Alright, I'm sorry I went there. Its just from your posts you've been all attack and haven't conceded anything. I've done a little perusing of the web, and I will admit a few things.
First of all, I understand what you're saying about Libya and Syria. Syria is physically smaller, but the point was that of the enormous area that is Libya, only a small percentage needs to be covered by aircraft. With Syria though, you are right. Aleppo, Damascus, and Homs are all on the western half. I stand corrected.
Also, I will admit that some aircraft have been lost in Libya. One fighter went down in march due to malfunctions, and a helicopter drone went down in June
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/8590077/Libya-Nato-deny-Gaddafi-troops-shot-down-unmanned-drone.html
Other than that one plane, and that one drone, all other aircraft that have been shot down have been Libyan, at least as far as I could find.
And yes we are fighting a conventional war in Libya. A rough definition of unconventional warfare is subversive or guerilla actions. While I'll admit that we are doing PSYOPS campaigns, and subversion to some extent, a huge part of our role so far has been close air support. There is a clear-cut uniformed military that we are doing combat with. You may now mention various houses of Gadhaffi that were bombed as being unconventional, but electronic surveillance indicate they were command and control facilities as well.
While I agree that victory = stalemate, Syria cannot handle our air force. Iraq couldn't handle our air force in 1991 or 2003 and they had state-of-the-art Soviet and American missile launchers. In Desert Storm there was a radar floor of 50-100 feet, and our helicopter pilots flew in under that and knocked out their early warning systems. After the first few days, what planes Iraq had left wouldn't leave their airfields. I *just* finished a book on Desert Storm written by a 4 star from the theater, so I can cite these facts over and over for you.
And with the Cutliero plan, you're right. It is quite a *coincidence* that the Bosnians withdrew shortly after seeing Ambassador Zimmerman. I wasn't even referring to the beginning part of the conflict when I mentioned Bosnia though. I was referring to Operation Deliberate Force, which effectively ended the war. Also, I don't see what's wrong with Operation Storm. The Serbians were the aggressors trying to expand their state, and we helped the Croats stop it. I mean to me, its a sign that all peace treaties in the Balkans don't have be like the Treaty of Lausanne and divide everything up by ethnicity