In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Posts Tagged ‘Stop the bombing of Libya’

Libya: Demonization and Self-determination

Posted by seumasach on July 24, 2011

Sara Flounders

Global Research

24th July, 2011

If you went to a shopping center, a street corner or a graduate school of a top university in the U.S. and conducted a pop quiz asking who are the kings or crown princes of Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Morocco and Bahrain; the emir of Kuwait, Qatar or Dubai; and the sultan of Oman, most people would not be able to name any of them.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

NATO in trouble

Posted by seumasach on July 23, 2011

Manuel Domingos Neto

Pravda

23rd July, 2011

Only despair before the crisis would lead European leaders to calculate so badly with their intervention in Libya. Inspired by the toppling of Arab regimes and relying on wearing down Qaddafi, they mounted an unconvincing justification for “humanitarian” help. They encouraged defections from the Libyan government and froze one hundred billion dollars in reserves of the country.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Disband NATO!, Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

NATO mistakes Muammar Gaddafi for the gutless wonders they are

Posted by seumasach on July 21, 2011

Lisa Karpova

Pravda

21sy July, 2011

Part of the massive mainstream media campaign of lies and disinformation is the attempt to declare that Muammar Gaddafi is going to agree to go off somewhere into exile, which couldn’t be further from the truth.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Leanor is a Frequent Visitor to Libya – She Tells All

Posted by seumasach on July 21, 2011

Posted in Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

France suggests plan for Gaddafi to stay in Libya

Posted by seumasach on July 21, 2011

So there you have it: the so-called rebels have not taken Brega as widely trumpeted by desperate western media sources. It looks rather that they have suffered a defeat losing 60 fighters in the battle, a significant loss for what John Bolton describes as an insignificant force. Since Gaddafi is clearly winning and most of Libya has rallied round him, why should he step down? Only because of threats from NATO which are probably vacuous- the political will, the heart seems to have gone out the Atlanticist terror grouping.

Telegraph

21st July, 2011

Gaddafi insists he will neither step down nor flee the country he has led for four decades. With the Nato-led air campaign against Gaddafi’s forces entering its fifth month and the fighting in a stalemate, the international community is seeking exit strategies.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Why is Obama giving Libya to the Russians?-Bolton

Posted by seumasach on July 21, 2011

There is no greater proof of the disastrous course of this war from a NATO point view than the fact that enemies of NATO such as ourselves are able to cite neo-cons like Bolton in defence of our case. His article is a futile rant against the inevitable ebbing of US power in the world.

But in the last four months, neither America nor its NATO allies have successfully identified and strengthened (quietly or otherwise), a truly significant cadre of pro-Western voices in Libya

This sums up the rebels: they are pro-Western but insignificant in terms of support from the Libyan people.

Reuters

20th July, 2011

John R. Bolton, the 25th United States Ambassador to the United Nations (from 2005 to 2006), is of counsel at Kirkland & Ellis and is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. The opinions expressed here are his own —

WASHINGTON, July 20 (Reuters) – With President Obama’s Libya policy staggering from one embarrassment to another, last week he and Secretary of State Clinton outdid themselves. They publicly welcomed Russia’s effort to insert itself as a mediator, an act of such strategic myopia that it must leave even Moscow’s leadership speechless.

Full article

 

Posted in Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Telegraph exposes Libyan rebel terror

Posted by seumasach on July 21, 2011

Within the context of the western press which has done so much to orchestrate a cacophony of lies around events in Libya, this is a remarkable recognition suggestive, not of a few rotten apples as Amnesty seems to want to imply, but sustained terror. The normally gung-ho Telegraph is showing disillusionment with this war, a reflection of just how disastrous it has been.

The headless corpse, the mass grave and worrying questions about Libya’s rebel army

Telegraph

21st July, 2011

The streaks of blood, smeared along the sides of this impromptu mass grave suggested a rushed operation, a hurried attempt to dispose of the victims.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Signs of Hope: Libya’s Promise of Tomorrow and a New Strategic Axis?

Posted by seumasach on July 20, 2011

Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya

Voltairenet

20th July, 2011
The Libyans have realized that they need to continue on a pan-African path and to follow a model of self-sufficiency. Many in Tripoli have also started thinking about the future. Old disputes and animosities may also be put aside with other global players that are opposed to U.S. hegemony and opposed to NATO.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Disband NATO!, Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

NATO strikes radar system at Tripoli airport

Posted by seumasach on July 20, 2011

Some journalists at the NATO press conference don’t believe the story that the destroyed antenna isn’t necessary for civilian purposes i.e. humanitarian missions which NATO claims it is facilitating:

Q: Yes, Brooks Tigner, Jane’s Defence. Just a small technical question on this air tower. If it was a key antenna site I assume there must be other back-up antenna for civilian landing purposes. If not, how are these aircraft being guided? Are you using the AWACS to guide them into the Tripoli airport, or what? Thank you.

Colonel Roland Lavoie: Actually, that antenna is not required to allow the landing of aircraft because its function was to track the air traffic from a distance. So it’s not to provide landing assistance at all. You raise an important point, however, in terms of backups. It is of use that there’s always the possibilities that some specific targets that we may engage could eventually be repaired and this is the reason why we constantly monitor with sophisticated intelligence airborne means the situation. And sometimes we have to revisit specific military targets to ensure that they are not repaired or reactivated.

Does this answer your question?

Oana Lungescu:I think it does. AP. Can you… Pascal, could you possibly just turn that off. Merci.

Q: Yes, Colonel, Slobo Lekic from the Associated Press. I used to be a commercial pilot. I have to say I’m surprised to find out that air traffic control doesn’t use radars to guide planes and to clear them for landing. As far as I know it’s routine procedure, especially when there are several plains in holding pattern over the airport and in conditions of low visibility to use the radar to keep a safe distance between the planes and both horizontally and vertically and to clear them for the final approach.

So, I have to say I’m very surprised that you would say that the radar isn’t necessary. I don’t know any traffic controller who would agree with you.

Colonel Roland Lavoie: Thank you for the question. The Triopli airport still has the ability to control the landing of aircraft, so I will not go into the details of that specific target, but I could assure you that air traffic, especially the air traffic that is authorized and legitimate, will in no way be prevented from landing in Tripoli as a result of that engagement.

And as I mentioned, no later than yesterday, just a few hours after that target was hit, there was a successful, of course, and safe landing of a humanitarian aid aircraft.

People’s Daily

19th July, 2011

NATO forces destroyed on Monday an antenna radar system at Tripoli’s main airport, which was being used solely for military purposes, the military alliance said.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

NATO denies coordination with Libyan rebels in Brega

Posted by seumasach on July 20, 2011

This NATO spokesman is the new spokesman for the ironically titled Operation Unified Protector- he is contradicting claims about the fall of Brega and emphasizing NATO’s supposed dissociation  from the rebels. This new NATO spin presumably reflects that organisation’s deep divisions over an increasingly disastrous war and is consistent with French statements to the effect that further military action is useless.

People’s Daily

20th July, 2011

A NATO spokesman dismissed on Tuesday that the military alliance had “direct coordination” with Libyan rebel forces, who fought their way into the eastern oil town of Brega.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Is NATO arming the Libyan “rebels”?

Posted by seumasach on July 20, 2011

Timothy Bancroft-Hinchey

Pravda

19th July, 2011

Reports are coming in of a vessel carrying weapons, some fabricated in the United States of America, together with 500 mercenaries, sailing through the Suez Canal towards Libya. Certainly, western mercenaries have been captured. After a number of western lies have been uncovered, we see the truth coming out of Libya as we expose NATO’s lies.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Libya | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »