Libya and the Problem with The Hague  The war in Libya has been under way for months, without any indication  of when it might end. Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi’s faction has been  stronger and more cohesive than imagined and his enemies weaker and more  divided. This is not unusual. There is frequently a perception that  dictators are widely hated and that their power will collapse when  challenged. That is certainly true at times, but often the power of a  dictator is rooted in the broad support of an ideological faction, an  ethnic group or simply those who benefit from the regime. As a result,  naive assumptions of rapid regime change are quite often replaced by the  reality of protracted conflict.   This has been a characteristic of what we have called “humanitarian  wars,” those undertaken to remove a repressive regime and replace it  with one that is more representative. Defeating a tyrant is not always  easy. Gadhafi did not manage to rule Libya for 42 years without some  substantial support  More info  | |
The musings of a politically incorrect dinosaur from a forgotten age where civility was the rule rather than the exception.
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