Ok yes you are right, it was NATO and not the US this time, that was in the 80s when the US bombed Lybia. However according to wiki
"More than 110 "Tomahawk" cruise missiles were fired in an initial assault by U.S. warships and a British submarine against Libyan air defences"
[ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Odyssey_Dawn"]Operation Odyssey Dawn - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/ame]
[ame]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Unified_Protector[/ame]
Yes I am serious Lybia was on the same or higher standard of living as Saudi Arabia under Gaddafi, not only that the human rights situhation was better than in saudi arabia,and it had the hightest GDP in Africa. Lots of oil in detroit?
The Arab Leauge does not speak for all countries, it is dominated by Qutar and Saudi Arabia. These are the two countires where most of the outside "rebels" in Lybia and Syria come from. So in fact these countries do have the balls, as there are sending marytars in holy jihad.
"Then again the Arab countries leaders don't want to know the meaning of democracy. It's probably part of their DNA. "
If you really think its "part of their DNA" I see no reason to discuss.
More info:
After government revenue, supported by rising oil prices, richly flowed once more, living conditions have clearly improved. The country now ranks 53rd on the HDI index, better than all other African countries and also better than the richer and Western-backed Saudi Arabia. Using โGovernment subsidies in health, agriculture and food imports,โ along with โa simultaneous increase in household income,โ could โextreme povertyโ be virtually eliminated, stated the UNDP in its monitor of the millennium development goals of the UN. (Millennium Development Goals: Goal 1 โ Goal 8, UNDP Libya Office)
The life expectancy rose to 74.5 years and is now the highest in Africa. It is now almost
one and a half years higher than in Saudi Arabia, which was the reverse of the situation in 1980 (UNDP Database) The infant mortality rate declined to 17 deaths per 1,000 births and is not nearly as high as in Algeria (41) and also lower than in Saudi Arabia (21). (WHO, Global Health Indicators 2010) Libya is also ahead in the care of pregnant women and the reduction of maternal mortality. Malaria was eradicated completely.
According to the UNDP, a lack of human resources in health care still presents a problem, but โthe gradual reintegration of the country into the international economy after the lifting of sanctionsโ is leading โto better availability of health care. The government provides all citizens with free health care and achieved high coverage in the most basic health areas.โ
The illiteracy rate dropped to 11.6 percent in Libya, and is well below that of Egypt (33.6 percent), Algeria (27.4 percent), Tunisia (22 percent) and
Saudi Arabia (14.5 percent). (See Human Development Report 2010)
The UNDP-calculated Education Index, which in addition to literacy also includes the number of pupils in secondary schools and university students, is even higher than that of small super-rich emirates
Kuwait and Qatar, which can hardly be compared with the Arab territorial states. (See UNDP, Arab Human Development Report 2009 and UNDP, Human Development Report 2009)
The UNDP certified that Libya has also made โa significant progress in
gender equality,โ particularly in the fields of education and health, while there is still much to do regarding representation in politics and the economy. With a relative low โindex of gender inequalityโ the UNDP places the country in the Human Development Report 2010 concerning gender equality at rank 52 and thus also well ahead of Egypt (ranked 108), Algeria (70), Tunisia (56),
Saudi Arabia (ranked 128) and Qatar (94). Even Argentina (ranked 60) seems worse in this regard
http://hdr.undp.org/en/reports/regional/arabstates/name,3442,en.html
http://hdr.undp.org/en/reports/global/hdr2010/
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BwXHJxOdfyA"]Was the CIA involved in Libya's revolution? - YouTube[/ame]