What's behind the Libya intervention?
Many in China and throughout the world are  questioning the motives of U.N. coalition forces as they continue their  military action in Libya under the banner of humanitarian intervention  and with the blessing of a U.N. Resolution despite mounting civilian  casualties and the great risk of the nation sinking into civil war.
As  a matter of fact, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, Libya's leader, has been  offering goodwill gestures to Western countries in the past decade.  Qaddafi announced Libya voluntarily gave up the development of weapons  of mass destruction in 2003. Libya accepted its responsibilities for the  Lockerbie bombing and paid 2.7 billion U.S. dollars to compensate those  victims' families.
The Libyan domestic oil industry absorbed a  large amount of capital from Western countries, and oil companies in  France, Italy and Spain have an important market share in Libya. In  addition, Qaddafi voiced his opposition with al-Qaeda to cooperate with  Western countries in anti-terrorism.
After all this, Qaddafi  still cannot be accepted by Western countries and has become the target  of military attacks this time. Why?
From Qaddafi's personal  perspective, shifts in foreign policy are among the most important  reasons that caused him to be targeted. In the early stages of the  Qaddafi regime, he used violent methods to fight against Western  countries and made many enemies. Although he tried to get close to them,  it seems like they do not buy it. Even worse, Qaddafi had already been  labeled as a textbook example of repression against civilians, so he was  rebuffed with accusations and assault.
On a strategic level,  Qaddafi's choice of words in his political rhetoric has also displeased  Western countries, such as when he said he opposes the "New Crusade."  Although Qaddafi was not necessarily aiming those words at Western  countries, analysts believe that these political words actually have  great power to encourage political mobilization and might even foster  anti-Western sentiment.
Apart from above reasons, the thing that  Western countries can least accept about Qaddafi is the political road  on which he has been stepping. For years, Qaddafi has been advocating  unifying country and regions, building powerful army and political  organizations, oil nationalization, mobilizing middle and lower class  public, carrying on land reforms and fighting against Western  intervention. Although these goals are hard to realize, they are clearly  in the direction of a revival of the Arab world.
The middle of  the last century was the greatest period for the Arab world both in  terms of international reputation and global influence. But the good  times did not last long. The international position of the Arab world  and the national security of Arab nations have been challenged often  since the middle 1970s.
In recent years, the United States  launched two wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and Israel also launched  large-scale military attacks over Lebanon and Palestine. However, the  Arab world could do nothing about that.
For Western countries,  the status quo or even a new Arab world changed due to Western will is  the best thing. But once a united Arab world is formed, the Western  interests in this piece of land, with its large population and rich  resources, will be affected badly.
The reason Libya is being  "punished" by the Western coalition is mainly because the country has a  big affect on Western interests. However, with the development of war  and the overall global situation, the political goals of the  intervention will be vaguer and vaguer.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
        
    
 
  
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