised Libyan government of national accord.
“We have
allocated £10 million this year to help the new government to restore
stability, rebuild the economy, defeat [Isis] and tackle the criminal gangs
that threaten the security of Libyans and exploit illegal migrants.
HMS
Enterprise and HMS Diamond are both currently deployed to support the EU naval
operation to tackle illegal migration, people smuggling and arms trafficking.”
The report
cites academics who said the UK “spent just under half as much (48.72%) on
rebuild than on intervention”.
The committee say it regrets the
failure of the UK government to exploit Tony Blair’s contacts and influence
with the Gaddafi regime.
Blair, one
of the few British politicians who knew Gaddafi, spoke to the Libyan leader by
phone at the start of the west’s bombing campaign, urging the Libyan leader to
pull back from Benghazi.
The calls were at Blair’s initiative, but Cameron and
Clinton were aware of them.
The report
urges the Foreign Office to lead an international review into whether the
United Nations is the appropriate body to coordinate stabilisation and
reconstruction in a post-conflict environment and whether it has the
appropriate resources, and if not to identify alternatives that could be more
effective.
It says
such a review is a practical and urgent requirement, because the UN might be
asked to coordinate a similar mission in Syria, Yemen or Iraq in the near
future.
It also
says UK special forces should only operate to prop up the existing UN-backed
Libyan government, and to train a Libyan national army.
The story that exemplifies the vulgarity and racism of the propaganda campaign against Ghadaffi-and in favour of war- was the nonsense, emanating from the Clinton State Department coven, that Libya wasa being invaded by Ghadaffi supporters from sub Saharan Africa, pumped up on Viagra (supplied by our Owen Smith?) and raping everyone that they encountered.
ReplyDeleteI recollect at the time arguing in The Guardian (an enthusiastic supporter of the war) that this was utter nonsense of the worst kind and challenging those promoting the atrocity story to produce evidence.
These things should not be forgotten. Nor should the appalling pogroms Cameron backed forces carried out against black Africans.