NATO's bombing of Libya: Ten years on

It is ten years now since NATO bombed Libya with authorization from the United Nations Security Council to stop attacks by the army of the late Libya leader Muammar Gaddafi against civilians.
However, this
intervention had been catastrophic, according to Jacobin, a leading site of the
American left.
The same intervention
has opened the door for an endless cycle of violence and civil war in Libya,
the site said.
The rise in violence in
Libya prompted the United Nations to authorize the international community to
interfere in Libya.
This emboldened
Gaddafi's opponents. The United Kingdom and France launched a series of
airstrikes against Gaddafi's army. NATO then took the mission of leading the
military action against the late Libyan leader on 31 March 2011.
Jacobin said the
British and French interference in Libya was not based on correct intelligence
information.
It said the
interference that ostensibly aimed to protect civilians reverted to an
opportunistic desire to change the regime in Libya.
It added that the same
interference resulted in political and economic collapse in Libya, something
that opened the door for unending fighting between different militias and
humanitarian crises.
It also opened the door
for an exodus into Europe by illegal immigrants and a wide range of human
rights violations as well as a proliferation of arms across Libya, Jacobin
said.