In the Libya thread, there are several posters who advocate intervention in that country's internal conflict. One or two have claimed that we should do this in every case of liberty being denied.
The rebellion in Bahrain has largely gone unremarked. The Shia majority are protesting at their autocratic Sunni rulers and have been faced with some pretty heavy handed retaliation.
Yesterday, a column of Saudi armoured personnel carriers crossed the border to deliver 1,000 troops to aid the Bahraini king - and incidentally send a message to the increasingly fractious Shia in their own country.
This rather makes pleas for Western intervention in Libya subject to interesting analysis. If the fight for liberty and freedom is to be supported in Libya, surely Bahrain should be on our list of military interventions too? Clearly these rebels, if successful, may tend towards Iran, but that is their free choice (we have invaded a country previously to depose a Sunni dictator and hand a country over to Iranian influence, so why not now)? Should they be so minded, why shouldn't Iran be allowed to invade Bahrain on behalf of the Shia non-governmental majority as the interventionist would have us do in Libya, and as Saudi Arabia has done on behalf of the dictator? Surely the Saudis, as nurturers of the 9-11 bombers and hardline Islamist dogma - a country steeped in the worst kind of Shari'a law and seemingly determined to crush the legitimate aspirations of an oppressed majority in another country by force - should be subject to immediate sanction, if not military action, at long last?
Clearly, most would argue self-interest however foul a stench it leaves. Or the non-interventionist like myself would call a plague on all their houses and extend non-intervention to include arms sales, and as soon as we can make it practical, oil sales. But there have been some very high-mided calls for action in LIbya - how do proponents of intervention plan this new war?
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