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Africa North
0bean Cites Lack of Intelligence 'Day After' Plan in Libya as Biggest Mistake
2016-04-11
Oops. Next time.
A failure to adequately plan for the aid and governing of Libya after the U.S.-led NATO attacks in 2011 "probably" was his biggest error in office, President Barack Obama said in an interview on "Fox News Sunday."
What about the total ignorance which is your normal operating state? Does that fit in anywhere?
Asked by host Chris Wallace about the "worst mistake" of his soon-to-end White House years, Obama listed the aftermath of the ouster and death of Moammar Qaddafi, even as he defended the intervention.
How did he manage to just pick one? What about the agreement with Iran? Obamacare? Dissing Poland? The Apology Tour? Jeebus, where do I begin? Not supporting the rebellion in Iran? The border disaster?
"Probably failing to plan for the day after," Obama said in the session, which was taped at the University of Chicago on April 7. He added that intervening in Libya "was the right thing to do."
Maybe. If only you had one of them 'day-after' plans.
The Libya operation and its chaotic aftermath has been resurrected in the 2016 presidential campaign. That's in part because of the increasing presence of the Islamic State there, and U.S. airstrikes to disrupt its operation.

Democratic contender Hillary Clinton, as Obama's secretary of state, strongly supported the intervention. In a 2011 interview with CBS News when still secretary, Clinton said of Qaddafi, "We came. We saw. He died."
So did a lot of other good people. And while he was no good man, Qadaffy wasn't as bad as he was made out to be.
At a March 7 town hall meeting, Clinton said what has happened since then "is deeply regrettable. There have been forces coming from the outside, internal squabbles that have led to the instability that has given terrorist groups, including ISIS, a foothold in some parts of Libya."
Yeah. That's why we couldn't foresee the obvious.
"I think it's fair to say, however, if there had not been" an intervention "we would be looking at something much more resembling Syria now, than what we faced in Libya," she said in March.
Bull$hit. Your ignorant policy of having your cake and eating it too in Syria effed up things beyond all recognition.
Army General David Rodriguez, head of U.S. Africa Command, told reporters last week that the Islamic State presence in Libya has doubled since 2015 to as many as 6,000 fighters.
I understand we kill about 50/day. It won't be long before they're all demoralized and dead, right?
Former Defense Secretary Robert Gates told Yahoo News in January that he thought Clinton's "influence was pivotal in persuading the president to broaden the goal in Libya beyond just saving the people in Benghazi" from Qaddafi's forces and "essentially focusing more on regime change. The president told me that it was one of the closest decisions he'd ever made, sort of 51-49, and I'm not sure that he would've made that decision if Secretary Clinton hadn't supported it."
Saving which people in Benghazi? The embassy staff, or the terrorists?
The Congressional Research Service this month wrote that Libya's "political transition has been disrupted by armed non-state groups and threatened by the indecision and infighting of interim leaders" after the armed uprising toppled Qaddafi's regime.
You mean the toppling that happened right after 0bean called it one of his big success stories?
"Interim authorities" have "proved unable to form a stable government, address pressing security issues, reshape the country's public finances, or create a viable framework for post-conflict justice and reconciliation," according to CRS, the public policy research arm of the U.S. Congress.
Maybe you shouldn't have left Inshallah in charge?
A United Nations-sponsored unity government led by Fayez Serraj assumed office last month and has won support from politicians and militias, offering hope that Libya may begin to emerge from the turmoil that has uprooted nearly half a million people since Qaddafi fell in 2011 after more than four decades in power.

Obama told Fox News that his best day in office was the one on which his signature health care plan was passed, and his worst was "the day we traveled up to Newtown," after the shooting deaths of 20 children and six adult staff members at an elementary school in Sandy Hook, Connecticut.
Only because the former didn't interfere with your tee time, I'm sure.
Posted by:gorb

#5  "Probably failing to plan for the day after," Obama said. He added that intervening in Libya "was the right thing to do."

I vaguely recall a couple of folks skewering G. W. Bush for poor planning of the Iraq adventure, not too long after everyone in the whole world endorsed the idea.
Posted by: Bobby   2016-04-11 14:26  

#4  So if intervening in Libya was the "right thing to do" that means the next right thing to do would be to occupy that country indefinitely; dealing with al Qaeda, ISIS, Qaddafi loyalists, and all the other various and assorted nut jobs who inhabit that part of the world. Good thinking, Baraq. Now forget about it and go play another round of golf.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2016-04-11 13:09  

#3  Obumble will be known as America's greatest mistake.

Affirmative action will be known as America's greatest mistake.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2016-04-11 11:29  

#2  Obumble will be known as America's greatest mistake.
Posted by: DarthVader   2016-04-11 11:26  

#1  I thought the day after plan was to see some Mayan ruins after learning the Samba.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2016-04-11 11:09  

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