Taken from The Highchair Analyst
And so the coalition falls apart. First Amr Mussa wiggled out of the Arab League's support for actually enforcing Security Council Resolution 1973, the UAE stepped back from military involvement, Vladamir Putin thumbed his nose at it (but he might not be speaking for Russia, after all), Norway seemingly suspends their involvement, and now Italy's role seems to be in jeopardy as well, although it's unclear who exactly is in charge over there.
The US, Great Britain and France, meanwhile, are left holding the bag. And so much for limited American involvement. What's more it's unclear who, without the NATO framework as a guiding force, is in command of this operation? By a number of accounts the new head of US Africa Command is a capable individual, but USAFRICOM is a small operation that quite recently changed leadership. Finally, with infighting going on between member states of the North Atlantic Treaty Org., it seems that this mission is further put in jeopardy.
While I did not explicitly lay out this scenario in my breakdown of how things might unfold in Libya, a disorganized coalition without clear objectives is fairly disastrous.