DIANA WEST: US GENERAL INVITES LIBYAN OFFICERS TO US WAR COLLEGE…DO THEY GET TO BRING THEIR AL QAEDA FLAGS?

http://www.dianawest.net/Home/tabid/36/EntryId/1974/US-General-Invites-Libyan-Officers-to-US-War-Colleges.aspx

Question: When the Libyan “military” comes to US staff colleges — a real possibility– do they get to bring their flags of al Qaeda with them?

This is a joke, right? I’m dreaming, aren’t I? Either give me a pitchfork, or wake me up when it’s over.

From USA Today:

The United States is in discussions with Libya over ways to help rebuild the country’s military, which the U.S. military considers essential to unify the country and bring rival militias under national control.

We’re looking for ways in which we can be helpful,” said Gen. Carter Ham, commander of U.S. Africa Command. “They have to find some way to form a national army.’

Who cares if Libya isn’t a “nation,” but a motley patchwork formerly run by a personality-cultish dictator?

In an interview with USA TODAY in Washington, Ham said the discussions had not reached the level of agreeing to specific cooperation. If the two countries do establish a relationship, it would not be the scale of U.S. efforts to rebuild the militaries of Iraq and Afghanistan.

That’s how it always starts.

We’d like, for example, to begin having Libyan officers come to U.S. staff colleges,” he said, adding that the United States could also sell Libya equipment and offer training.

How do we screen out the ones who killed Americans in Iraq and Afghanistan???

Estimates of the size of the Libyan army under dictator Moammar Gadhafi ranged from 50,000 to 130,000 soldiers. He used it to crack down on political rivals and sometimes to assist other dictators in the region, such as Uganda’s Idi Amin.

Libya’s military mostly disintegrated over the course of the revolt that began with protests in February. Some units defected to the rebel side, some fought alongside foreign mercenaries and indiscriminately bombed cities, and others broke under pressure from rebel forces and NATO airstrikes.

Sounds like great material for US training — which has worked SO WELL in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Libya had an impressive arsenal for a small country, according to a report of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, with more than 4,000 tanks and other armored vehicles and 400 combat aircraft. Even so, combat-readiness on the equipment was “exceptionally low” and even its best combat units suffered from severe training and leadership problems, political favoritism and erratic training, the report said.

The new Libyan government is interested in maritime security, because of its long coastline, Ham said. That is also an area of defense in which the U.S. military can assist, he said.

Hey, why not a space program while we’re at it? Libya has a lot of air above, too.

Ham said Libya’s new leaders recognize the new military must be “inclusive” and not exclude professional officers from Gadhafi’s military as long as they did not participate in atrocities.

In Iraq, efforts to exclude from the military even midlevel officials in Saddam Hussein‘s ruling Baath Party deepened divisions.

Michael Rubin, a former adviser to the Coalition Provisional Authority in Baghdad, said military training would be a good way to prevent the militias roaming the country from disrupting the country.

Maybe midnight basketball, too.

A well-run and professional army and navy automatically gains legitimacy at the expense of militias, casting the latter as gangs rather than protective forces, he said.

I repeat: military training has worked SO WELL in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Rubin said U.S. involvement would also create personal relationships with Libyan officers that would provide intelligence benefits and help prevent militant infiltration of the Libyan military by helping it institute background checks. The U.S. military has learned from its experience in Iraq and Afghanistan, where militias competed with national forces for the hearts of young fighters, that “the sooner we start the easier it will be,” Rubin said.

If that’s what the U.S. military learned from Iraq and Afghanistan, it has learned nothing.

The Pentagon has also expressed concern about weapons and ammunition that may fall into the hands of rogue elements inside or outside the country. Gadhafi is believed to have stocked 20,000 portable surface-to-air missiles.

Ham said that some of the mercenaries who fought for Gadhafi might have brought weapons with them when they fled the country. There is “no hard evidence of that but my instinct tells me that’s a pretty likely outcome,” Ham said.

Unerring Ham.

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