usatoday | 'We came, we saw, he died,' she joked. But
overthrowing Gadhafi was a humanitarian and strategic debacle that now
limits our options on North Korea.
Black Africans are being sold in
open-air slave markets, and it’s Hillary Clinton’s fault. But you won’t
hear much about that from the news media or the foreign-policy pundits,
so let me explain.
Footage from Libya, released recently by CNN, showed young men from sub-Saharan Africa being auctioned off as farm workers in slave markets.
And how did we get to this point? As the BBC reported back in May, “Libya has been beset by chaos since NATO-backed forces overthrew long-serving ruler Col. Moammar Gadhafi in October 2011.”
And who was behind that overthrow? None other than then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Under President George W. Bush in 2003, the United States negotiated an agreement with Libyan strongman Gadhafi. The deal: He would give up his weapons of mass destruction peacefully, and we wouldn’t try to depose him.
That
seemed a good deal at the time, but the Obama administration didn’t
stick to it. Instead, in an operation spearheaded by Clinton, the United States went ahead and toppled him anyway.
The
overthrow turned out to be a debacle. Libya exploded into chaos and
civil war, and refugees flooded Europe, destabilizing governments there.
But at the time, Clinton thought it was a great triumph — "We came, we saw, he died,” she joked about Gadhafi’s overthrow — and adviser Sidney Blumenthal encouraged her to tout her "successful strategy" as evidence of her fitness for the highest office in the land.
It’s
surprising the extent to which Clinton has gotten a pass for this
debacle, which represents a humanitarian and strategic failure of the
first order. (And, of course, the damage is still compounding: How
likely is North Korea’s Kim Jong Un to give up his nuclear weapons after
seeing the worthlessness of U.S. promises to Gadhafi?)
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