Far from being a model for future interventions, Libya shows that meddling strangles the democratic impulse.
by Patrick Hayes
‘People in Libya today have an even greater chance after this news of
building themselves a strong and democratic future. I am proud of the role that
Britain has played in helping them to bring that about.’
So declared UK prime minister David Cameron last year following the
announcement that former tyrant Muammar Gaddafi had met his end at the hands of
Libyan rebels just outside Gaddafi’s hometown of Sirte. Cameron’s response
typified the self-congratulatory backslapping of Western leaders. Western
intervention, in their eyes, had saved the Libyan people in their hour of need
and dislodged the great ogre Gaddafi and his rotten regime. Now the Libyan
people could begin to build a ‘strong, democratic future’.