Hence the operative word "or".
Not conquest
OR plunder.
:. Not invasion via the cited Merriam Webster definition.
Also, CIA may have civilian oversight, but they are trained in military grade weapons and tactics. They are civilian only in a funding sense; they are still combatants which work for the US government. It's far mor accurate to call them soldiers than to call the Libyan uprising a US invasion.
Don't let the movies fool you, the vast majority of what the CIA does is information gathering.
Namely, putting holes in paper, not people. Pushing paper in the office, not guns in people's faces in exotic secret prisons.
Yep, vast majority is information gathering and analysis, but also includes activities such as espionage, providing liasons/military training to sympathetic elements and spotting for drones/artillery/military insertion.
Oh, and paramilitary wetwork.Press reports served up in the wake of the bin Laden mission to the effect that special forces teams and their CIA paramilitary counterparts perform such feats on a daily basis only underscores the high quality of these units and their value to the nation.
I think it likely that there was at least a single CIA operative trained in field work in the country; local news papers here in Aus mentioned CIA acting as trainers and advisors to the Libyan rebels, and I cannot imagine them being sent without suitable training.
Finally, even if we do take CIA as civilian... that doesn't change my original point, as I used CIA
as an exception.
Invade might be a bit strong winded there; with the exception of CIA (who are probably everywhere), did even a single american soldier set foot in Libya?
Oh hey, CIA aren't soldiers? Well then, that makes my point all the more pertinent.
Unless you really want to claim that the U.S. invaded a country
a) Without conquering it.
b) Without looting it.
c) Without any soldiers touching it.
Edited quote to clarify who that was directed at.