Wednesday, April 13, 2011

al Queda

WTH? Rebels in Libya-aka al Queda trying 2 blackmail US 2 send inground troops! Or else-expect civilian casualties!

Results for libya ground

 James Bigglesworth 

Just been called back to . Seems we're the only pilots qualified to fly  in ground attacks!
 Dani Vucenovic 

RT @ RAF now providing 1/4 of all ground attack assets, flying 15% of all sorties - & 25% of all hours flown by NATO
 USMule 

Anyone with Military sense knows you have 2 get boots on theground 2 win the war in Libya it was a ploy right from the beginning
 ne1 g0tz da n64 emUz 

Warmonger Obama lied! General Carter Ham may considerground troops in Libya     
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 Paula DeLeon 

WTH? Rebels in Libya-aka al Queda trying 2 blackmail US 2 send inground troops! Or else-expect civilian casualties! Who's the enemy now?!

DOHA/TRIPOLI (Reuters) – Britain pressured other NATO members to beef up ground attacks in Libya on Wednesday as foreign ministers met in Qatar to try to open the deadlock in the country's civil war.But divisions within NATO immediately appeared at the international "contact group" meeting when Belgium ruled out boosting air attacks or arming Libyan rebels. There is increasing frustration in Paris and London that air strikes have neither tipped the balance of the war in favor of rebels trying to end Muammar Gaddafi's 41-year rule nor even ended devastating shelling of the besieged city of Misrata. French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe attacked NATO on Tuesday for not stopping the bombardment and said it must do more. His British counterpart, William Hague, told Reuters on his way to Doha that other NATO aircraft must join ground attacks. Britain and France, western Europe's two main military powers, are delivering most of the air strikes on Gaddafi's armor since President Barack Obama ordered U.S. forces to take a back seat. The Americans are providing intelligence, logistical support and air-to-air refueling, but not bombing. Other NATO countries are either keeping their distance from the campaign or enforcing a no-fly zone. The rebels, whose rag-tag army has shown itself incapable of consolidating any advance against  Gaddafi's better armed and trained army on the eastern front, despite NATO strikes, again appealed for more weapons. A spokesman for the rebel national council, which is attending the Doha talks, said the coalition was considering supplying arms which he said should go to trained soldiers who have defected from Gaddafi's army. MORE POWERFUL FORCE Britain's Hague told Reuters that NATO needed a more powerful strike force, and that sanctions on the Libyan government should be intensified. "We have sent more ground strike aircraft in order to protect civilians. We do look to other countries to do the same, if necessary, over time," he said in an interview. "There are many other nations around Europe and indeed Arab nations who are part of this coalition. There is scope for some of them to move some of their aircraft from air defense into ground-strike capability." French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe called on Tuesday for NATO to do more to destroy Gaddafi's armor on the ground and lift the siege of Misrata, the rebel-held port in the west. Hague also sought a clear statement from the ministerial group that Gaddafi must go, a demand reiterated in Doha by the rebel national council. The group of international powers has struggled to reach a consensus on calling for "regime change." There is clearly a wide gap between NATO hawks and doves. Belgian Foreign Minister Steven Vanackere said the March 17 U.N. resolution authorizing NATO action in Libya -- to protect civilians from Gaddafi's government forces -- ruled out arming civilians and he saw no need to boost forces there. Rebel spokesman Mahmud Awad Shammam said the national council took a positive view of an initiative by Muslim NATO member Turkey, which initially opposed military action, for a peaceful transition in Libya. But he added: "They have to say the magic word -- that Gaddafi must go." Libyan government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim lashed out against the West's "imperialist way of thinking," accusing world powers of trying to impose political change on Libya. Moussa Koussa, a former Libyan foreign minister who fled to Britain last month, was in Doha on the sidelines of the contact group talks to meet the rebels, the British government said. But the rebel spokesman said they did not plan to speak to him.