1 - Rebel leaders in Benghazi said on Tuesday they are losing hope that a popular uprising can topple Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi and are inclined to ask for foreign air strikes. They gathered for hours at their headquarters in the country's second city to discuss their next move and announced the formation of a military council, but said they would delay any further announcements until Wednesday. Salwa Bughaighi, a member of the coalition of lawyers and activists trying to run Benghazi after Kadhafi loyalists fled, told reporters government forces in the west of the country posed too strong a threat.
"There is no balance between our forces and Kadhafi's," she said. "There is a crisis, conflicting emotions between despair and hope for an international solution." Bughaighi said her coalition would demand a no-fly zone to prevent Kadhafi from reinforcing his strongholds in Tripoli and the coastal city of Sirte. But people who attended the meeting or had knowledge of its discussions said privately late on Tuesday that the coalition was inclining towards seeking foreign air strikes, perhaps under a UN mandate, against strategic targets.
"This is something the organisers agreed on in the meeting," said one source, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the topic. Protesters have publicly rejected foreign intervention, but many are now taking stock of the disparity of strength between their forces -- mostly disorganised army defectors -- and Kadhafi's well-armed militias. But the issue remains sensitive. "This has been leaked to people to gauge their reaction," said one organiser, adding that they have heard favourable responses.
"But people don't want another Iraq or Afghanistan," he said. Muftah Quwaidir, the father of a 26-year-old shot dead during the protests, stood outside the meeting with a list of targets he said should be attacked. "We need logistical intervention (against) radar installations, communications (used by the government)," he said. "The United States brought back democracy in Haiti and they intervened in Kosovo," he said. "We have the will to fight Khadafi, but he is stronger than us," he said.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) March 1, 2011
Enforcing a no-fly zone over Libya would first require bombing the north African nation's air defense systems, top US commander General James Mattis warned Tuesday.
The general told a Senate hearing there should be "no illusions" about what would be required if the United States and its allies decided to ban Moamer Khadafi's warplanes from the skies.
"My military opinion is, sir, it would be challenging," Mattis said when asked about the difficulties of imposing a no-fly zone.
"You would have to remove the air defense capability in order to establish the no-fly zone so it - no illusions here, it would be a military operation.
"It wouldn't simply be telling people not to fly airplanes," said Mattis, head of Central Command.
The United States and its allies are weighing possible military action, including a no-fly zone, to stop the embattled Libyan leader from using his forces to crush mounting opposition.
As head of Central Command, which oversees US forces in the Gulf and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Mattis would not command operations involving Libya, where hundreds of protesters have been killed in a brutal crackdown.
Although Kadhafi's military is badly outgunned by US and NATO aircraft, the regime has dozens of surface-to-air missiles that could shoot down allied warplanes.
US military doctrine usually requires knocking out an adversary's air defense missiles and radar any time air power is used.
A no-fly zone would likely require large numbers of aircraft, with US bases in southern Italy providing a staging area for operations.
The United States and its partners also might have to ask other countries in the region, including Egypt or Tunisia, for permission to use their airfields, analysts say.
The general's comments came as the American military moved naval and air forces near Libya for possible joint NATO military action, including a warship with hundreds of Marines.
The USS Kearsarge, an amphibious assault ship accompanied by two other naval vessels, was expected to pass through the Suez Canal soon from the Red Sea, two defense officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told AFP.
The Kearsarge amphibious ready group, with about 800 marines, a fleet of helicopters and medical facilities, could support humanitarian efforts as well as military operations.
US military leaders are preparing a range of options for President Barack Obama and holding discussions with their European counterparts, but the likelihood of military intervention remained unclear, one of the defense officials said.
"I think it (the advice) goes from everything from a show of force to something more involved," the official said, adding: "The president has made no decisions about the use of the military."
Analysts say a symbolic show of force off the coast of Libya in and of itself could increase pressure on Kadhafi but the official said the deployment of naval and air forces near Libya was not an empty gesture.
"There are sailors on ships heading that way, it's real."
An American aircraft carrier, the USS Enterprise -- which has fighter jets that could enforce a possible no-fly zone -- could also be called upon for the Libya crisis.
The carrier is currently in the north of the Red Sea near the mouth of Suez Canal, according to the US Navy's website.
The West heaped pressure on Kadhafi on Tuesday after loyalists tried to retake a key city near the capital following a show of defiance by the veteran leader.
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