Publication
6 Jun 2011
The character of the Libyan crisis today arises from the complex but so far evidently indecisive impact of the UN-authorised military intervention, now formally led by NATO, in what had already become a civil war. NATO’s intervention saved the anti-Qaddafi side from immediate defeat but has not yet resolved the conflict in its favour. Although the declared rationale of this intervention was to protect civilians, civilians are figuring in large numbers as victims of the war, both as casualties and refugees, while the leading Western governments supporting NATO’s campaign make no secret of the fact that their goal is regime change.
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English (PDF, 41 pages, 3.0 MB) |
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Author | International Crisis Group |
Series | Crisis Group Middle East Reports |
Issue | 107 |
Publisher | International Crisis Group (ICG) |
Copyright | © 2011 International Crisis Group (Crisis Group) |