Showing posts with label Libyan war. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Libyan war. Show all posts

Monday, May 2, 2011

Gaddafi family deaths reinforce doubts about Nato’s UN mandate

Posted: May 2, 2011 by crescentandcross

Saif al-Arab Gaddafi's home
The missile reportedly fired during a Nato air strike is seen in the Tripoli house of
Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Arab, who died in the attack.

 Nato is facing urgent questions about the legality of its air strike on a Gaddafi family compound at the weekend, which the Libyan government said had killed the leader’s second youngest son, 29-year old Saif al-Arab, and three grandchildren under 12. The grandchildren were not named.
The Libyan government spokesman, Moussa Ibrahim, said Muammar Gaddafi and his wife, Safiya, had been in the building at the time, but had escaped injury. He said the aim of the attack was clear: to assassinate the Libyan leader.

Nato swiftly scrambled to deny that it was targeting any individuals, insisting that it was only interested in attacking the military command structure.

The prime minister, David Cameron, told the BBC that UN resolutions permitted attacks against the regime’s “command and control” sites because their aim was to prevent “a loss of civilian life by targeting Gaddafi’s war-making machine”.

But the deaths of Gaddafi’s three grandchildren, if confirmed, will reinforce the doubts of alliance members uncomfortable with Nato’s six-week bombing campaign and generate criticism from countries such as Russia that Nato is pushing beyond its UN security council mandate.

“Statements by participants in the coalition that the strikes on Libya are not aimed at the physical destruction of … Gaddafi and members of his family raise serious doubts,” the Russian foreign ministry said. “The disproportionate use of force … is leading to detrimental consequences and the death of innocent civilians.” The ministry called for “an immediate ceasefire and the beginning of a political settlement process without preconditions.”

The Venezuelan president, Hugo Chávez, said in Caracas: “There is no doubt the order was given to kill Gaddafi. It doesn’t matter who else is killed … this is a murder.”

The attack, which one diplomatic source said had been carried out by Danish airmen possibly in an F16 bomber, ripped through the Gaddafi residence at around 8pm on Saturday night. It was the second time in recent days that an airstrike has come close to the Libyan leader, and Ibrahim indicated that someone within the leader’s circle may have leaked intelligence on his whereabouts.
But in Washington, Stephen Hadley, former national security adviser in the Bush administration, warned that the assassination of Gaddafi by Nato aircraft could prove counterproductive.

“The narrative we want to come out of this is that the Libyan people overthrew a dictator – not that we came in and toppled a despot,” he told CNN. “What we really want him to do is to leave or to die at a Libyan hand, not an American hand.”

But senior Republicans expressed little concern over the prospect of Gaddafi becoming a casualty. Senator Lindsey Graham told Fox News: “Wherever Gaddafi goes, he is a legitimate military target. He’s the command and control source. He’s not the legitimate leader of Libya and the way to get this to end is to go after the people around him and his support system.”

Reminded that assassinating foreign leaders is illegal, Graham said: “In my view, he’s not a foreign leader, he’s a murderer.”

John McCain, another Republican senator who specialises in foreign affairs, told CBS: “We should be taking out his command and control. If he is killed or injured because of that, that’s fine.”

Michele Bachmann, a Republican congresswoman considering seeking the Republican presidential nomination who was also on the Sunday talk shows, said it was foolish of Barack Obama to have become involved in Libya. She told Fox: “When President Obama went in, his doctrine was to enter Libya for humanitarian purposes. The point of what I am saying is that we are seeing many, many lives lost, including innocent civilians’ lives.

“What will be the ultimate objective and gain? I don’t see it. I think it was a foolish decision to have gotten involved.”

In spite of criticism by Russia that Nato is trying to assassinate Gaddafi, Moscow has stopped short of raising the attacks at the UN security council.

The Libyan government has been pressing Russia and China to challenge the legality of the Nato action. Both have expressed sympathy with the argument that Nato strikes against compounds where Gaddafi and his family live go beyond the UN mandate to protect civilians in rebel-held areas.

A UN security council official said on Sunday that there was no sign of Moscow seeking to bring the issue up at the security council. The official said China was taking its cue from Russia. Both abstained in the vote on the resolution sanctioning action against Libya in March.
According to British diplomats, the Gaddafi regime retaliated against the airstrike by dispatching a mob to attack western embassy buildings, which have been abandoned in recent weeks as the hostilities have gathered pace.

A spokeswoman said a building housing the ambassador’s residence had been set on fire, and according to initial reports had been burned down. Sky News journalist Mark Stone, who visited the embassy, reported on Twitter: “Totally burnt out. WW2 memorial smashed on the ground. Burnt out cars. Looted.”

A British official, speaking on condition of anonymity said there was no doubt in London that the mob attacks had been officially sanctioned. “There are no demos allowed to move anywhere in Tripoli unless they are 100% orchestrated by the regime.”

William Hague said: “I condemn the attacks on the British embassy premises in Tripoli as well as the diplomatic missions of other countries. The Vienna convention requires the Gaddafi regime to protect diplomatic missions in Tripoli. By failing to do so that regime has once again breached its international responsibilities and obligations. I take the failure to protect such premises very seriously indeed.”

Omar Jelban, the Libyan ambassador, who has worked as a diplomat in London since 2001, was given 24 hours to leave. Britain expelled five Libyan diplomats in March, on the grounds that they were a threat to national security.

Bombing aftermath: Twisted metal and a TV still on

It was a heavy blow, but not heavy enough to deflect the regime’s minders from their job. Within hours of the Nato attack on the house of Muammar Gaddafi’s youngest son, foreign journalists were being escorted through the shattered building to see for themselves the destructive impact of Nato air power.

The Gaddafi family complex, comprising two residences in a wealthy residential area of Tripoli, was a grotesque combination of the broken and the banal. One building was a wreck of shattered concrete and twisted metal, with an unexploded missile lying in the middle.

Libyan officials said the house had been hit by three missiles but only two had exploded. Dust and smoke rose from the rubble which included smashed toilet bowls, bathroom of smashed sinks and furniture amid demolished ceilings and walls. The kitchen clock had stopped at 8:08. Cooking pots with leftover food, including stuffed peppers, noodles and a stew, had been covered with aluminum foil.

In one room, the television was still turned on and a pile of PlayStation games lay on a sofa, including Modern Warfare 2 and Fifa Soccer 10, according to a Washington Post reporter. A pair of Homer Simpson slippers was half buried in the dust, and fruit lay in a bowl near a small green regime flag. Blood stains were visible on the wrecked furniture.

In a children’s bedroom next door, half an apple, clearly cut earlier in the evening, lay chopped up on a table between two beds. A children’s book lay on the ground. A table football machine stood outside in the garden of the house.

Crowds later gathered at the compound calling for revenge.

In Benghazi meanwhile celebratory gunfire rang out, even though many residents did not believe the news.
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Sunday, May 1, 2011

"... His killing in an air strike is militarily insignificant but diplomatically disastrous"

Via FLC

"... But his killing in an air strike is a grievous strategic error - militarily insignificant but diplomatically disastrous. The propaganda value of such unintended deaths is potentially severe”
Assassination of a head of state is illegal under international law, and forbidden by various US presidential orders. On the other hand, the targeted killing of those woven into the enemy chain of command is shrouded in legal ambiguity. Given the personalistic nature of the regime, and the "all means necessary" clause in UN Resolution 1973, it might be argued that killing Col Muammar Gaddafi and certain members of his family - such as his son Khamis, commander of an elite military brigade - would be permissible, even if it posed a risk to those non-combatants around the regime. Legality, though, indicates neither legitimacy nor prudence. This strike, and the death of Saif al-Arab, have produced little military result at the greatest diplomatic and symbolic cost to Nato...
In the 1991 Gulf War, a US stealth bomber directed two bombs at what was claimed to be a command-and-control bunker, but was in fact an Iraqi civilian shelter.
The result was 315 deaths, including 130 children. Col Gaddafi, like Saddam Hussein before him, will take every opportunity to exploit such errors to paint Western powers as indiscriminate aggressors.
Moreover, this is no longer a conventional war in which top-down direction is crucial. Pro-Gaddafi forces in both the besieged western city of Misrata and in the east have adapted to Nato's air power and are using increasingly unorthodox tactics.They need not rely on a stream of detailed orders from Tripoli, and can cause considerable harm to civilians without this guidance.
There is no doubt that, along with the military aim of disrupting command-and-control hubs, Nato sought a psychological effect, conscious of the possibility of "accidental assassination". The problem is that the direction of this effect is unclear. The dramatic visual impact of this air strike, and the death of those disconnected from political and military leadership, will harden the diplomatic opposition to the war, from Russia and China amongst others. more consequentially, it will anger the alliance's warier members, like Germany and Turkey, and inflame parts of Arab and African public opinion..."
Posted by G, M, Z, or B at 10:03 AM
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Gaddafi Son Killed After Talks Offer Rejected

Local Editor
A NATO air strike killed Moamer Gaddafi's youngest son and three grandchildren but the strongman escaped unhurt, a Libyan spokesman said on Sunday, after rebels and NATO spurned an offer for talks to end the crisis.

The house of Seif al-Arab Gaddafi, 29, "was attacked tonight with full power," government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim told reporters, announcing the deaths from Saturday night raids.

The Libyan leader and his wife were in the building but were not harmed, Ibrahim said, calling the strike "a direct operation to assassinate the leader of this country."

"The leader himself is in good health; he wasn't harmed. His wife is also in good health; she wasn't harmed, (but) other people were injured," he added.

Ibrahim later said intelligence on Gaddafi's whereabouts appeared to have been "leaked," adding: "They knew about him being there, or expected him for some reason."

The United States avoided comment on reported deaths in the Gaddafi family.

RAIDS

In the attacks, three massive explosions ripped through Gaddafi's headquarters in Tripoli on Saturday evening.

Volleys of anti-aircraft fire rang out following the first two strikes on Bab al-Aziziya. The aerial attacks were followed by a third from the same direction, media sources reported.

Meanwhile, 13 powerful explosions rocked the Libyan port city of Misratah late on Saturday as NATO warplanes struck targets in the opposition-held city.

Earlier in the day, Gaddafi said he would not step down, but he was ready for a ceasefire and negotiations, provided that NATO halted its airstrikes.

Rejecting his offer, NATO announced that it would only consider a ceasefire after Gaddafi forces stop attacking civilians.

The opposition has also dismissed Gaddafi's ceasefire proposal, saying he has no part to play in the country's future.

And despite Gaddafi's calls for a ceasefire, regime forces later rained mortar shells and rockets on Misratah, killing at least 15 people, including a nine-year-old boy.

The regime is trying to block access to Misratah by sea and has threatened to target any ships that enter the port city.
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Right or Wrong

You were Right, Right, Right 

Yvonne Ridley said Linyan war "is another oil-fuelled, reckless act by gung-ho leaders who would end up being sucked in to a long military campaign as futile as the Bush-Blair adventures into Iraq and Afghanistan that we are still paying for in terms of wasted lives."

First: I don't think USA-Nato is ready into a long military campaign in Libya as futile as the Bush-Blair adventures into Iraq and Afghanistan. On the contrary, because of their bloody intervention in both Iraq and Afghanistan they are using the so called soft power, divide the people ethnically, religiously, tribally, and let them kill each other.
Second: its not only about oil, they were getting the oil from Khadafy. its also about creation of a separation zone to prevent the integration of revolutions in Tunis and Egypt. Despite The Interim Transitional National Council wishful thinking and its committment to liberate every part of Libya from Aamsaad in the east to Ras Jdir in the west, and from Sirte in the north to Gatrun in the south, The No fly zone, and the "humanitarian intervention" is drawing the new borders of divided Libya, the US-Nato, and their Arab puppets wanted the people of Libya to be "brutally crushed without mercy" until they cry for help, as Sheikh Mohammed Bosidra told you. Those Libyans who are crystal clear in one thing: Gaddafi must go, should have thought and planed how they would force him to go, like in Tunis, Egypt, Yemen, and Bahrain, they should have avoided violence, and giving Khadafy an excuse to crushed without them mercy. So far the conspiracy failed in Tunis, and Egypt, but brought Libyans to their knees, and turned it from a popular revolution into a civil war.

Its not true that the war in libya is led by no one, with no particular aim, and its not true that the No fly zone prevented a Massacre. In every revolution, there is the people's will to get free, and there is the conspiracy's will, where conspiracy try to ride drive the people to face the wall untill they cry for help.

Somebody, called, the Arab uprising, "The Grand Arab Revolution", referring to the Grand Arab Revolution led by Sharif Husain of Mecca, where the people wanted liberation from the Ottoman Empire, and the Conspiracy was about dividing Arab world, and creation of the Zionist entity.

History is repeating itself, but in other forms. The so called "constructive chaos" is now used to redraw the region according to US-Israeli "geo-strategic needs and objectives." Therefore and Syria is the main target, because its the corner stone of the Resistance Axsis, The loss of Syria, God fordid, shall compensate the loss of Egypt, and pave the way to the NEW zionist middle east. The struggle is greater than Libya, its about the middle east, and its heard, Syria.
So the question is, even in Tunis and Egypt, is about who would laugh at the end.

Uprooted Palestinian

+++++++++++++++

Yvonne Ridley: “I was wrong to oppose military intervention in Libya – wrong, wrong, wrong”  

By Yvonne Ridley in Benghazi

30 April 2011

Yvonne Ridley explains from Benghazi in eastern Libya why she was wrong to oppose Western intervention in Libya, which she now accepts was necessary to avoid the bloodbath Libyan mafia chief Muammar Gaddafi had planned for Libyans for daring to rise up against him.

Just a few weeks ago I stood on a public platform and vigorously slammed proposals for Western military intervention in Libya.
The hasty scramble by the Americans, French and Britons lacked strategy and a clear goal.

To me it appeared to be yet another oil-fuelled, reckless act by gung-ho leaders who would end up being sucked in to a long military campaign as futile as the Bush-Blair adventures into Iraq and Afghanistan that we are still paying for in terms of wasted lives.

“Here we go again,” I said. “Another imperialistic adventure with the long-term aim of getting our grubby hands on other peoples’ oil.”

To those few Libyans present, I warned they would live to regret this pact with the West that I likened to jumping into bed with the devil.

Being very conscious of the fact I’m not a Libyan and desperate at not wanting to be seen as another opinionated Westerner sticking my nose into matters I didn’t understand, I sought the views of many Libyan friends and contacts.

Their reaction was mixed, but more often than not I was told that without outside help the Libyan people would be slaughtered by Gaddafi who himself described those who opposed him as cockroaches that needed to be crushed.

To justify my stand I reasoned that all revolutions are bloody and that the heroic people of Tunisia and Egypt had paid the blood price in their hundreds to win freedom.

I even recounted Malcolm X telling people that if they were not prepared to die for it they should remove the word freedom from their vocabulary.

Of course, making grand statements from platforms in central London is one thing but going to see for myself what was happening on the ground was something else.

My few days in Libya proved to be extremely humbling, illuminating and provided me with a reality check.

I was wrong about opposing military intervention. No if, buts or maybe – I was wrong, wrong, wrong.

The people of Libya would have been brutally crushed without mercy if the West had not responded to their cries for help.

Perhaps the greatest shame is that Arab leaders stood by emotionless as the Libyan people begged everyone and anyone for help to bring down Gaddafi.

Some of those Arab leaders had no such hesitation in answering cries for help from the oppressive royal regime in Bahrain – obviously the Saudis and rest of the Gulf Cooperation Council cabal felt uncomfortable helping to bring down an evil, brutal, dictator who routinely abused and oppressed his people while happily propping up another.

It could have been an opportunity for the rising regional power Turkey to step in to the breach but to the massive disappointment of the Libyan people Recep Tayyip Erdogan refused to become embroiled.

So in the end the West did intervene and although the blood of innocents is still flowing in the streets at least it is not a torrent.

And maybe this is a war led by no one, with no particular aim, but the enforcement of the no fly zone has prevented a massacre.

That is the view held by one of Libya's spiritual leaders, Sheikh Mohammed Bosidra, who told me: "We had no choice. It was either make a pact with NATO or be crushed. It was a matter of survival, as simple as that."

However many have already paid the ultimate blood price. Each town and city has a special place for its martyrs, and there are many. Faces of young men stared back at me from family portraits proudly hung in the central square in Benghazi and what struck me was how young they were.

In Derna, more portraits of the sons of Omar al-Mukhtar hung in the town centre and some of the bodies have been buried in a cemetery next to the tombs of three Sahaba and 70 other martyrs who fought against Roman and Byzantine forces in 692AD.

“We have a very fine tradition of producing martyrs in Derna and that is why Gaddafi hates the people of Derna more than anywhere else in Libya,” one woman told me.

And then she pointed to a French Tricolor and a Union Jack whispering: “Thank you, we will never forget what you have done for us.”

I admit I felt uncomfortable, even a fraud, on several different levels by accepting her thanks. Usually I end up apologizing for the deeds of various British governments and empire so this was something new for me.

We are still not clear what is the endgame of the NATO-led force, but the Libyan people are crystal clear in one thing: Gaddafi must go.

Only then can they begin to work out the next move, and it won’t be easy.

The Interim Transitional National Council says it is committed to liberate every part of Libya from Aamsaad in the east to Ras Jdir in the west, and from Sirte in the north to Gatrun in the south.

But from what I could see the mission is unstable and unpredictable, chaotic, disorganized and confused.

“It is clear to me that once Gaddafi is gone – and he will go – the Libyan people will not replace him with another tyrant or a Western puppet. Whatever government and constitution they choose will be one of their own making.”



However, what is undeniable is the bravery and courage of the Libyan people who we in the media routinely refer to as rebels. These people are not rebels. They are shopkeepers, students, doctors, businessmen and mechanics who have never owned a gun or wanted to pick one up in anger, until now.

And yet there they are tens of thousands prepared to die for freedoms and liberties they’ve never known in Gaddafi’s 41-year rule.

I was moved to tears by a regiment of young men who marched, rallied and chanted demanding to be sent to the front lines in Misrata to help their brothers in arms.

Their personally-delivered message in Benghazi was to the members of the interim government and they were extremely critical of some elements of the ITNC who they said were more interested in parading around with bodyguards intoxicated with the little power they had than making real decisions.

The criticism of the leadership was stinging but reassuring that these young men were not blind to the shortcomings of their own. Too often in the Middle East people are blind and unquestioning in their loyalty to their leaders.

It is clear to me that once Gaddafi is gone – and he will go – the Libyan people will not replace him with another tyrant or a Western puppet. Whatever government and constitution they choose will be one of their own making.

But first we in the West must give them all the help and support they need to accomplish the removal of Gaddafi until it is time for NATO to go in a dignified exit.

And who knows, for once, Western intervention might just be regarded as a force for good.

[Wishfull thinking]

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Monday, April 25, 2011

Coming soon to a theater..... near you !!!

FAD

http://www.solarnavigator.net/films_movies_actors/film_images/MGM_metro_golwyn_mayor_trade_mark_asr_gratia_artis_www.mgm.com.jpg
present:
The
Liberation of Libya
based on a Novel
by Rolf Blitzer
( Gone with the Oil )



S t a r r i n g:A well-paid nurse
A raped-student
A Colonel and his Sons
And the
air-dropped--Democracy
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/01441/Gaddafiitaly3_1441008c.jpghttp://www.oyetimes.com/plugins/content/contentoptimizer/50a21367d1e9274442bf60b1a4ec46cf793a9463_200x300_Q70.jpeghttp://www.charter97.org/photos/20090929-kaddafi.jpg
http://www.tdbimg.com/files/2011/03/26/img-hp-highlight---griswold-rape_205917815400.jpg_home_cheat.jpg


original-scrip by :
the CIA


Produced by :
The Pentagon
Directed by :
Hilarious Clinton
of
The State Department


executive producers
and casting :
The NATO


2 Oscar´s  nomination for :
best farce,   
and
best make-up


http://www.hunempires.com/en/images/stories/logo.pnghttp://www.hunempires.com/en/images/stories/logo.pnghttp://www.hunempires.com/en/images/stories/logo.png
music by
Ennio Berlusconi
Original theme-song by:
  Carla Bruni




parental guidance recommended



Sponcered by :
BP , TOTAL , ESSO




Posted by Tlaxcala at 1:51 PM
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

The Odyssey of the Libayn-civilian

FAD

 http://blogs.state.gov/images/Dipnote/behind_the_scenes/2011_0414_civilians_libya_m.jpg
Civilians

http://www.dw-world.de/image/0,,2021021_1,00.jpg
Refugees

http://emajmagazine.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/turkish-gastarbeiter-wdr-de.jpg
Foreign workers

http://www.centree.cn/en/images/b_2_4.jpg
and the , back home !!


"The NATO shall protect the civilians of Libya"
so we are told.......
Which civilians ,are protected ?? may I ask,
also the civilians supporting Qaddafi  ??............ I think not !!

So,  it must be exclusively to protect the anti-Qaddafi-civilians.

But once an-anti-Qaddafi-civilian starts to carry weapons.......
is he still considered as " civilian"  ???............I think not !! 
but he would still be protected by NATO because :
"The NATO shall protect the civilians of Libya"
so they said.

But ,
if and when some Libyan-civilians take a fisher-boat
and risk to sail to the south of Italy
and then ask for asylum......would they get it ???
I think not !!.........they would be deported,
or dropped over the borders into France
and then France smuggles them into Germany
to work as illegal-cheap-labour until their employers
shall send them back to Libya .........
as civilians without any civil-rights !!
(otherwise known as: illegal-alients)


Once back in Libya ,
Qaddafi shall give them a house,
a job and free-education for their children.
When those children will grow up,
they shall ask again for the removal
of the dictatorship of Qaddafi ,
because Qaddafi is not as democratic........... as Berlusconi !!
or  as Sarkozy !!
.................I think not !!


Sherlock HommosNovelist.
 
Posted by Tlaxcala at 1:33 PM
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Friday, April 22, 2011

Obama approves use of armed drones in Libya

Via FLC

... “President Obama has said that where we have some unique capabilities, he is willing to use those,” Gates said. “And in fact he has approved the use of armed Predators.” “What they will bring that is unique to the conflict is their ability to get down lower, therefore to be able to get better visibility on targets that have started to dig themselves into defensive positions,” Cartwright said. “They are uniquely suited for urban areas.”
Posted by G, M, Z, or B at 4:34 PM
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

GORDON DUFF: “PEACE MONGERS” IN SHEEPS CLOTHING


TWO OF THESE AND YOU HAVE A CIRCLE...SORT OF

April 19, 2011 posted by Gordon Duff

THE EXTREME RIGHT MAKES A HARD “LEFT” TURN INTO UNFAMILIAR TERRITORY

By Gordon Duff STAFF WRITER/Senior Editor
There are at least two ways to look at the UN/NATO intervention in Libya.  From an egalitarian standpoint, there is a resolution from the United Nations Security Council authorizing the use of force against the Gaddafi regime.  Russia and China could have easily vetoed it but chose to abstain.  They stayed out of it to cover their backsides.  They know what Gaddafi, a known psychopath, is capable of but they also know what the US, Britain, France and Italy can do also.  Gaddafi isn’t the only psychopath.
As to vital national interests, Libya hardly counts.  That the Mediterranean has long been accepted as an “American lake,” does loosely imply both American responsibility and complicity in anything that happens there as multiple interventions in Lebanon attest to. The world has one of those “since you are there anyway….” views about the US in the Mediterranean.
(On a side note, Saudi Arabia decided today to cut oil production, all the while oil is heading for the highest prices in history.  More on this in a bit.  The oil problem isn’t Libya but rather speculation in oil futures meant to bleed the US economy dry.  The recent attack on the dollar is partially driven by oil speculation.)
A key security component, not taken into account by most, is the enmity between Libya and Egypt, nations that share a common religion and absolutely nothing else, that has “fertilized” a decades old “marriage of convenience” between Israel and Libya, one we saw signs of during the early days of the current rebellion.


That “second” way is to oppose any US involvement.  For some, it makes sense, a clear result of moral and political views.  However, many of the new “peace mongers,” are a different lot, more “chickenhawk” than “dove.”
For the “left,”  reasons could be a love of peace, of which there is none, a sign of less than deep understanding of the issues, or a mistrust and even hatred of the United States and a belief that anything America does is driven by sinister intentions.
There certainly is a long and well established history of America acting with sinister intentions, no question about it.  Suspicion is always reality based.
Then again, we now have inside the “no Libya intervention” group  these very inexplicable “scavengers,” certainly not “predators,” who have taken on the mantle of “moral leadership,” something that may add a new and strange dimension to their resumes.
Our problem is that those leading the pack in damning the United States as a colonialist and aggressor is the same group supporting the policies of endless war in Afghanistan, a new war on Iran, unquestioned support for Israel’s predatory policies and the horrific human rights violations the United States has engaged in for years, kidnapping, torture and blanket assassinations, the “dronings.”

CALL TO ARMS OR GATHERING OF COCKROACHES

Subsequent to US involvement in Libya, orders went out to Americans known as “Israeli firsters.”  With little education and background, particularly for those serving in congress, as we all know only too well, none questioned the idea of helping Israel by supporting a vicious dictator that has spouted violent threats and spewed Antisemitism for decades.  None asked why he has never been targeted, why he has gotten a free ride from the media for so long.
No “deep thinkers” were called on.
Our ‘friends” were to mount a “cover operation” to defend the Gaddafi regime because of its strategic relationship to Israel and its close financial associations with US banking houses and oil companies.  Gaddafi had become a goldmine for, not only “big oil” but defense companies as well.  Libya became the second biggest lobbying force in Washington, next to Israel.  While other nations, like China, are castigated for any involvement in American politics, Libya is given ‘carte blanche.”  For a nation some  imagine to be a threat to the security of Israel,
This was no simple task, particularly in light of recent events.
News reports from every source report the use of cluster bombs, artillery and rockets against civilian target in rebel held areas.  Deaths are mounting up and there is a very real human disaster in the making, no one disputes that.
SEXUAL PERK FOR JOINING
THE "LEFTY" ANTI-WAR CROWD
For those who follow Islamophobic pundits and the Zionist pro-war, “sacrifice Americans without thought” mindset, the idea of going “soft” on a brutal Muslim extremist dictator should seem a contradiction yet no one notices the 180 degree turn around.  Curious.  Perhaps years of conditioning paid off and the armies of rednecks and militia types quickly joined the “loafered lefties” on the “peacenik picket lines.”  Are our “tobbacky chawing” friends looking for “hot hippie chicks?”
This has been a hoot!

WATCHING IT PLAY OUT

Where, then, does the controversy come into play?  Why has the “right,” initially clamoring for an attack on Gaddafi as early as February now done a 1000% turnaround?

Let’s take a look at the positions held by this new anti-war group.
Note that there is no call for leaving Afghanistan, nobody got the word out that Afghanistan is a war too. Call our friends “careless.”
The only war they are against is Libya?  Remember, this is the group that pushed for the attack on Iraq, in fact it is the same group that is pushing actively for an attack on Iran, a military action judged by Pentagon officials responsible for our “war plans” as larger than both Vietnam and Korea combined.
Think of this as moral and political schizophrenia.
This new anti-war crowd wants to crush Iran, beginning with attacks on nuclear facilities (reported as “peaceful” by international inspectors), spreading radiation across Asia, followed, of course by a massive ground invasion.   Why do we talk of schizophrenia?  How many contradictory views can a mind with so little reasoning capacity hold at one time?
This is a group that calls America’s actions in Libya, or rather “Obama’s” actions in Libya “war crimes” but, not only supported torture and rendition under Bush but still support it.  Another oversight.  Our new “pro-human rights” advocates seem to have only one human on their list, Colonel Gaddafi.  The rest of the world can be waterboarded, gang raped and tossed into a mass grave like was done in Afghanistan to 2000 POWs early in the war.
This is the group that has lobbied to keep Guantanamo open, then turn around attacking Obama for not closing Guantanamo.

BORN AGAIN ANTI-NUKE ACTIVISTS AND SCANNER LOVERS

Though opposing DU use in Libya, not by Gaddafi who we have found has used Depleted Uranium munitions in his own country against his own people, though that relationship seems somewhat strained of late, but by the US only, our new ‘anti-nuke’ activists seem to hold even more contradictory views.  They love airport scanners and think they are totally safe.  Not everyone agrees with this, however.
In a report from the Daily Mail:
Dr David Brenner, head of Columbia University’s centre for radiological research, said about airport scanners:
  • he is urging researchers to carry out more tests on the devices to look at the way they affects specific groups who could be more sensitive to radiation.
  • the most likely risk from the airport scanners is a common type of skin cancer called basal cell carcinoma
  • If there are increases in cancers as a result of irradiation of children, they would most likely appear some decades in the future. It would be prudent not to scan the head and neck,’
  • the low level beam does deliver a small dose of radiation to the body but because the beam concentrates on the skin – one of the most radiation-sensitive organs of the human body – that dose may be up to 20 times higher than first estimated.
The same “anti-war” group is now actively against the use of Depleted Uranium munition in Libya.  That the same individuals are closely aligned and many actively lobby for the nuclear power industry, in fact, none have come out for increased regulations even monitoring of nuclear power facilities in light of the disaster in Japan that has flooded the United States with deadly radiation brings up a point of odd contradiction to the point of hypocrisy.
However, Colonel Gaddafi also has depleted uranium munitions.  Has anyone asked if he is using them?  He is certainly using his cluster munitions, genuine certified Weapons of Mass Destruction, reported by Veterans Today early last month and by the mainstream press 4 days ago.
Israel is using Depleted Uranium in Gaza along with cluster munitions and white phosphorous, which causes deadly burns.  That seems to be OK also, anything is OK, anywhere and by anybody as long as it isn’t against Colonel Gaddafi.
You would think Gaddafi had billions of dollars and was buying off New York and Washington wholesale.  Did you know that $35 billion of the “Fed’s” bail out money went to Gaddafi personally? The Bank of Libya got that much bailout money and the Bank of Libya is Gaddafi’s personal ‘piggybank.’  8 years ago, Gaddafi was considered a terrorist.  Now he seems to have become a member of the Rothschilds family.
Imagine the friends in Washington and elsewhere that helped pull that off.
One of the more amusing things we are hearing is about how Obama is plotting to steal oil from Libya by overthrowing Gaddafi.  There is real humor in this, of course.  Until 2004, Gaddafi was on our “axis of evil” list.   Then Gaddafi got an offer he couldn’t refuse.  We offered to kiss his behind if he agreed to grease a few palms here in the US.
Gaddafi became a neocon.
This was the deal:
  • Turn Libya’s oil over to British and American companies
  • Turn all oil and gas exploration and equipment business over to Vice President Cheney’s company, Haliburnton
  • Donate money to GOP candidates
  • Donate more money to “friends” in France and Italy
  • Join as a full partner in the imaginary Global War on Terror
  • We will pretend we have certified your WMD programs as ended and
  • You can do as you please from now on, we certainly do!
America has been in Iraq for years, is still there.  Hundreds of supertankers of crude were taken from Iraq through both the Gulf, Basra Lite and the ports south of Ceyhan, Kirkuk Lite.  No one counted, no one checked, they just loaded it up, took it to refineries and sold it to the American people as though they had paid real money for it.  It was paid for all right, 5000 Americans died fighting in Iraq and 3000 more were murdered on 9/11.  They paid for the oil, have no doubt about that.
What kind of threat is Obama making against Libyan oil?
His real threat, if you have been paying attention, is to end Republican Party control of Libyan oil.  Other than defending Gaddafi at any cost, how are the GOP geniuses planning to save America?
They are learning to use photoshop:


YOU WOULD THINK EVEN GADDAFI COULD FIND BETTER FRIENDS THAN THE FOLKS WHO DID THIS
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Tough choices for West in Libya

FLC


(Reuter)- "... "The U.N. Security Council never aimed to topple the Libyan regime," (Serguei Lavrov) said in Belgrade. "All those who are currently using the U.N. resolution for that aim are violating the U.N. mandate. It is crucial to establish a ceasefire."
Even the advocates of more robust attacks on Gaddafi's forces have insisted they will not deploy ground troops. But the European Union outlined a tentative plan on Monday to do just that to protect aid deliveries to Misrata and elsewhere if requested by the United Nations..."
Posted by G, M, Z, or B at 9:59 AM
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Three different names for the same Libyans.

FAD

http://www.independent.co.uk/multimedia/dynamic/00597/misrata_597284s.jpg
The machine-gun has three legs ,
while the man on the right has only one !!

In Libya,
we have now reached a more clear picture:

Half of Libya wants a change
and the other half does not obviously.
The NATO bombs the second half
and sometimes also the first-half , but by mistake.

When NATO kills Libyans it is called Collateral-damages
When Qaddafi kills his own citizens it is called Human-rights-violation
When the Insurgents kill the Qaddafi-loyal´s it is called Civil-War.

I wonder if it matters, really ,for the poor victims ,
what name will be used ??


Raja Chemayel
Posted by Tlaxcala at 9:43 PM
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Saturday, April 16, 2011

KOUROSH ZIABARI: International silence over the Middle East felonies

Kourosh Ziabari - author
April 15, 2011

By Kourosh Ziabari / STAFF WRITER

As the U.S.-backed repressive regimes of the Middle East harshly crack down on their unarmed, innocent citizens, the international community has kept a low profile and indifferently watches the massacre of pro-freedom demonstrators in Libya, Bahrain and Yemen by the merciless dictators of the Persian Gulf region.

Since the wave of protests at the dictatorial regimes of the Middle East began in late 2010, hundreds of people including pro-freedom revolutionaries, activists, bloggers and journalists have been killed by the dictators who have shown that they have no respect for the most essential rights of their people, including their right for peaceful demonstrations and protests and constructive criticism of the government.

Unofficial statistics have recently revealed that more than 10,000 protestors were killed by the mercenaries of the Moammar Gaddafi regime since the beginning of protests in Libya, and this figure is astounding enough to convince us that an all-out, real genocide has taken place in Libya where a delirious dictator has been ruling for more than 42 years.

Since the United Nations Security Council authorized the use of a no-fly zone over Libya “with the explicit task of protecting the civilian population” in its resolution 1973, nothing has changed significantly and the NATO forces who dispatched their troop with the proclaimed intention of saving the life of unarmed civilians who were being massacred by the Gaddafi regime achieved nothing special in their military intervention in the Northern African country.

So far, a block of NATO member states mainly shaped of European countries such as Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark, France, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Romania, UK, Spain and Sweden along with the United States, Canada and some Arab countries of the Persian Gulf have taken part in the military expedition to Libya; however, the only result of their massive operation was the carnage of innocent civilians and an enormous waste of money which should be paid by the European and American taxpayers.

American military Journalist Francis Tusa who is the editor of “Defence Analysis” magazine, estimated that flying a Tornado GR4 would cost about £35,000 an hour, so the cost of patrolling one sector of Libyan airspace would cost £2M to £3M per day.

The former Australian foreign minister Gareth Evans who works with the Council on Foreign Relations think-tank which is notorious for its hawkish and warmongering stance considers the international military intervention in Libya a movement which is aimed at saving the lives of the civilians: “the international military intervention (SMH) in Libya is not about bombing for democracy or Muammar Qaddafi’s head. Legally, morally, politically, and militarily it has only one justification: protecting the country’s people”; however, he and those who think like him have credulously forgotten the fact that 114 civilians have been killed as a result of the military operation of NATO and its allies in Libya. If the NATO member states, mainly consisted of European countries who conventionally boast of their commitment to human rights, were really concerned for the lives of the Libyan people, they wouldn’t have killed 114 civilians. Maybe one may say that 114 is an insignificant number compared with more than 10,000 people whom the Gaddafi regime massacred; however, one should not forget that the life of each human being is precious and valuable and those who introduce themselves as the defenders of human rights should know this better than anyone else.

Now, Libya is entangled in a state of civil war and nobody can predict the future of popular uprising in this African country. The United Nations Security Council has frozen the assets of Moammar Gaddafi and imposed travel bans on the members of his family. So, are these measures adequate to respond to the felonies which the old dictator of Libya is committing? Is the international community genuinely willing to draw to an end the crisis in Libya and hold Gaddafi accountable for his crimes? The International Criminal Court has warned that Gaddafi and the members of his inner circle “may” have committed crimes against humanity. Are these flat accusations enough to put on trial a dictator who relentlessly kills his people and calls them “rebels”, “addicts” and “drug smugglers”? What is the reason behind the silence of international community over the humanitarian disaster occurring in Libya? Is it because the United States and its European friends cannot turn a blind eye to the countless barrels of oil awaiting them in Libya? Is it because the gigantic investment of the United States and its European allies depends on Gaddafi’s remaining in power? If the international community has come to the conclusion that Gaddafi is a terrorist, so why doesn’t it take essential and effective steps to help the Libyan people depose him?

The situation in Bahrain isn’t much better. The dictatorial regime of Al Khalifa has invited Saudi and Emirati forces to come to its help in quenching the protests of the angry revolutionaries who cannot tolerate the discriminatory treatment of the government with the Shiite majority. The defenders of human rights have apathetically neglected the massacre of Bahraini protesters, the widespread arrest of political activists and even the destruction of the Pearl Roundabout which the Bahraini government feared might become the symbol of Bahraini people’s revolution like Egypt’s Al-Tahrir Square.

The mainstream media in the West, run by the well-of Zionists who control the majority of media conglomerates in the world, have flagrantly ignored the abuses of human rights in Bahrain during the 2011 protests and boycotted the news of the massacre of Bahraini people by the Al Khalifa regime. This clearly shows that what is not of any importance to them is the issue of human rights, at least in the Middle East and Bahrain which is host to the U.S. Fifth Fleet.

Overall, the performance of the European governments, international organizations and the mainstream media has indicated that it’s usual and customary for them to exercise double standards wherever needed. The reaction of the international community to the Middle East uprisings has been a clear exercise of double standards which we are now quite familiar with.

Kourosh Ziabari is an Iranian journalist and media correspondent. Read more about him here.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Libya: A flea market of weapons ...

FLC

'Made in good old Israel'
Posted by G, M, Z, or B at 10:30 AM
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Hezbollah Denies Members Fighting in Libya

Local Editor

Hezbollah issued on Thursday a statement in which it denied claims made by Libyan deputy FM that some members of the party were fighting alongside the revolutionists in Misrata.

Hezbollah stressed that the Libyan claims were baseless and have no foundation at all.

Earlier,Libya's deputy foreign minister, Khaled Kaim, accused Hezbollah of joining the ranks of the revolutionists fighting against Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi's regime.

Kaim claimed Wednesday that several members of Hezbollah are fighting alongside the revolutionists in Misrata, but did not provide evidence.

Kaim went on to say that Qatar had sent military trainers to Libya and was supplying the fighters in Benghazi with French-made Milan anti-tank missiles.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian