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Posts Tagged ‘Stop the bombing of Libya’

What’s really at stake in Libya

Posted by seumasach on July 2, 2011

Pepe Escobar

Asia Times

 

30th June, 2011

Way beyond the impenetrable fog of war, the ongoing tragedy in Libya is morphing into a war of acronyms that graphically depicts the tortuous “birth pangs” of a possibly new world order.

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Libyans rally round Gaddafi

Posted by seumasach on July 2, 2011

In the face of NATO attack a mass protest has been held again in Tripoli. Before the NATO campaign Gaddafi seemed unable to rally support but, unsurprisingly, as NATO continue their illegal action, killing civilians and destroying infrastructure, the Libyan people are turning out en masse in defense of their national sovereignty.

See video report

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Russia: arming Libya rebels is “crude violation”

Posted by seumasach on July 1, 2011

Ottawa Citizen

30th June, 2011

TRIPOLI – Russia accused France on Thursday of committing a “crude violation” of a UN weapons embargo by arming Libyan rebels, a stance which could also cause unease within the Western alliance bombing to remove Moammar Gadhafi.

 

France confirmed on Wednesday that it had air-dropped arms to rebels in Libya’s Western Mountains, becoming the first NATO country to openly acknowledge arming the insurgency against Gadhafi’s 41-year rule.

 

France, Britain and the United States are leading a three-month-old air campaign which they say they will not end until Gadhafi falls. The war has become the bloodiest of the “Arab Spring” uprisings sweeping North Africa and the Middle East.

 

Rebel advances have been slow, although the insurgents claimed successes this week in the Western Mountains region where they received the French arms, pushing on Sunday to within 80 km (50 miles) of Tripoli, Gadhafi’s main stronghold.

 

“We asked our French colleagues today whether reports that weapons from France were delivered to Libyan rebels correspond with reality,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said.

 

“If this is confirmed, it is a very crude violation of UN Security Council Resolution 1970,” he said. That resolution, adopted in February, imposed a comprehensive arms embargo on Libya.

 

Paris said on Wednesday it believed it had not violated the UN embargo because the weapons it gave the rebels were needed to protect civilians from an imminent attack, which it says is allowed under a later Security Council resolution.

 

Although Russia is not involved in the bombing campaign, its stance could add to reservations among some NATO countries wary over an air war that has lasted longer and cost more than expected. Moscow could also challenge Paris at the UN Security Council, where both are veto-wielding permanent members.

 

France’s weapons airlift, while possibly increasing the insurgent threat to Gaddafi, highlights a dilemma for NATO.

 

More than 90 days into its bombing campaign, Gaddafi is still in power and no breakthrough is in sight, making some NATO members feel they should help the rebels more pro-actively, something the poorly armed insurgents have encouraged.

 

But if they do that, they risk fracturing the cohesion of the international coalition because of differences over how far to go in trying to topple Gaddafi.

 

Even before news of the French arms supply emerged, fissures were emerging in the coalition with some members voicing frustration about the high cost, civilian casualties, and the elusiveness of a military victory.

 

Gaddafi says the NATO campaign is an act of colonial aggression aimed at stealing the North African state’s oil. He says NATO’s UN-mandated justification for its campaign — to protect Libyan civilians from attack — is spurious.

 

FRANCE ACTS ALONE

 

NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen made clear on Thursday the weapons airlift was a unilateral French initiative. Asked by reporters on a visit to Vienna if NATO had been involved, he answered: “No.”

 

“As regards compliance with the UN Security Council resolution, it is for the UN sanctions committee to determine that,” Rasmussen said.

 

The rebels are pushing towards Tripoli from the mountains to the southwest and from the coast to the east, where they have made scant progress advancing from their stronghold of Misrata.

 

In Misrata, about 200 km (130 miles) east of Tripoli, which has been bombarded for months by Gaddafi’s security forces, six rockets landed early on Thursday near the oil refinery and port.

 

A Reuters journalist in Misrata reported no casualties.

 

Britain’s military said its Apache helicopters had attacked a government checkpoint and two military vehicles near Khoms, on the Mediterranean coast between Misrata and Tripoli.

 

Insurgents say Gaddafi’s forces are massing and bringing weapons to quell an uprising in Zlitan, the next big town along the road from Misrata to the capital. Rebels inside Zlitan said they mounted a raid on pro-Gaddafi positions on Wednesday night.

 

“(We) carried out a violent attack last night on checkpoints . . . and exchanged gunfire, killing a number of soldiers,” a rebel spokesman, who identified himself as Mabrouk, told Reuters from the town.

 

WEAPONS DROP

 

Le Figaro newspaper said France had parachuted rocket launchers, assault rifles and anti-tank missiles into the Western Mountains region, southwest of Tripoli, in early June.

 

A French military spokesman later confirmed arms had been delivered, although he said anti-tank missiles were not among them. Despite the diplomatic storm, the rebels encouraged more arms deliveries.

 

“Giving (us) weapons we will be able to decide the battle more quickly, so that we can shed as little blood as possible,” senior rebel figure Mahmoud Jibril told a news conference in Vienna.

 

The conflict has halted oil exports from Libya, helping push up world oil prices to near $112 per barrel.

 

Jibril said it may take years for oil exports to fully resume: “No, no oil is being sold. A lot of the oil well system was destroyed, especially in the east.”

 

Misrata’s rebels have pushed westwards out of the city but are blocked by government troops in Zlitan. In the eastern third of the country, rebel forces have been unable to advance west to the oil town of Brega.

 

Rebels in the Western Mountains advanced 30 km (19 miles) north towards Tripoli last week, but have since been held down by pro-Gaddafi forces around the town of Bir al-Ghanam, about 80 km short of the capital.

 

Nalut, a Western Mountains town near the border with Tunisia, came under artillery fire from pro-Gaddafi forces overnight, a rebel spokesman called Mohamed told Reuters.

 

“Two (rockets) hit the town centre while the rest landed on farmland surrounding the town,” he said.

© Copyright (c) Reuters

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Arming Libyan rebels contradicts case for war

Posted by seumasach on July 1, 2011

RT

 

30th June, 2011

The UN resolution allowing use of force against Gaddafi is meant to protect civilians. Armed rebels are clearly not civilians; so France’s airlifting of weapons to Libya goes against the whole case for the war, says British journalist John Laughland.

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Framing Libya and Reframing War

Posted by seumasach on July 1, 2011

Creative Destruction Part III:

Humanitarian Neo-colonialism:

Framing Libya and Reframing War

F.William Engdahl

Oilgeopolitics.net

3rd May, 2011

The most remarkable facet of NATO’s war against Libya is the fact that “world opinion,” that ever so nebulous thing, has accepted an act of overt military aggression against a sovereign country guilty of no violation of the UN Charter in an act  of de facto neo-colonialism, a ‘humanitarian’ war in violation of basic precepts of the laws of nations. The world has accepted it without realizing the implications if the war against Gaddafi’s Libya is allowed to succeed in forced regime change. At issue is not whether or not Gaddafi is good or evil. At issue is the very concept of the civilized law of nations and of just or unjust wars.

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Dutch call for political solution in Libya

Posted by seumasach on June 29, 2011

As NATO disintegrates it will continue to pledge itself, as in Afghanistan, to finishing the job, whatever that is.

Nato reviews Libya campaign after France admits arming rebels

Yahoo

29th June, 2011

 

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – The Dutch defence minister warned NATO allies on Wednesday against “mission creep” in Libya and forecast heated debate in the military alliance about the future of its campaign if it was not over by the end of September.

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France arming rebels

Posted by seumasach on June 29, 2011

 

Nato reviews Libya campaign after France admits arming rebels

Guardian

29th June, 2011

Nato was today urgently reviewing the conduct of its military campaign inLibya after France admitted arming rebel fighters in apparent defiance of the UN mandate.

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Tripoli bombed but steadfast

Posted by seumasach on June 29, 2011

Thierry Meyssan

Voltairenet

 

29th June, 2011

As the Libyan bombing campaign entered the 100th day, NATO announced its imminent success. However, since the aims of the war were never clearly defined, it is difficult to know what is meant by success. Simultaneously, the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant against Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, his son Seif al-Islam and the Libyan regime’s intelligence chief Abjullah al-Sanoussi for “crimes against humanity.”

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NATO Warning: Bombs may hit any place at any time!

Posted by seumasach on June 29, 2011

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Qadaffi: After you Brother!

Posted by seumasach on June 29, 2011

Qadaffi stays and Obama leaves?

Franklin Lamb

Opinion Maker

 

28th June, 2011

Gaddafi has survived assaults of various types from US Presidents’ Ford, Carter, Reagan, George Bush 1, Clinton, George Bush 2, and Obama. Vegas book makers are giving odds he’ll be the leader of Libya’s Fatah Revolution after the voters retire Obama, whose broken promises included telling them that the US would be involved in Libya for days, not months.

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‘NATO drops uranium bombs on Libya’

Posted by seumasach on June 29, 2011

PressTV

29th June, 2011

The Center for Research on Globalization says the bombs and missiles that the US-led military alliance has dropped on several Libyan cities contain depleted uranium (DU).

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