Posted on 03/17/2011 2:03:34 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
His air force is already bombing the outskirts of the city, but not for much longer. The Security Council’s expected to vote at 6 p.m. ET and the French are telling people that airstrikes against Libyan air defenses — and maybe more — could begin immediately thereafter. At the same time, Qaddafi just delivered another insane stemwinder against the rebels on Libyan radio warning people in Benghazi that the army will be rolling into town tonight and that, if they don’t surrender, they’ll receive “no mercy.” Which means, unless someone blinks in the next few hours, that city will be a bona fide international war zone by the time America goes to bed tonight.
This is turning out to be some week.
Ibrahim Dabbashi, the deputy Libyan UN ambassador, warned that, “in the coming hours we will see a real genocide if the international community does not act quickly.”
Dabbashi, who defected early on from the Gaddafi regime, said “about five” Arab states were ready to help police the no-fly zone if it was adopted…
Al Jazeera’s Bays in Tobruk said that people in the city said they were confident of winning against Gaddafi, but still needed international help.
“I can tell you that when you speak to the people here, they say they’re winning, they say they’re beating back Gaddafi. Then you ask them the question should the international community do more, and they say ‘Yes, we’re all going to die if they don’t help’. So very contradictory answers to those questions,” Bays reported on Thursday.
The regime’s threatening to retaliate by attacking air and sea traffic in the Mediterranean, which is unlikely in the near term with NATO overhead but more likely if Qaddafi brokers a deal to stay in power and inevitably returns to his old terrorist-y ways. (He’s worried enough about imminent airstrikes to have opted for radio over video today.) Meanwhile, I’m intrigued by those five Arab states who are allegedly ready to help “police” the NFZ. What does that mean, exactly? McClatchy reported earlier that only two were on board so momentum is building across the region to help make this happen, but in practical terms it means — what? Certainly use of local air bases; possibly also … Arab air forces joining NATO patrols?
As for which five states are involved, Tunisia and Egypt are obvious candidates since they’re adjacent, have revolutionary fever themselves, and want to maintain good relations with the west in the near term to keep the foreign aid flowing while they reorganize. The obvious risk is that if Qaddafi somehow remains in charge, then they have to live with him and wonder if he’s plotting revenge. That’s not a big concern for Egypt, which could crush him if need be, but little Tunisia may think twice. Assuming they’re both in, though, then who are the other three states? Given the current circumstances in the region, would the Saudis dare lend logistical support to dislodging an Arab dictator — even one they despise? Stay tuned.
Exit question: How’d the NATO powers get China and Russia to go along with a no-fly zone on the Security Council? Exit answer: In a way, they didn’t.
Update: According to one report, four of the five Arab countries involved are the UAE, Qatar, Jordan, and … Saudi Arabia. No word on the fifth. I guess Tunisia and Egypt don’t want to make the mad dog mad.
How many planes and aircraft carriers does the UN have?
Has Congress authorized this??
Can impeachment hearings start in the morning??
RE: Why the rush to war? Lybia had nothing to do with 9-11!
Ahh but remember, Gaddafi still had something to do with Lockerbie and the German Disco bombing.
It’s taken years, but it’s payback time.
Once the no fly zone is established, then what?
Qadaffi now controls most of the country.
His ground forces have established superiority over the rebels.
Who will commit ground forces to help drive them back, or prevent the genocide?
People think Obama’s been quiet behind the scenes....I’m afraid to know what he’s actually been doing. If it ain’t good for America, he’s there.
Well, the Italians have said they oppose military action and the Egyptians have said they will not participate. So, once again, why should the US be bombing Libya? If the Arab league wants to take action, they have plenty of planes and troops. NATO also failed to agree on a military course of action.
People are being slaughtered in Libya. IS this going on in Bahrain, as well?
lol
The UN resolution doesn’t limit this to a no-fly zone.
“In other words, were mulling it.”
So in the street patois Obama uses when it suits him, he would be a “mullah”?
That was back when we had a Congress. When we had three co-equal branchs of Government with different balancing responsibilities. When we had citizens that had the intelligence to wipe their asses.
What? You think the uprising in Libya or the other African/ME countries are fighting for a truly free self-determining republic or even a mob democracy? If so, you got blinders on, son. That whole area will become radicalized.
People die in war. As long as it's not our people, I'm tired of giving a shit about Africa. It's a cesspool and will always be so. It's a cultural/tribal thing.
Focus your efforts on Japan. A nation that learned their lesson and is one of the West's biggest allies, and have such self-restraint and honor that the World could learn from their tragedy. I don't give a shit about Africa, and apparently neither do they after all that the West has done for them. I'm over my care quota.
Khadafy sacrifices a military plane filled with civilians....
He can send helicopters against the rebels, we gonna shoot them down......
And when the seige of Benghazi begins, are we gonna bomb his troops.......
Why do I have the certainty that none of those charged with thinking these things through have done so.
>People are being slaughtered in Libya.
People were slaughtered in Darfur, the Congo, in Tibet in 08 by the Chinese, in Xinjiang also by the Chinese. We didn’t do anything.
Anyway, no one can rebut the assertion - The USA has no vital or strategic interest at stake in Libya.
However, Bahrain, Iraq and Saudi and the Gulf states are where we do.
The Mulligan Mullah?
“Genocide does not matter to you?”
Genocide of our enemies??? Hell NO!
Not as long as its a bunch of Islamic whack jobs
Because they no longer do. It's all about expediency and politics and keeping a cushy job at the CIA, NSA, NSC, DOD et al, now. Historical context doesn't even figure into the equation anymore. Yes, there are plenty of hard-working low-level people monitoring things, but they have no say in how intel should be acted upon. It's been about international politics for years and not defense of our Nation.
Me, well, I believe differently.
I know there are no guarantees on outcome, but I would rather have my money and my military fight the fight for freedom all over the world at times of crisis when the people under oppression make the first moves. I believe in this.
Of course my life is not on the line like our military's is. So my stance is not easily defendible.
But somehow freedom does not taste full when I know there are others suffering incredible brutality and fighting to be free of it.
America is great-and btw-over one hundred thousand troups were killed in the civil war-which was not a war against a tyrant-but a war about keeping the union together and abolishing slavery as a result.
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