[Peace-discuss] By what right?

C. G. Estabrook galliher at illinois.edu
Mon Mar 21 21:28:43 CDT 2011


[Obama has no constitutional authority - none - to kill people in N. Africa. 
This is, as Rep. Kucinich points out, an impeachable offense. It's an abuse of 
presidential authority as egregious as anything the Bushes, Clinton, or Reagan 
did.  We can't let him get away with it. --CGE]

"...Turkey has criticized NATO's role in the military campaign against Libya, 
saying the large-scale military operation was similar to those in Iraq and 
Afghanistan. Ankara has called for a review of other possible measures NATO 
could take in Libya. It has also called for an immediate Western ceasefire, 
urging NATO to give greater consideration to the possibility of civilian deaths..."


    Obama: NATO to join Libya war
    Tue Mar 22, 2011 2:14AM

US President Barack Obama says the United States will transfer control of the 
air assault against Libya to the NATO alliance within days.


"We anticipate this transition to take place in a matter of days and not in a 
matter of weeks," Reuters quoted Obama as saying at a news conference during a 
visit to Chile on Monday.

"NATO will be involved in a coordinating function because of the extraordinary 
capacity of that alliance" but details of the transfer would be provided by US 
military chiefs, he said.

General Carter Ham, the US commander now leading the offensive, has said the 
missile strikes had crippled embattled Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi's military 
prowess and set the stage for a broad no-fly zone stretching across most of 
northern Libya.

French officials had earlier said that Arab countries do not want the US-led 
NATO alliance in charge of the military operation against Libya.

Meanwhile, Turkey has criticized NATO's role in the military campaign against 
Libya, saying the large-scale military operation was similar to those in Iraq 
and Afghanistan.

Ankara has called for a review of other possible measures NATO could take in Libya.

It has also called for an immediate Western ceasefire, urging NATO to give 
greater consideration to the possibility of civilian deaths.

Germany also announced that it prefers to stay out of the conflict.

The British defense secretary, however, expressed hope that NATO would take 
command of the campaign in the next few days.

The developments come as the Arab League criticized the Western coalition's 
airstrikes over Libya.

Dozens of civilians have been killed in Libya since the US, Britain, France and 
some other Western countries launched their attacks on the North African country.


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