, assistant professor of peace and conflict studies at 51ˇçÁ÷, called the Sept. 11 attack on the American Consulate in Benghazi and the resulting death of Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens a ârude wake-up call to the coalition of states that was too-quick to say âmission accomplishedâ following their humanitarian intervention last year.â
Mundy spent the summer in Libya researching the impact of NATOâs intervention there, and whether anti-Qaddafi rebellion forces had been engaged in war crimes while accepting NATO assistance.
Mundy accuses the international media of âgross negligenceâ for its lack of critical coverage of the rebellionâs post-conflict abuses, and its failure to take an interest in the âdangerous politics of revolutionary martyrdomâ taking shape there.
âWhile attacks on Western targets have been witnessed for several months in Libya, they have been largely ignored in the media,â he said. âItâs sad that it takes such a high- profile killing to wake up the press from its stupor.â
Mundy recently wrote about for the Middle East channel of .
âThe reconstruction debate is actually a coded language for a far more important political debate regarding the forces restructuring power relations in Libya today,â he wrote.
âPower is now heavily determined by three factors: the size and reach of each areaâs militias, each militiasâ role in the revolution, and each areaâs economic independence.â