One year ago, on March 19, 2011, Western leaders, alarmed by the disaster unfolding in Libya,
voted in the U.N. Security Council to intervene militarily with "all
necessary means," arguing that they could not stand by and watch
civilians get massacred. As a result of the U.N. resolution, NATO
launched a bombing campaign, led by Britain, France and the U.S., and
flew about 10,000 bombing sorties over Libya, helping to obliterate Muammar Gaddafi's 42-year dictatorship in just seven months.
So, could it happen in Syria?
Probably not, according to two reports out on Monday. Both suggest that
the Western powers would face significantly bigger challenges in
intervening against President Bashar Assad,
both politically and militarily, than they did in Libya. Says the
British military think tank Royal United Services Institute for Defence
and Security Studies (RUSI)
in a report marking the anniversary of the U.N. vote: "The Libya
intervention took place in a singularly unique moment where the
international stars, as it were, were aligned in a set of propitious
circumstances."
Unlike Gaddafi, Assad has hugely
upgraded his air-and-sea-attack capabilities since the revolt against
him erupted a year ago, according to the Stockholm International Peace
Research Institute (SIPRI),
which tracks the opaque defense industry. In its yearly report on
global arms transfers, also to be published on Monday, SIPRI lists
billions spent by Assad on state-of-the-art Russian systems, much of
which has been delivered during the past year. "This is a major
upgrade," says Paul Holtom, SIPRI senior researcher on arms transfers.
"Any discussions about an air attack on Syria would be more challenging
than it would have been previously."
Last year, Russia delivered as
many as 36 Pantsyr-SI antiaircraft missiles to Syria, according to
SIPRI. Lightweight and mobile, the medium-range missiles can be mounted
on the back of trucks, making them difficult for combat jets to target.
In addition, the organization believes Russia has recently delivered
upgraded versions of the MiG-29 combat aircraft to Syria. And it has
upgraded hundreds of T-72 tanks every year since 2007, fitting them
with far more modern weapons; in recent weeks, opposition activists in
the besieged city of Homs filmed video footage showing T-72 tanks in
action during the assault on the city.
Aside from the Pantsyr, Russia
also sent Syria other modern antiaircraft missiles last year, including
about 40 SA-17 Grizzly missiles and two medium-range SA-17 Buk systems,
according to SIPRI. And despite the worlds outrage over Assad's
crackdown, Assad announced a $550 million deal with Russia in January
for 36 light training and combat aircraft called Yak-130.
Indeed, if Gaddafi had taken
delivery of the weapons, which Assad now has, he would have proved a
more formidable foe against NATO forces, according to Holtom; Gaddafi's
order for six Yak-130s had not been delivered by the time the Libyan
revolt erupted in February last year, and he lacked new-generation
antiaircraft weapons. "These are systems Gaddafi did not have," Holtom
tells TIME. "He was in advance discussions about buying a number of air
defense and combat aircraft from the Russians, but he never bought
them."
That turned out to be a lucky
break for NATO, according to RUSI. It says the Libya campaign was much
more difficult than Western leaders revealed publicly at the time,
making the prospect of a Syria campaign much more worrisome for
politicians with the Libya experience behind them. When NATO began
bombing Libya last March, Gaddafi was a much tougher enemy than the
coalitions leaders, British Prime Minister David Cameron and French
President Nicolas Sarkozy, had calculated. Having been argued at the
U.N. that it was only to protect civilians in eastern Libya, "the
operation was conceived at the lowest level and for the shortest period
of time," writes RUSI director of international security studies
Jonathan Eyal in the report.
Instead, it quickly morphed into
an all-out war. That severely strained European militaries, which flew
90% of the attack sorties. "European stockpiles struggled to cope,"
writes Elizabeth Quintana, a RUSI air-power senior research fellow,
adding that the U.S. ultimately had to "plug the gaps." And since
Britain's Tornado and Typhoon jets were flying daily sorties over
Libya, Britain's own airspace was left dangerously vulnerable. In
addition, she says, European militaries were relying on aging aircraft
ill equipped for the intensity and fast pace of Libya's wa
As Libya's war dragged on for
months, the strain on NATO forces grew more evident. Indeed, Cameron
and Sarkozy must have breathed a sigh of relief when Libyan rebels
finally killed Gaddafi on Oct. 20, ending the NATO campaign. "The armed
forces were lucky the rebels toppled the Gaddafi regime when they did,"
Quintana writes.
Ironically, the Libyan war now
makes it more difficult for Western leaders to win U.N. approval for
military intervention against Assad, even though Syria looks worse than
Libya did last March: U.N. officials estimate that more than 8,000
people have been killed in Syria's yearlong revolt, including many
civilians in assaults against Homs, Idlib and other opposition enclaves.
This time around, however,
Russia with veto powers at the U.N. Security Council has made it clear
it will not ditch its longtime ally; it maintains its only naval base
in the region in Syria's port of Tartus. Russian officials have said
repeatedly they believe Western leaders misled them at the U.N. in
March 2011 by saying NATO attacks were only to protect civilians,
rather than to overthrow Gaddafi; China which also has veto powers at
the Security Council has expressed similar views.
In truth, Gaddafi did critical
damage to his own cause -- a mistake from which Assad seems to have
learned. In firebrand speeches in Tripoli last February and March,
Gaddafi dared Western leaders to attack his country and scorned several
overtures by them and the Arab League to negotiate a political
settlement or exile deal. The RUSI report says Gaddafi "virtually
invited military action upon himself. What dictator would now ever risk
announcing to the world's media his intention to butcher an entire city
like rats," a phrase Gaddafi used frequently to describe his opposition.
Notwithstanding the assault on
Syria's opposition, there are differences: U.N. envoy Kofi Annan flew
to Damascus last week to discuss possible negotiations with Assad.
"Gaddafi had no powerful friends and was isolated in a way that Bashar
al-Assad, for example, is not," says the RUSI report. And so far those
friends are standing by their mana leader who now has other weapons at
hand.
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