And of course, when you're bombing from the air, you're also bombing civilians -- which tends to upset the survivors and further undermine any strategic gains. Plus, the Gadhafis are crazy. So there aren't any good options here:
In an exclusive interview with ABC News "This Week" anchor Christiane Amanpour, Saif Gadhafi, son of Libyan leader Col. Moammar Gadhafi, expressed surprise at the Western coalition attack launched against Libya, and said that his father has no plans to step down from power.
"Yesterday, we were surprised that ... the Americans and the British and the French attacked Libya, attacked five cities. Terrorized people, and especially children, women, were so afraid yesterday," Saif Gadhafi said. "So it was big surprise that finally President Obama -- we thought he was a good man and friend of Arab world -- is bombing Libya."
He denied the Libyan government had continued attacks against resistance forces in Benghazi, telling Amanpour the city was controlled by "terrorists" and "armed militia" who are attacking civilians and the Libyan army.
"Our people went to Benghazi to liberate Benghazi from the gangsters and the armed militia," Gadhafi said. "If the Americans want to help the Libyan people in Benghazi … go to Benghazi and liberate Benghazi from the militia and the terrorists.
"No country in the world will allow the second-largest city to be controlled by gangsters and armed militia," he added. "Of course not."
Gadhafi dismissed the notion that his father would step down from power because of the air strikes against Libya.
"Step aside, why?" Gadhafi said when pressed by Amanpour. "Again, there is a big misunderstanding. The whole country is united against the armed militia and the terrorists. Simply the Americans and the other Western countries, you are supporting the terrorists and the armed militia. That's it."
Gadhafi said Americans will regret the military action against Libya, comparing Western support for opposition forces in Libya to inaccurate claims of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in Iraq before war began there in 2003.
"It's like the WMD, the fiasco of WMD," Gadhafi said. "WMD in Iraq, and armed militia in Libya. You would understand that in Libya it's not about peaceful demonstrations or people talking about democracy. ...We are fighting the terrorists."