Following the death of Muammar Gaddafi then-US State Secretary Hillary Clinton jokingly said: "We came, we saw, he died." However, now amid the massive migrant crisis in Europe, Washington would unlikely react the same way if Syrian President Bashar Assad repeats the Libyan leader's fate, author Brian Cloughley believes.
The author cites a statement from Amnesty
International which said, "The international community has stood and
watched as Libya has descended into chaos since the 2011 NATO military
campaign ended, effectively allowing militias and armed groups to run
amok. World leaders have a responsibility and must be prepared to face
the consequences, which include greater levels of refugees and migrants
fleeing conflict and rampant abuse in Libya."
Meanwhile, let’s remember an emotional statement by then-US Secretary
of State and current Democratic Party presidential hopeful Hillary
Clinton with regard to the violent death of Libyan leader Muammar
Gaddafi, who was killed after the West had launched a military
intervention to oust him. He was captured by Western-backed National
Transitional Council forces and died from multiple bullet wounds.
When told of reports of Gaddafi's death by an
aide, Hillary Clinton jokingly said: "We came, we saw, he died," she
later stated in a CBS interview. Interestingly, she arrived in the
Libyan capital of Tripoli the next week to hold a meeting with Libya's
National Transitional Council.
The International Organization for Migration has recorded 2,373 cases of migrants who died while attempting to reach Europe by sea this year. Thousands more have been picked up from dingy boats and brought to temporary asylum centers in southern Europe.
Meanwhile, thousands of Syrian refugees are flooding Europe with a few million in neighboring countries while their country is has been mired in a civil war since 2011, as government forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad fight several opposition and radical Islamist militant groups, including the Nusra Front and ISIL.
At the same time, US Department of Defense spokesperson Peter Cook said that the location of Syrian rebels who had participated in the US train-and-equip program to fight Islamic State militants was unclear, adding that Washington "would have concerns" if any of the rebels had joined such groups as al-Nusra Front, al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria.
"The belief that there could be any grouping of insurgents that could be described as "moderate rebels" is bizarre and it would be fascinating to know how Washington’s planners classify such people. It obviously didn’t dawn on them that any person who uses weapons illegally in a rebellion could not be defined as being moderate," Cloughley wrote for the Strategic Culture Foundation. If Assad repeats the unfortunate fate of Muammar Gaddafi, Hillary Clinton's successor US Secretary of State John Kerry would unlikely react as she did, Cloughley believes.
"But he will be able to take heart from the
fact that the ensuing cataclysmic shambles will have been facilitated by
‘moderate’ rebels. All five of them," the author concluded.
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