Gaddafi Compound Attack Photos: A Look Inside Libyan Leader's Bab-al-Aziziya Home In Tripoli

PHOTOS: A Look Inside Gaddafi's Bab-al-Aziziya Compound

(AP) Moammar Gadhafi's main military compound, stormed Tuesday by Libyan rebels, was a sprawling blend of barracks, personal living quarters and offices seen as the most defining symbol of the leader's nearly 42-year rule. (Scroll down for photos of rebels inside the compound)

The Bab al-Aziziya military barracks came under heavy attack from NATO aircraft in the months leading up to the battle for Tripoli.

It was surrounded by a high wall fitted with sensors, alarms, and remote-control infrared cameras that constantly scanned the access roads, authors David Blundy and Andrew Lycett write in their book "Gadhafi and the Libyan Revolution." The video was fed back to a bank of television screens in a main security room.

Inside Gaddafi's Compound

Gadhafi's home and office sat in a bunker designed by West German engineers to withstand massive attack. The leader's wife and family lived in a two-story building, their opulent living room decorated with glass screens, paintings and sofas.

Gadhafi entertained guests in a Bedouin-style tent pitched near two tennis courts about 200 yards from the family home.

Blundy and Lycett describe Bab al-Aziziya as "a pleasant place, with the security of a prison but the facilities of a country club."

A cruise missile blasted an administration building in Bab al-Aziziya in March, knocking down half the three-story structure early in the campaign of airstrikes against Gadhafi. Months of NATO airstrikes left much of the rest of the compound largely demolished.

The compound was also targeted in a U.S. bombing in April 1986, after Washington held Libya responsible for a blast at a Berlin disco that killed two U.S. servicemen. on Tuesday, one rebel climbed onto a sculpture of a clenched fist crushing a U.S. fighter jet that had been erected after the strike.

Blundy and Lycett describe the compound as dominated by the 100-foot metal skeleton of a communications mast that kept Gadhafi in touch with his senior army officers in Sirte, Benghazi, and the main control center at the oasis town of Jufrah, 125 miles south of Sirte in the middle of the desert.

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