男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影

Op-Ed Contributors

Libya's expanding complications

By Zhao Kejin (China Daily)
Updated: 2011-04-20 07:55
Large Medium Small

With no end in sight the situation is turning into a humanitarian disaster with far-reaching consequences

After weeks of seesawing firefights, the Libyan conflict seems to have fallen into a stalemate. The Western allies have assumed that they could intervene and oust Libyan ruler Muammar Gadhafi through air strikes.

But even with the aid of the allied bombardment the rebel forces have been unable to gain an apparent advantage over the government troops.

Related readings:
Libya's expanding complications No end in sight, one month into NATO's Libya airstrikes
Libya's expanding complications Libya govt says to fight any foreign troops
Libya's expanding complications Western countries press on in Libya
Libya's expanding complications West says Libya campaign on until Gadhafi goes

Indeed, with increasing civilian casualties and a growing humanitarian disaster, the West's military operations have merely convinced some of the rebels that the opposition is betraying national interests and resorting to Western powers to further its own interests.

The political impotence of the opposition is gradually being exposed. Besides accusing the Gadhafi regime of corruption and dictatorship, the opposition has found no other convincing arguments with which to attack its legitimacy.

The opposition is composed of a lot of factions scrambling for power, which has undermined the rebels' unity, and there is concern among the Western allies that in a post-Gadhafi era the opposition would be incapable of restoring order.

For the allies, a long-drawn-out military intervention will inevitably result in a growing number of civilian casualties and serious humanitarian issues, such as the destruction of civilian facilities, swelling numbers of refugees and a shortage of food and medical care. This would enable the Gadhafi regime to make a big fanfare over the misery of the Libyan people and to claim that the people's suffering was caused by the West and the only way out is to return to the previous state of affairs.

Long-term military intervention by the allies would also consolidate anti-war sentiments in their own countries and because of the financial crisis and the already strained fiscal circumstances in Western countries, the allies cannot indefinitely finance their military operations on the battlefield.

After weathering the allies' air strikes and the opposition's attack, Gadhafi quickly began a diplomatic offensive. He has spared no effort to enlist the support of neighboring African Union (AU) countries and has used the fact that Libya, as an African country, is suffering from foreign intervention to arouse simmering anti-colonialist sentiments. The Libyan leader wants the whole AU to back his legitimacy.

In Africa, Gadhafi's government is increasingly regarded as the standard bearer in the fight against Western colonial intervention. Libya is becoming the front line of African countries' resistance toward Western interference, rather than a place where the UN mandated a peacekeeping no-fly zone, intended to prevent Libyan civilians from being abused by the Gadhafi regime.

The longer the Western allies are embroiled in the domestic conflict in Libya, the stronger Africa's anti-interventionist sentiments will become, with the result that the political legitimacy of the Libyan opposition will become even more tenuous, compelling the West to undertake more substantial operations in Libya and ultimately bogging them down in Africa.

Compared with Africa's increasing unity, the fragmentation of the Arab world might be detrimental to hopes of achieving a resolution to the situation in Libya. In dealing with Libya, the Arab countries seem to be in confusion.

They first tried to instigate Western countries to intervene in the Libyan conflict and attempted to let Gadhafi serve as a sacrificial lamb for the upheavals in the Middle East, especially those with their own domestic revolt pressure.

When Gadhafi managed to stand up against the allies' military strikes, the Arab League began to hold itself slightly aloof from the West so as to avoid being labeled as "the betrayer of Arab interests" by their people. Those few countries, which are firmly following the West's footsteps, will likely incur the anger of the Arab world in the future.

To a large extent, the Libya crisis has caused the Arab world to divide into three parts, those countries that have turned to Africa, those to Iran and those to the West. This has further reduced the Arab world's influence in regional affairs.

The West's deepening involvement, combined with the complex relations between countries in the region and tribal and religious conflicts and grievances, will further complicate the situation and make it even harder to find peace in the region.

The author is an associate professor at Tsinghua University's Institute of International Studies.

(China Daily 04/20/2011 page8)

分享按鈕
主站蜘蛛池模板: 绵阳市| 安岳县| 沅江市| 西华县| 龙门县| 孟津县| 诏安县| 长宁区| 西林县| 广宗县| 昭平县| 内江市| 西城区| 池州市| 栖霞市| 右玉县| 阿克| 长海县| 海兴县| 龙里县| 乐昌市| 乌审旗| 新巴尔虎左旗| 柳州市| 石嘴山市| 临桂县| 临汾市| 新绛县| 昌都县| 汽车| 观塘区| 应用必备| 城固县| 南通市| 桦甸市| 屯门区| 诸城市| 岱山县| 上蔡县| 馆陶县| 南雄市| 英德市| 环江| 紫云| 平顶山市| 宁蒗| 南阳市| 兴山县| 朔州市| 岳西县| 永平县| 盈江县| 上犹县| 安图县| 彩票| 钦州市| 怀安县| 广宁县| 巴中市| 光泽县| 石阡县| 三门县| 余干县| 新密市| 阳曲县| 江西省| 应用必备| 永和县| 襄城县| 天津市| 彩票| 秦皇岛市| 十堰市| 高陵县| 鄢陵县| 长寿区| 周至县| 明水县| 贵州省| 茶陵县| 陆良县| 汝南县|