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Libyan Capital Targeted By Fourth Night Of NATO Airstrikes

Libya

First Posted: 05/27/11 01:18 AM ET Updated: 07/26/11 06:12 AM ET

May 26, 2011 10:51:51 PM

By Joseph Logan and Mohammed Abbas

TRIPOLI/MISRATA, Libya, May 26 (Reuters) - NATO launched a fourth night of airstrikes on Tripoli on Thursday, leaving smoke rising from Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi's compound, after the United States said a ceasefire offer from Libya was not credible.

Several large explosions rocked Tripoli late on Thursday night and a column of smoke was seen rising from Gaddafi's Bab al-Aziziyah base, a Reuters correspondent said.

Forces loyal to Gaddafi launched the heaviest bombardment on the rebel-held city of Misrata for days earlier on Thursday as Western leaders gathered for a Group of Eight summit in the French seaside resort of Deauville.

Rebel spokesmen in Misrata, scene of some of the fiercest fighting in Libya's three month old conflict, said a mortar attack there killed three rebels.

Suleim Al-Faqih said the Misrata clashes started when rebels attacked Gaddafi forces who were using an excavator to dig a trench to block a road.

"We fired on them and advanced. They fell back and started firing mortars," he said.

At a news conference in Misrata late on Thursday, Fathi al Bashaagha, a member of the town's military council, said rebel forces advanced four km (two miles) west on Thursday and destroyed weapons depots belonging to Gaddafi loyalists before falling back to their front line on Misrata's outskirts.

The military council said it had no immediate plans to advance on Zlitan, the next major town west on the road to Tripoli, which is currently held by Gaddafi loyalists.

"We're waiting for Zlitan to start the battle, then we will be at their call," Bashaagha said. "We think that will be in the next few days."

Spain said it was one of several foreign states contacted by Libyan Prime Minister Al-Baghdadi Ali Al-Mahmoudi with an offer of an immediate ceasefire.

But White House deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes, speaking in Deauville, said the United States did not see the new Libyan ceasefire offer as credible.

Libya was not complying with U.N. demands and its forces were still attacking population centres, so the United States would continue with the military campaign, he told reporters.

GADDAFI DEPARTURE ESSENTIAL

At a Tripoli news conference, Al-Mahmoudi said the offer was based on an existing African Union roadmap to resolve the conflict, which, crucially, does not mention Gaddafi's future.

"Libya is serious about a ceasefire," he said.

But he added: "The leader Muammar Gaddafi is the leader of the Libyan people; he decides what the Libyan people think. He is in the hearts of the Libyan people."

The rebels said they wanted any government initiative to include the Libyan leader's departure as a first step.

"We welcome any initiative which starts with the departure of Gaddafi, his sons and his regime from Libya," Mustafa Abdel Jalil, head of the rebel Transitional National Council, said on Al Jazeera television.

Gaddafi's security forces cracked down ferociously when thousands of Libyans rebelled against his rule. NATO missiles and warplanes have been bombing targets in Libya for two months under a U.N. mandate to protect civilians from attack.

Rebels now control the east of the country, around their main stronghold of Benghazi, and pockets of land in the West.

But the conflict has reached stalemate on the ground, with the rebels unable to advance towards Tripoli and NATO powers -- wary of getting sucked into new conflicts after their experience in Iraq and Afghanistan -- refusing to put troops on the ground.

Nevertheless, Western officials say they are confident that they are gradually loosening Gaddafi's grip on power through a combination of sanctions and military and diplomatic pressure.

British diplomatic sources said many of Gaddafi's senior commanders had stopped using their telephones for fear that their calls were being listened to, and there was a sense that the "regime was feeling the pressure and beginning to fracture".

Libya's ambassador to the European Union and Benelux countries, Al Hadi Hadeiba, earlier defected after lengthy talks with EU officials, the Union said.

Britain's defence ministry said its Typhoon and Tornado aircraft had used Paveway guided bombs to attack a military vehicle depot at Tiji, in western Libya, which was being used to support attacks on the rebel-held Western mountains region.

British officials said Britain's helicopters were now ready to fly sorties over Libya. British ministers gave clearance in principle for the use of Apache helicopters on Thursday.

France has already said it will deploy attack helicopters.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, the most hawkish Western leader on Libya, is hosting the G8 summit and is expected to use it to press other powers to ramp up pressure on Gaddafi.

Attempts to build a consensus at the summit on Libya may be prevented by Russia, which opposes the NATO bombing.

Gaddafi denies that his troops target civilians and say his security forces were forced to act to put down a rebellion by criminals and members of al Qaeda. (Reporting by Joseph Logan in Tripoli, Mohammed Abbas in Misrata, Hamid Ould Ahmed in Algiers, Tracy Rucinski in Madrid, Sami Aboudi in Cairo, Missy Ryan in Washington, Tim Castle in London, Keith Weir in Deauville, Joseph Nasr in Berlin and Steve Gutterman in Moscow; Writing by Christian Lowe and Jan Harvey; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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May 26, 2011 10:51:51 PM By Joseph Logan and Mohammed Abbas TRIPOLI/MISRATA, Libya, May 26 (Reuters) - NATO launched a fourth night of airstrikes on Tripoli on Thursday, leaving smoke rising...
May 26, 2011 10:51:51 PM By Joseph Logan and Mohammed Abbas TRIPOLI/MISRATA, Libya, May 26 (Reuters) - NATO launched a fourth night of airstrikes on Tripoli on Thursday, leaving smoke rising...
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01:01 AM on 05/30/2011
This systematic rape is done to those families that the Gadaffi's regime views as sympathetic towards the rebels. These acts are done to silence and bring shame to those families. This Rwandan style of intimidation is politics of the worst kind and the perpetrators need to be tried for war crimes. If there is any doubt that these actions are ordered directly from the regime we only need to look at who are the perpetrators. Captured soldiers report (Andrew Harding B.B.C. May 23) that the soldiers organizing these rapes were Libyan Special Forces who take their orders from the top.
http://politicsdisgust.blogspot.com
07:22 AM on 05/28/2011
The West hates Gaddafi because he is a leader of a small rich nation backing revolutionary independence movements, he is against racism (in Libya and the West), he apologized for Arabs participating in the slave trade, he wants to create a United Africa, he gives his resources to his people, the Jamahiriya is a better system than a republic, and he is an anti-imperialist. Libya also doesn't depend on foreign aid to sustain itself. Thanks to Gaddafi, Libya is now the richest nation in Africa. Before, even with all the resources, it was one of the poorest. He came to power with a bloodless coup, he has offered amnesty to the rebels time after time, he's even willing to negotiate with them (even though they reject it), and this CIVIL WAR (not protest) would have ended months ago if it wasn't for NATO hypocritically attacking an African Nation... Yeah because Europeans feel that it is their moral obligation to fight the problems in Africa by bombing it more. It's so good for the Libyan people to destroy its entire infrastructure. It's so good for the American people to waste millions of dollars on war.
07:22 AM on 05/28/2011
This is all a lie. The Libyan situation was an armed insurrection, not a ''peaceful protest'' by dissatisfied pro-democracy citizens. These people are waving the flag of the old monarchy. Get it - MONARCHY. These people are tribe's people. I find it funny how these articles on Gaddafi have key words like "pro-Gaddafi forces" instead of saying the people. The people are in favour of Gaddafi. Obama, 1st black President of the United States, and he attacks an African nation, proving that he is a puppet.

NATO should attack Bahrain or Saudi Arabia, but that doesn't suit the western interests. In fact, the U.S. supports those same authoritarian leaders. The UN is also a lie and pointless. It's a racist institution. Communist China, authoritarian Russia, and terrorist-supporting European states make up the security council. They say Gaddafi was ''rambling'' when he mocked the UN last year, but he told the truth.
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07:18 PM on 05/27/2011
BBC reports credible evidence of systematic ra pe in Misrata.

Soldiers ordered to gang ra pe women and girls. In front of their families.

Read it if you have a strong stomach:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-13502715
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
se72748
06:26 PM on 05/27/2011
I don't think Gadafy has any choise but to fight to the death.If he quits the fight he will be arrested tried,found guilty and killed.NATO should shoot to kill and forget any idea of chasing him out of power.It ain't going to happen.Gadafy will never surrender
05:01 PM on 05/27/2011
I didn't like the mood of this article:

"Gaddafi's security forces cracked down ferociously when thousands of Libyans rebelled against his rule."
Sure he tried to stop the protests. But calling the occasional killing of a few protesters "ferocious" is in my opinion an inflation of the word. What happened in Hama, Syria a few decades ago that is ferocious. Gaddafi is just a dictator trying to suppress a rebellion with the minimum number of casualties necessary. Not nice, but if he leaves we may very well see civil war with much more casualties.

"But the conflict has reached stalemate on the ground, with the rebels unable to advance towards Tripoli"
You might have said that Gaddafi has considerable support amongst the population and that one of the reasons the rebels are stuck is that they have conquered the regions where Gaddafi is most unpopular and they are increasingly reaching regions were he has considerable support.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptainRenault
Here to keep an eye on the rascals.
07:09 PM on 05/27/2011
mm: "Gaddafi is just a dictator trying to suppress a rebellion with the minimum number of casualties necessary.: . "

You're joking, right?

^ ^
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09:00 PM on 05/27/2011
I think he is fooling himself....
04:52 PM on 05/27/2011
If NATO wants to back the Rebels then back them with weapons... how many Arab Leaugue Nations have given weapons and support to the ati Quadaffi forces? They were all for NATO stepping in. Again it will be up to the USA to fund this mess.
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07:08 PM on 05/27/2011
Germany is paying 1/4 of the bill. France, Britain and Italy are all paying part of the bill.
04:30 PM on 05/27/2011
But White House deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes, speaking in Deauville, said the United States did not see the new Libyan ceasefire offer as credible.

Libya was not complying with U.N. demands and its forces were still attacking population centres, so the United States would continue with the military campaign, he told reporters.

Oh... I thought we handed this mess over to NATO... wait.. the USA IS NATO
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07:09 PM on 05/27/2011
I have no idea if you even attempted to make a point there. Really.
03:23 PM on 05/27/2011
NATO thuggery....shame on us...

Cheers, from CT
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03:16 PM on 05/27/2011
Clinton says the US is flying 25 percent of the NATO sorties in Libya. So much for our "limited involvement."
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06:16 PM on 05/27/2011
USA flew over 90% of air sorties in Iraq. Are you saying 25% is not an improvement and a sharing of responsibility?
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06:56 PM on 05/27/2011
My comment was only 20 words long and yet you had trouble understanding it. Did I compare Libya and Iraq? No. I compared what we we're doing in Libya with what we were told we'd do there. Flying 25 percent of the sorties isn't a limited involvement. If you want to disagree with what I said, fine. But disagreeing with what i didn't say is stupid.
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07:10 PM on 05/27/2011
How few do you need for it to be before you stop crying over it?
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07:24 PM on 05/27/2011
Succinct and witty with just the right amount of snark. B .
Pauline Jaing
Artist, worker, mother
12:41 PM on 05/27/2011
Such merciful bombing! I can JUST imagine how merciful I'd feel NATO were if it was my neighborhoood they were bombing.

God will punish them I believe.
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07:12 PM on 05/27/2011
Yawn.

Qaddafi has a lively propaganda machine, and plenty of foreign reporters in Tripoli, including Western reporters.

If NATO's bombing was indiscriminate and wanton, be assured you would be reading about it in the papers.
12:11 PM on 05/28/2011
We aren't no thin red 'eroes, nor we aren't no blackguards too,
But single men in barricks, most remarkable like you;
An' if sometimes our conduck isn't all your fancy paints,
Why, single men in barricks don't grow into plaster saints;
While it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' "Tommy, fall be'ind",
But it's "Please to walk in front, sir", when there's trouble in the wind,
There's trouble in the wind, my boys, there's trouble in the wind,
O it's "Please to walk in front, sir", when there's trouble in the wind.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
12:29 PM on 05/27/2011
So much for 'protecting civilians' and 'humanitarian' BS. This is a war against Libya
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07:12 PM on 05/27/2011
No, it is not.

It is a war against Qaddafi. Qaddafi is no more Libya that Bush or Obama are America.
11:59 AM on 05/27/2011
On Sunday morning, December 7th, 1941 the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. At a meeting at the White House on December 21, 1941 FDR expressed to the Joint Chiefs of Staff that Japan be bombed as soon as possible to boost public morale.

October 23, 1983 in Beirut Lebanon, a truck packed with explosives raced past marine guards and hit the main marine building near the Beirut airports. The explosion killed the driver of the truck and 241 marines asleep in their barracks. President Reagan ordered the troops to leave Lebanon.

On 8 April 2009, four Somali pirates seized the Maersk Alabama. On April 12, 2009 President Obama ordered the Navy Seals to rescue Captain Richard Phillips and they killed three pirates and rescued the Captain.

On April 30, 2011 Navy Seals on the order of President Obama raided the compound of Osama Bin Laden, the mastermind of the Twin Towers Attack and killed him.

President Obama warned Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi on Wednesday, May 25, 2011, there would be 'no let-up' in pressure on him to go, following a second successive night of heavy NATO bombing in Tripoli.

If President Obama is an amateur. Then God Bless Amateurs!
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04:02 PM on 05/27/2011
He was an amateur. He's a pro now. Like his predecessors, he's become an expert at expanding presidential power and lying to the American people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptainRenault
Here to keep an eye on the rascals.
07:11 PM on 05/27/2011
Oh, I think that he's got an awful long way to go before he holds a candle to the Bush Mafia.

^ ^
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07:13 PM on 05/27/2011
Cry me a river.
11:48 AM on 05/27/2011
NATO has become an extension of the American military. France, Britain, and Italy are now our mercenaries.
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07:14 PM on 05/27/2011
Yawn. It is an alliance. Allies tend to join each other in military combat.

That is sort of the point of an alliance.
11:29 AM on 05/27/2011
What a strange way to enforce a no fly zone, bomb the people on the ground.
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07:15 PM on 05/27/2011
You apparently have no idea what the actual language of resolution 1973 is.

Do us all a favor and learn about it before you pop off again.
09:32 PM on 05/27/2011
reading some of your comments, you really are a nasty little smug waste