*Editor's Note:* Below is the second sample I promised you from our
coverage of the big events happening right now. Both of these articles are
just from the last week of commentary in TIA Daily, so they give you an idea
of the kind of guide to the news that you could be getting every day.

The previous sample was about the big story in domestic news. The sample
below is our latest update on the big story in international news: the Arab
Revolution of 2011.

The uprising in Libya is an important new phase in that revolution: the
first anti-American regime to be brought down by "people power." The
revolution in Egypt had its inspiring moments and offers significant promise
for an improvement in the political culture of the Arab world. But we are
also right to be nervous about how it will all end up. Hosni Mubarak was no
prize—not even from the perspective of the most callous *realpolitik*—but
things could definitely get a lot worse in Egypt. By contrast, when Moammar
Gaddafi finally goes down, things could probably get worse, but not by much.
And they are far more likely to get much better.

As I point out below, Libya is also a better analogy to Iran, and Gaddafi's
downfall will help fuel the revival of that nation's anti-theocratic
opposition. If we're lucky, the Persians will get to complete their
rebellion against tyranny, too.

As I said yesterday, this is no ordinary time. In the Middle East, it is a
great age of revolutions. You cannot afford to be without a rational guide
to help you understand what is going on and what America can and should do
about it. I hope you will consider subscribing at
www.TIADaily.com/subscribe<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoSuQaBlI5KSWfjUZhlLqJwwNU6gnSoPuwJUVVzTzIb0yw-Asp4q-yAhAil38VPelwUJF6MWflSfGujCJeuplOyQy7i92p_EdSl2uc-F6RJVF6lU0OrflmOj>.—RWT


[image: 
TIADaily.com]<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoTo2gE4Sah9hpRksxjSjWGXGn8NR_p4029IVKhk_tZdJ7YvdbqBApUnVnKJEMd_J2uYHKy0pSbwPaSE89ynk73yUJXTcqAG3eM=>



*TIA Daily* • * February 27, 2011 *

 *COMMENTARY*

 Planning to Fail in Libya

It is as if somebody decided, at the beginning of this year: Hey, let's
change all of the governments in the Middle East—and let's do it in a couple
of months. I have not seen geopolitical change this rapid since the last
great year of revolutions, 1989.

Back then, I remember there was a lot of frustration with the administration
of the elder George Bush over his passive, stumbling response to the fall of
communism. At one point, he actually gave a speech urging Ukrainians not to
seek their independence from the Soviet Union (of which they were still a
province). I believe it was William Safire who dubbed this the "Chicken
Kiev" speech for the timidity of its vision.

Well, the Obama administration's response to the new year of revolutions in
the Middle East is making that look like bold, decisive leadership.

First, an update on the latest developments.

Moammar Gaddafi and his sons are holed up in Tripoli with a ragtag,
dregs-of-the-earth mercenary
army<http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/02/25/6132143-how-gadhafi-could-find-mercenaries->recruited
from neighboring African countries, thanks to Gaddafi's years as a
"pan-African" rabble-rouser.

Up to now, Gaddafi has mostly been an international punch line, with a
reputation as the most eccentric dictator outside of North Korea. Now he is
trading in that reputation for a special kind of infamy, the infamy of a
leader who would rather set his country on fire, and burn everyone in it,
than give up power,
vowing<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoSVM2soxvRfmjjbZXRHF6prCKa6HJMj0Lr79Q55LBbuw8-UVDnpAENwffOuGwoMgdXKjMbatEeJGJ4TQ_OUBMixx5Ep3YxzbgTOjon1d1echzglYhjyObq5DTio94oTRuEVRL2WhSLngz0cB_UbZjQY_nt6TRMw5f6AVYhLvH9o3LCna29iJhwJlRH9d815H9s=>that
"Libya will become a hell."

The *New York Times* reports that a Libyan army colonel has cobbled together
"an armed volunteer force of about 2,000 men—including army defectors" that
is supposed to be converging on Tripoli to take back the capital. Peaceful
demonstrations won't do it. It will require armed force.

Meanwhile, a *New York Times* reporter invited into Libya for what was
supposed to be a carefully stage-managed whitewash by the regime, was
allowed to wander away from his handlers long enough to send back a
report<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoQZLkExwz19zawjMgFA7dD6klTcTmhVxPdEV1YfYli_YTMdw_rgQqF6tkAUkw9DzVXwUlpgLo_tYSsyhYpakStPQppHP7K3CJF4U2UoGTK8SJLN3WgKwYClRB5WZmxyBQy_BLyWTm30ps5sFyyPuGle_41egvQIpzfeaMPQHDwMedLjlqBgXCBwEfPFLABxg2sBgmEuVPD6GPclBqFu6zawdJm-rsAXuhEL7-dRjUShSbmyT8EB0vbVt1-OEe2AR9F8LUmYC0W8rd3aoQf0vQzY>on
the chaos and carnage in Tripoli.

The editorial board of the *New York Times* may be corrupt, but the paper
still has the best international reporting, and for keeping up with
fast-breaking events like this on an hour-by-hour basis, I recommend
their breaking
news 
blog<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoTe-1Vs7lp8TEAj87EZhyiHTPtVgeEaQAXJ2nQowB36fjSb0Bq21yULQWHCk5v4tAEJlhAXnav2hnakjd5DAg6CDg3uIV7qSMR0wEMm4gzg6lC9ZePEuDtQ>.


At the very beginning of this story, when the possibility of an uprising in
Libya was still speculative, I mentioned TIA's small connection to this big
story. One of the Facebook pages calling for protests against the regime
featured a caricature of Gaddafi drawn by John Cox, the illustrator who also
produces the covers for our print edition. John speculates that his drawing
must have served an important function for the revolutionaries: they need to
have an image that makes the once-feared dictator seem ridiculous.

That caricature keeps popping up in the Libyan uprising. John's blog
has a screen
capture<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoROnDB4tkaP7QFKX8fnlDAYuOwEU7qrG3wjBkrsAt6Nu2vA3v0p2DB3sz8wGTePxckqjF4p1wNZAmreqO8YHo1UYqufopuN2UMc7qq9OL87-z62jeWOLog_RcyPNqmCYSC39uzrfIpCK9Cd1Sv57UE2R3humRz8Njeg8pilS8vXJQ==>of
CNN's home page, which features a close-up of his caricature being
held
up at an anti-government rally. A similar scene from another rally is shown
here<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoQXFNvM-6QBf_Ob8L9ZNdGpqPcs9F53_1DvdVXj_FvLjYzgwCeOSS5_9LWc-rveQU7zcSCDxLWUVM9phfd5fthbOz4-21O-q7SKqVzH2DSsIKINVvaLliHMbnnc112LLRYbZCDZgP-1d5K8zYoWj695_aETxwW5VMn1RQGgCimDFPSo2vK7dUiuWMI0JYERbfW59nhNhIJiAqmFQWa-Rq9491VZftTRaus=>.


The uprising in Libya is another opportunity to spread political freedom in
a region that has never enjoyed it. Talking to a *New York Times* reporter,
a supporter of the rebels sums up their motive: "We have no freedom here. We
want our freedom, too."

The biggest implication of the battle in Libya may be for Iran. The Middle
East Media Research Institute
quotes<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoRVwx_1hUs5XGbTwNKA_2QTIq3I6Vy0pSBaqLfImouxtP4TKeypbRk7kphtHb7umLHjJZzsFNia1OG4Rg8VAsLJJmg05zujdfEmSK69qY5CjOR1MUkje2nCKLGwtsDmGTZy0gpcg253zbiV7s4Y0xlB1deeC0zg4zU=>one
Arab media baron—a guy who has previously admitted to funding
insurgents
in Iraq—declaring that the new era of Arab revolutions should be limited to
toppling pro-American leaders. Well, Moammar Gaddafi is the first *
anti-American* leader to be targeted, and also the first who is willing to
use brutal and bloody force to suppress the opposition—both of which also
hold true for Iran. If he can fall, the Iranian regime can be taken down,
too.

One of the most striking features of the revolt in Libya has been the
defection of that nation's ambassadors abroad, who have run up the
pre-Gaddafi Libyan flag over their embassies and asked the world to issue
stronger condemnations of their nation's leader. Well, we're also seeing
that pattern with Iran. The latest
report<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoTg15pHgRtsqTBHX9AmBDebH2LcxCurthIf4-QAE7n_prPAeU_-w6vNyI7__oh9xXmEpV0EvBwtf3IFMpKTYPk1z_JD7tKsTTg1FuRp9-bM9aVM7BKnXraFieJ1NHERKQoKwSDDrAHdtxb8nC732Z3wif3SxFYNerbDsvp0MIY5A6PUsOb8XEZc>:


 Ahmad Maleki, head of Iran's consular office in Milan, resigned his post on
Sunday to protest Tehran's "barbaric actions against the Iranian nation,"
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reports, adding that he now plans to join
Iran's pro- democracy Green Movement.

Egypt's and Tunisia's uprisings have breathed new life into the Iranian
resistance.... After a year of lying low, tens of thousands of Green
Movement protesters marched through Iran's streets on Sunday and last
Monday. Whereas in 2009 they called for fresh elections, they are now
calling to overthrow their government and to end the country's "religious
dictatorship."...

Mr. Maleki, who previously served Tehran in Portugal and Kenya, tells RFE/RL
that there are "many others in the [Iranian Foreign Ministry] who are
unhappy with the government." Mr. Maleki is the fourth Iranian diplomat to
resign in the past year, after Iranian envoys stepped down in Norway,
Finland, and Brussels

 This is the big opportunity we have right now in the Middle East, and as
much as we need to worry about the negative consequences of the death of the
devil we know, we should keep our eyes on this prize.

*The Guardian* is a leftist British newspaper that still manages to
remember, from time to time, that "liberals" are supposed to stand for
freedom. Their coverage of the uprising in Iran two years ago was very good,
and they have done a generally good job on this year's uprisings as well. A
few days ago, the paper carried an
op-ed<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoSOZOcNJKA93QOBj2DIvnL31QDR6ON2IENvN-_Fcqm56p06l20rfjUqisw2HMik_CWGxREz0wkd-0z5taL7HR8lJLXE2qORld4gYHm0NniVTzxn8Tql7ukOAKLR98DaDj3x7ewuTZ9R_EfAGlEygm7e33YXfo8VgyKZH5nOZU_-luGIrdUm7tgQsTJNWuX9Hxa8QyMl9UkFCA==>by
a Moroccan political activist who borrowed a phrase from George W.
Bush,
asking the West to go beyond the "soft bigotry of low expectations" in
dealing with the politics of the Arab and Muslim worlds. In effect, he is
asking us to consider that the Arabs may be capable of something better than
rule by a "stable" strongman.

 The prevalent thinking about this region of over 300 million souls is that
it offered no fertile ground for democracy, either because democracy risked
bringing political forces hostile to western interests or because democracy
is not a value that has much currency in the region. Many regimes understood
this, and played a double game of decrying their societies' "immaturity"
while encouraging anti-democratic tendencies such as populism and, at times,
a reactionary social conservatism. After the revolutions in Tunisia and
Egypt, no one will buy this any more—and nor should they about two more
North African countries: Libya and Morocco....

More and more Moroccans want something akin to what they see in Britain or
Spain: a constitutional monarchy where the king is head of state but does
not interfere in government. Like the protests elsewhere in the region, the
peaceful demonstrations that have taken place in eight cities are about
dignity. Moroccans, like other Arabs, are tired of being subjects: they want
to be citizens....

Libyans are not condemned to be ruled by Gaddafis for eternity; Moroccans do
not have to settle for an absolute monarchy, no matter how enlightened.
Encouraged by their neighbors' example, they have higher expectations for
their future, and so should you.

 To put it in my terminology, young Arabs seem to be discovering the freedom
that is part of a "normal life" for the rest of the world. But we, too, have
to adjust our outlook and regard freedom as "normal." We have to recognize
the evidence of history and look on a free society, not as an unusual system
enjoyed only by a few especially enlightened Western societies, but as
something that can take root in Latin America, in Eastern Europe, in
Southeast Asia—and, next, among the Arabs and Persians.

This, in my view, is what constituted the visionary genius of George W.
Bush. He grasped that the global impact of liberty could and would hit the
Middle East, and he tried to prepare for it. Faced with the current wave of
political change, he might still make many mistakes—he certainly did so in
Iraq and elsewhere—but he would not be caught utterly flatfooted and
disoriented.

Flat-footed and disoriented is the only way to describe the Obama
administration's response. They have no idea what is happening and no sense
of urgency that they need to know and to take action. Their response to
Libya has been, if anything, even worse than Obama's slow and passive
response to Egypt.

First, the White House announced, unbelievably, that Obama had not yet said
anything about Libya because, gosh, they just couldn't work it into his
schedule<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoRDe1mm7I0BoJRE-izu7xssG6RAtyQ_OUQhIfcSztY5Sf2LguHIPN3jpyZTy6geuJW1VCZbg0zPxNXyRZerMMXA51GNTWjYTK6pbIUulGFCzvYyLZFw-F0EGhMjOg5WGpR3pPLhK68gpiYFOy58TkClv3h4c4rW9qn5qIDVHp6FTQ==>.
Then they assured
us<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoRUUEIzQyD1inbjhaLrod1U4k4CYF984XPvOKFAJ6f9AAkJKCrA7aoFOYYRuEN54pSQdYTdptUYk3T-_Dc6IwtUhIxzxnPAiqi8-QMLjTE-DxFgSq0YUYKUdf4Ll7gS2tEGppXk_KVHRFEn-D1Ep1yaUcnkcD9pde4XKFkBmGHxGWNG5ygVqV3HCzbhYs5GuRdsiqyLdF8zPidjJqcDcySq>that
they were going to monitor the situation and "evaluate as we go." Then
they chose the bizarre medium of a press release summarizing President
Obama's phone conversation with German Chancellor Angela Merkel to make
public his strongest statement
yet<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoS-yPRKAe-xvKuIRUPGMYQKk2Vu9azuMH4I0iu18IT5STt-ec7WXNq26O1MEs9L7mebhBb2MoKovQ_g50HtTZYafKz_ingw65Qy9IatWWSYMZ3lT8xgUG-XTi3ojYhguYek79UAxWWjvgJNu3PU9XWwDaBvUNcprJN1aTdQaGm_vkehJVhoVGgRyUggYYUJ8w5Vx7aZTcS42oHc-0ISYA89GH5GqkF8v4EWmrFAQakHrQ==>.


 The president stated that when a leader's only means of staying in power is
to use mass violence against his own people, he has lost the legitimacy to
rule and needs to do what is right for his country by leaving now.

 But note that this is all still passive. It is about what someone else is
going to do, either Gaddafi, or the European Union, or (try not to laugh)
the UN. Thus, the press release goes on to say that Obama and Merkel

 discussed appropriate and effective ways for the international community to
respond. The president welcomed ongoing efforts by our allies and partners,
including at the United Nations and by the European Union, to develop and
implement strong measures.

 Even more jarring is the very next sentence: "The president and the
chancellor also discussed the global economic recovery and the need for
effective tools to promote economic stability in the Eurozone."

Has there ever been a president more disengaged from crucial world events?

The *Washington Post*'s Dana Milbank notes that new White House Press
Secretary Jay Carney—who, I must say, looks like someone grabbed a
high-school debate team captain and suddenly promoted him to spokesman for
the most powerful man in the world—has consistently had nothing to
say<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoRdGsqPZCNWULr8FnKgLTjfaiiwJv5VTcUckfpIl1tQ0y3CvcqtYHSs-ZqmEoxEZChexeHQxNcVKkxFzAEItc7RErV0GmSebgQbWwLyGUfJIB4QCVljnrr7ar5Y4ecCSi1OfAHdq3mLbXWE9GQhe6QQrMeNPBL5JqMuVVD4kDGfvQYwueRA-REKgGC6pNKkf2zMUpRZqmA-pD1pohbehkfu>in
response to the barrage of questions he is getting from the White
House
press corps. Milbank concludes that Carney has nothing to say because there
is no policy for him to announce or explain.

Or as John Bolton puts
it<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoSQG51JrnwDzU2O2an5w5fdXGapaR3OdYDiMumZ6cSPPBXjjUyTB3rRmKiJ1MpYgTJ7_ukcz08p1faspShgJkunhmp5j-YbmwxAWsmip6-2pBsT7Pbho0etm_3Cvgn4iI9GC3NL5N0DeprKduLq-GtEsQrgN9acyb60Ltbka3sSv6kZw7Z48Das9gXxF4iyt5spc2IBhfiThHbWYmdfzKTySaOoNShX5is=>,
President Obama *has no foreign policy*.

But remember that Obama warned us of this in his speech in Cairo two years
ago, when he announced that he regarded America as an unexceptional nation
that should not take any special, leading role in the world. Remember the
old saying that if you fail to plan, you plan to fail? Well, it goes the
other way, too. If you plan to fail, you will fail to plan. Why craft a
distinct foreign policy agenda, if your intention is for America to be
irrelevant to world events?

But this is a bad time to drift through foreign affairs.

There are many ways in which the conflagration in the Middle East could
spell trouble for us. Iraq has begun to see tumultuous street
protests<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoSoOrwiRF7fzn7i_OTeg4dU7rl44q4zfFOruZqWdCatoz4dOu9WYhUb5dHD3GoNSGOdwYLF6CwB5zebQjW_Hl9VE4II74y12-P639qXxWqnh9GQfe8AXbNrtqtjOLaYX1LEBObu2XpcJu_bTkGsUjgjCo-E2h53hXRgMKeXuKIOTIGZL1rz6qbj8GF2qZ8JVD8=>against
official corruption and the government's failure to deliver basic
services. On the one hand, Iraq is more likely to weather these protests
because it does have an elected government. On the other hand, Iraq's
elected government is very new, and the country is still something of a
battleground in which many malevolent forces—not least, the Iranians—are
attempting to exert influence. Things could spin out of control very
quickly.

Things *are* spinning out of control in Yemen, where prominent tribal
leaders<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoSAFxkDYSFyrEbN3PM4qTvSBevhGtvs_vHnKiFTiXL1LgzhHh_eTmkLoTs9rSO9I_mPp3-xD9bEU-NeywFlt1wT99AfO73LrU6I_iLPc8Kvc03zZrSuwnPX1S7Cx30a9XJBTOR9RTRnZhTpM8A_U3BCDvBuijQijSvh96CBwkZGdQ==>have
now come out against the local strongman—who has been somewhat helpful
in cooperating with American covert action against al-Qaeda's significant
outposts there.

And now for the news that should really make you uptight: DEBKAfile
reports<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoTL-_gZrQrV2IhpQhh1Jr4sE0CrhCK1Y_mKgqveU9JtTaEXPKKEOtjJMTpGEsjlxKw15_b1MUuzY2r2Ma5uRdMj9E9OHvkMPmMW0TxQABRwSDEk7ZYszW9LAGYWVJg4f1Y=>a
rumor of the first anti-government demonstrations in Saudi Arabia.

The Middle East is entering a period of rapid and radical change. It could
all go well for us, or it could lead to chaos. Our leaders need to be
actively engaged in influencing the outcome to protect and advance our
interests. Instead, our president is planning to fail.—RWT

*back to top* <#12e6d04fcab2057c_TOC>

 ------------------------------

[image: 
TIADaily.com]<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=bropbvdab&et=1104671974388&s=8037&e=001coZ8Uek0aoTo2gE4Sah9hpRksxjSjWGXGn8NR_p4029IVKhk_tZdJ7YvdbqBApUnVnKJEMd_J2uYHKy0pSbwPaSE89ynk73yUJXTcqAG3eM=>

-- 
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.

Reply via email to