Wednesday, October 05, 2011

Oddity Dawn

Government forces are endangering Libyan civilians by assaulting a city where forces resisting the government are holed up:

The fighters of Libya’s National Transitional Council, the rebel movement turned temporary government, have launched what they say is a “final assault” on Sirte — hometown of ousted dictator Colonel Gaddafi and one of the last redoubts of his supporters.

Thousands of civilians have fled the town, but thousands more are trapped inside, unable or unwilling to leave. The Red Cross reports that conditions inside Sirte are deteriorating, with people dying in the main hospital due to shortages of medical supplies, fuel, and water; food is also said to be in short supply.

There are no reliable casualty figures, although pro-Gaddafi forces — not surprisingly — are reporting hundreds of civilian deaths caused by both NTC fighters and NATO airstrikes. While those claims can’t be verified, with both rebel forces bombarding the town for the past couple weeks it’s inconceivable that civilians are not being killed and injured.

Given that we intervened for humanitarian reasons under a United Nations resolution calling on us to protect civilians, shouldn't NATO be bombing alliance (former rebel) forces now? I mean, Secretary of State Clinton famously said that our intervention was intended to "level the playing field," right?

When we intervene for the goals of the sainted international community, you can expect such situations to increase.