In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Posts Tagged ‘Stop the bombing of Libya’

Washington planifie une occupation prolonguee d’une partie de la Libye

Posted by seumasach on August 21, 2011

Theirry Meyssan

Voltairenet

20 August, 2011

Alors que les télévisions atlantistes annoncent la chute imminente de Mouammar Kadhafi, Thierry Meyssan —présent à Tripoli— dénonce une intoxication. Selon lui, la guerre est autant psychologique que militaire. Les mensonges de la propagande visent à provoquer l’implosion de l’État libyen, l’objectif final n’étant plus de gouverner le pays, mais au contraire d’y installer le « chaos constructeur » au détriment de la population civile, afin de débuter le « remodelage de l’Afrique du Nord ».

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Rebel advances on Tripoli a fake!

Posted by seumasach on August 21, 2011

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Pan-Africanists in Barbados write open letter to US and UK on the Libya war

Posted by seumasach on August 20, 2011

PanAfrican News

17th August 2011

President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington D.C. U.S.A

AND

Prime Minister David Cameron
No 10 Downing Street
LondonU.K.

Dear Sirs,

I am writing this letter to you in my capacity as the representative of a group of 13 non- governmental, community-based organisations of the Caribbean nation of Barbados.

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Libye – Plus fort que les rebelles, tu meurs !

Posted by seumasach on August 20, 2011

Allain Jules

20th August, 2011

Le territoire contrôlé par Mouammar Kadhafi s’est réduit considérablement au cours des trois dernières semaines. Les rebelles avancent vers la capitale, Tripoli, à partir de l’ouest, du sud et de l’est. Abdessalem Jalloud, ancien n°2 déchu du régime Kadhafi a rejoint ces derniers. Ils sont victorieux sur tous les fronts. Dans la nuit, ils ont encore fait une annonce: le port de Brega est sous leur contrôle et la ville de Zahouïa est tombée dans leur escarcelle. Demain, ils seront dans la lune. C’est certain.  Diantre.

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As NATO scales back in Libya, pressure mounts to end war soon

Posted by seumasach on August 20, 2011

If, as claimed, Gaddafi is finished and the rebels are advancing on all fronts, it is heard to see why NATO would be so negative: surely a few more weeks of bombing isn’t beyond them. The reality, of course, is that the rebels aren’t advancing on all fronts and it is they who are finished due to lack of support. Why would the Libyan people support the destruction of their own country? NATO have a simple choice: back down or escalate. Escalation, through invasion, would mean being bogged down indefinitely in an unwinnable war. NATO now face only lunatic options. As this article seems to suggest the issue will be resolved by a decisive breaking of ranks amongst the NATO rump, most likely by France.
Paul Richter
20th August, 2011
Reporting from Washington—

The French and Italians have sent their aircraft carriers home. The British have withdrawn their spy plane. Canada is pulling out air crews. The Danes are running out of bombs. And the Norwegians have dropped out entirely.

As their Libyan rebel allies finally are showing progress on the battlefield, members of the NATO alliance are scraping and scrounging these days to keep the five-month air campaign against Moammar Kadafi‘s government aloft long enough to make it to the finish line.

The strains are adding pressure for NATO to negotiate an end to the war, even if Kadafi doesn’t leave the country as the Obama administration has long been demanding. And the effects of cost fatigue are mounting despite the fact that the rebels have advanced far enough to engage in fierce battles in two coastal cities on either side of the capital, Tripoli, on Friday.

With all the governments struggling to cut budgets, member countries are scrambling for savings, and in some cases begging or borrowing aircraft and munitions. Some are considering taking a “pause” in their participation.

“These pressures are real; they’re building. You can be sure we don’t want this to go on a day longer than it has to,” said a senior NATO official who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue.

British, French and American officials now say Kadafi could stay in Libya after giving up power if the rebels advancing on Tripoli agree. But this formulation poses a risk, U.S. officials acknowledge, because of the possibility he will continue to exert a strong influence on a future government.

“They changed the definition of winning — they moved the goal posts,” said Jorge Benitez, who studies NATO at the Atlantic Council, a nonprofit public policy group in Washington. The shift shows that “they feel they’ve got to end this as soon as possible.”

For now, NATO officials say they will stay the course, noting that the number of airstrikes against Kadafi’s military forces and command facilities has not diminished — in part because the British, French and Americans are picking up the slack.

When Norway withdrew its four F-16 fighter planes this month, for example, the British added four Tornado fighters to cover the gap.

But Britain, which plans to slice 7.5% from its defense budget, was forced to withdraw one of its aging Nimrod spy planes from the flight line in May and send it to the scrap heap.

Critics called it a humiliation for Britain, especially when it was disclosed that the Defense Ministry was borrowing a U.S. P-3 Orion surveillance plane to help protect its warships off Libya.

France has flown about one-third of the 7,397 strike sorties so far, more than any other country. But this month it sidelined the largest ship in the war, the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle, for maintenance and to save money.

French officials said the carrier will be out of action for “several months,” meaning it probably is gone for good.

The Italians, facing a financial crisis, last month swapped their carrier, the 1,000-sailor Garibaldi, for a smaller ship to cut costs.

With Italy determined to cut spending on the Libya war by half in the coming months, some NATO officials fear that it might close or limit use of its air bases, which carry a crucial share of the Libyan air war traffic.

That would force NATO to fly more war planes from bases in Greece, which is in even worse financial condition.

Canada’s government disclosed in June that it would trim costs by withdrawing crews assigned to the NATO Airborne Warning and Control System plane, now in heavy use over Libya.

Danish officials last week agreed to keep its four F-16s in the war until at least Oct. 1. But the Danes, who have flown more than 10% of the sorties, have reached out to other countries for help with aircraft, munitions and financing, NATO officials say.

The Pentagon has chiefly provided surveillance, intelligence-gathering, air refueling and other logistical support rather than conducting manned combat missions since the air war began in March.

But the Pentagon has added Predator drones, refueling planes and attack aircraft designed to suppress fire from antiaircraft batteries and other air defenses. The U.S. also has helped replenish other countries’ inventories of “smart” bombs and other munitions, say NATO officials.

Benitez, from the Atlantic Council, said the Pentagon’s growing use of drones and strikes against air defense units means that the Pentagon is now the second-largest player in the air war, racking up 16% of strike sorties.

NATO officials have requested more help from several member countries now playing little or no role, a group that includes Spain, Germany and Poland.

The alliance has been “forgiving when the smaller countries decide there are limits to what they contribute,” said Kurt Volker, who was U.S. ambassador to NATO during the George W. Bushadministration.

North Atlantic Treaty Organization members will decide next month whether to extend the Libya mission for three more months. With the U.S., France and Britain all publicly committed to continuing the campaign indefinitely, an extension appears likely.

But the senior NATO official said that the growing pressures leave open the possibility that one of the countries will try to block the extension, which can only be adopted by unanimous vote.

“In this environment, there’s reason to fear someone might just put up their hand and say, ‘No more,'” the official said.

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Airstrikes in Libya did not take place – Russian military

Posted by seumasach on August 20, 2011

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=mHQwjopA83E

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NATO, rebels accused of war crimes in Libya

Posted by seumasach on August 20, 2011

Alex Newman

Global Research

19th August, 2011

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is being heavily criticized for civilian casualties and a series of bombings apparently targeting essential non-military infrastructure in Libya, with some observers calling the actions war crimes. The Libyan rebels being supported by coalition forces have also been accused of wanton savagery and even crimes against humanity.

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Fake Messages Led to Libya war

Posted by seumasach on August 20, 2011

Marinella Correggia

Pravda

 

20th August, 2011

ARIS TWITTER, LIBYA WAR. HOW A FATAL TWITTER MESSAGE OPENS THE DOORS TO A MUCH WANTED WAR AGAINST LIBYA, THROUGH THE GATE OF UNSC RESOLUTIONS 1970 AND 1973.

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Calling for a Ceasefire in Libya

Posted by seumasach on August 19, 2011

FPIF

19th August, 2011

The undersigned organizations and individuals call on Congress to support peace, not war, in Libya. The four-month NATO military intervention in Libya, in which the U.S. Africa Command plays a vital role, has reached a stalemate, and is killing civilians rather than protecting them. The best way in the short term to save civilian lives and in the longer term to achieve the stability in which the Libyan people can develop democratic institutions is to promote an internationally-led cease-fire and negotiations between the warring parties, provide generous humanitarian assistance, and maintain a strict arms embargo. To encourage this, we urge Congress to bar funding for any military or intelligence operations against Libya.

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Libye – Et Kadhafi cassa la doxa occidentale !

Posted by seumasach on August 19, 2011

 

The destruction of the cultural and civilizational patrimony of humanity is characteristic of NATO and their acolytes. Remember the destruction of Orthodox churches in Serbia. When someone mentions culture they reach for their cruise missiles. In the incubus of imperial Britain, in Elizabethan times, a new hero emerged representing a complete break from the hang-ups of Christianity past and new, ruthless, expansionist impetus. This hero’s life was played out on the stage to popular aclaim in Marlowe’s “Tamberlaine”. NATO is the new Tamberlaine, “the scourge and wrath of God, The only fear and terror of the world’

Those walled garrisons will I subdue,
And write myself great lord of Africa:
So from the East unto the furthest West
Shall Tamburlaine extend his puissant arm.
The galleys and those pilling brigandines,
That yearly sail to the Venetian gulf,
And hover in the Straits for Christians’ wreck,
Shall lie at anchor in the Isle Asant,
Until the Persian fleet and men-of-war,
Sailing along the oriental sea,
Have fetch’d about the Indian continent,
Even from Persepolis to Mexico,
And thence unto the Straits of Jubalter;
Where they shall meet and join their force in one.
Keeping in awe the Bay of Portingale,
And all the ocean by the British shore;
And by this means I’ll win the world at last.

Allain Jules

18th August, 2011

« Les insurgés libyens ont pris jeudi le contrôle de la raffinerie de Zaouïah, l’une des dernières sources d’approvisionnement en carburant des forces de Mouammar Kadhafi, et occupé la ville de Gariane, isolant de plus en plus Tripoli », annonce fièrement, l’agence Reuters. Il a fallu des bombardements intensifs des forces de l’OTAN semble-t-il mais, attendons de voir comment ils vont tenir nos chers amis islamistes.

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Angolan president calls on NATO to end raids on Libya

Posted by seumasach on August 19, 2011

Mathaba

19th August, 2011

(Xinhua) — Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, who just took over the presidency of the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC), on Thursday called on the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) to cease the military intervention in Libya.

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