Adrian Hamilton: Now we want Gaddafi out, now we don't

International Studies

Adrian Hamilton
Wednesday 27 July 2011 19:00 EDT
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If the British and French governments now find themselves all over the place in their policy towards Libya and the removal of Colonel Gaddafi, they have only themselves to blame.

On Tuesday, William Hague followed the French Foreign Minister, Alain Juppé, (literally – they shared the same podium in Paris) in accepting the possibility that Gaddafi and his family could remain in Libya after months in which the two had insisted he would have to go. Yesterday Hague followed France again by announcing that Britain would now recognise the Libyan opposition and eject from London the diplomats representing the old Gaddafi regime.

This is gesture politics of the worst kind. It's meant to show that, while the UK now recognises that it may not be able to get rid of Gaddafi personally, it is still proceeding ahead with promoting regime change. In reality it is simply an acknowledgement of the facts on the ground.

We threw our air weight behind the opposition in the fond belief that this would change the military balance and enable the opposition forces to win the war. They didn't. Instead, a stalemate has developed which could well last through the summer. Declaring now that Gaddafi can stay so long as he relinquishes power is just spitting in the wind. The whole point is that the Libyan leader won't relinquish power so long as he thinks he has the military capacity to hold on in at least part of Libya. And that he seems to have.

Over the long term, you can see him being squeezed out simply by economic pressure and the loss of oil revenues. But in the short run, the best policy of the West is not to go on screaming about what he can and cannot do, but to get the opposition to declare a cease-fire and for talks between the sides to begin, whether under the aegis of the UN or the African Union.

The trouble with Western politicians – all politicians – is that of "ownership". Give them a potentially advantageous development such as the Arab Spring and they want to claim a part in it. Given them an event which turns sour, such as Yemen or Bahrain, and they will distance themselves as far as possible.

But the Arab Spring is not something that can be "owned" in this way. It would be wonderful if great social movements such as the uprisings in the Middle East could take place peacefully in an atmosphere of sweetness and light. But they are ultimately about power and that is determined by all sorts of factors, most of them local.

Western intervention can't work unless you go the whole hog and invade a country and then you're in all the problems we've seen in Iraq and Afghanistan. The best Western policy is discreet observance.

Which is not to say that we should sit back and do nothing. But the best weapons, the best inducements, at our disposal are economic ones. Recognising the National Transitional Council as the true government won't do much. In the end the Libyans themselves are going to have to work out their political destiny. But we can at least offer them a future in which economic assistance, open markets and freedom of movement offer a better life than they have suffered in the years of autocratic rule and corruption.

Open borders and immigration are, of course, the last thing European politician are ready to accept. Nor are they willing to offer much in the way of market access or direct economic support in these days of austerity.

But step back a moment and consider. The Arab Spring could be the best thing to have happened to Europe in a generation, opening up the opportunity not just of a new politics for the whole Mediterranean but an economic renaissance that would take in southern Europe as well as North Africa. It's time for a bigness of response not a quibbling over the future of Colonel Gaddafi, however unpleasant a man he may be.

Questions Norway may have to face

It's hard not to think that the Norwegians have managed their tragedy with a great deal more dignity than if it had happened here. For a start the British media would have been all over Anders Breivik's family. They would have also been far more ruthless, and judgemental, about the failure of the Norwegian police to react in time. The Norwegians feel there will be time enough to debate such a delicate issue later. And they may well be right, given the grief of the moment. But one hopes that dignity is not at the expense of a thorough investigation of the response.

True, the security forces were looking in the other direction, at would-be jihadists, as the main threat. But it doesn't really matter where the threat comes from, they should have been far better prepared to take a grip on the situation. However uncomfortable the truth may be, the shooting should never have been left to go on for so long, especially when the perpetrator was prepared to give himself up so easily.

The death of a street seller in China

The parallels between the riots this week in Anshun in China and the demonstrations in southern Tunisia, which led to the fall of President Ben Ali's regime, are all too close. Both started after deaths of poor local street sellers were rumoured to have been caused by the brutality of local officials. The Chinese have smothered the riot, and news of it, pretty quickly – as you would expect. But the similarity is telling: in both cases a simmering resentment of oppression by petty and corrupt officialdom that won't be stamped out that easily.

a.hamilton@independent.co.uk

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