We’ve seen this movie before:  Spectacular photos of Tomahawk Cruise missiles being launched from American navy vessel, B-2 bombers piloted by amazing American crews making nonstop trips from Missouri to the Mediterranean…. And Americans of all political stripes asking: What’s the plan?

Make no mistake.  Muammar Gaddafi is a very bad guy.  He has been a bad guy for 40 years, and he has brazenly killed Americans on several occasions in attacks that fit any reasonable definition of terrorism.  The world would be better off without him.

But, at the same time that our courageous and incredibly skilled military is again being asked to destroy a military headquarters in Tripoli without damaging the civilian building next to it, the White House is saying “Gaddafi must go”, but these attacks are not about “regime change”.  They are saying the mission is to protect the Libyan people from Gaddafi’s madness, but that we aren’t going to send troops in to do the protecting.  And yes, they are once again assuring us that the U.S. commitment is limited and we are just doing our part as a coalition of the willing.

When are we going to learn?  Injecting American military right into the internal strife of other nations with no clear definition of a successful outcome doesn’t work.  Our service men and women who are putting themselves at risk, the taxpayers who are paying $600,000 for every Tomahawk missile launched, and yes, the people in Libya we are supposedly trying to help, all deserve to know what the plan is.  That really isn’t too much to ask.

Sometimes it appears our political leaders doubt that we can handle the truth.

If the objective in Libya is to replace Muammar Gaddafi – then why don’t we just say it, and do it?  Or at least have an honest debate about it.  If that is the idea, it is perhaps worth noting that the guy has hung on to power for decades and just bombing his missile defenses may not do the trick.  It is also worth pointing out that we went into Afghanistan to get rid of Osama bin Laden and his cronies, and almost ten years and hundreds of billions of dollars and too many American lives later, we are still there – and bin Laden isn’t.

If the plan were to somehow level the playing field in Libya so that Gaddafi’s opposition has a fighting chance of toppling him, it would have been a lot cheaper and easier to do that 3 weeks ago – before he was on the verge of crushing them.  And then there is the whole question of who will replace him, will they be any better for U.S. interests than Gaddafi, and how many of those people we are trying to protect will die in the process?

It has been observed that, by weakening his military capabilities, perhaps we will encourage dissension and defection among his own leadership and commanders. If that is the plan, it would be cheaper and a whole lot safer to just give each of them a check for a million dollars and a condo in Florida.

Or, if there is some hope that Colonel Gaddafi will back down, see the handwriting on the wall and turn over a new leaf, it really must be remembered that we have tried that a couple of times already.  The result:  He is still in power and killing people, and the Presidents who “backed him down” are not Presidents anymore.

For the cynical among us, let’s even try the theory that we care about what happens in Libya because it is the source of 1.3 million barrels of oil per day – and we need imports like that for more than half of our oil needs.  If we are worried about oil, we should be a lot more concerned about what is going on in Saudi Arabia and a bunch of other countries that are in fact much more important to our energy security.

Mr. President, or someone, PLEASE, tell us what the plan is.  Otherwise, just stop. At the end of the day, what is happening in Libya is a civil war against a clearly bad leader.  The world is full of clearly bad and evil leaders, and millions of people being victimized by them.  What makes Libya special?  Simply enforcing a no-fly zone will cost American taxpayers as much as $300 million a week, and that doesn’t include all those Tomahawk missiles and B-2 round trips.  More importantly, those are American crews risking their lives.  If there is some compelling reason to be doing what we are doing, tell us what it is.

If, on the other hand, we are once again playing cop to the world, we can’t afford it.

In Liberty,

Gary Johnson

Friday night (1/28/11) I attended a talk by Steve Forbes at the Reagan Library and was very impressed with his ideas on the major issues of the day: health care, education, taxation, economic decline and growth, size of government, national and personal debt, money manipulation and politics. Forbes not only addressed the problems and named names (of the culprits), but proposed realistic, libertarian, free-market-based solutions. I was pleased to hear support for throwing out the current tax code in exchange for a flat tax (and later during Q&A, agreement on the necessity of repealing the 16th Amendment to eliminate the progressive income tax). Solutions regarding health care and education focused on competition and freedom of choice. He suggested government assistance for those who can’t afford health insurance, the same way  government programs help people pay for food (e.g., food stamps), saying this would be more cost-effective and productive than a universal takeover of health care. Although Forbes smartly (considering his venue) gave nod to Republicans like Reagan for supporting some small government, liberty-minded ideas, he also laid blame on the GOP for various failures. Applause was heard many times from the audience, but never more loudly than when Forbes predicted that in his lifetime the dollar would again be tied to gold.

It doesn’t appear that the Reagan Foundation website stores Reagan Forum speeches for replay, but here is a YouTube video that captured about nine minutes of the roughly 50-minute Forbes speech: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JlqQhNKTHaw. If I later find a video of the full speech, I’ll pass it along.

© 2010 Libertarian Party of Ventura County Ventura County Libertarian Party P.O. Box 2417 Camarillo, CA 93011 Phone: (805) 652-0290 Email: lpventura.co@gmail.com Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha

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