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Gaddafi forces advance towards Libyan rebel capital
[Asharq al-Aswat] Libyan rebels retreated from another key town under heavy shelling from government forces as Mummer Qadaffy loyalists swept closer towards the main opposition-held city of Benghazi.

But following the fall of Brega, the commander of the vastly outgunned rebels, Qadaffy's former interior minister, vowed to defend the next town in the path of Qadaffy's forces, Ajdabiya.

A lightning counter-offensive over the past week has pushed the rebels out of Mediterranean coastal towns, allowing the regime to wrest back the momentum against the month-long uprising against Qadaffy's four-decade grip on power.

Qadaffy's forces are "marching to cleanse the country" of bad boys, Libyan army front man Colonel Milad Hussein told news hounds in Tripoli.

"Our raids are forcing the beturbanned goons to flee. We have liberated Zawiyah, Uqayla, Ras Lanuf and Brega, and the army is advancing to liberate the rest of the regions."

La Belle France said it would speed up its push for a no-fly zone to ground Qadaffy's warplanes, something the rebels on the ground have been calling for.

Dozens of rebels decamped east out of Brega towards Ajdabiya, the last rebel-held town before Benghazi which the Libyan opposition has made its de facto capital just 100 miles (170 kilometres) away.

Libyan state television declared Brega "purged of the armed gangs."

It also reported that Qadaffy had met the ambassadors of China, India and Russia to discuss the possibility of handing them control of the country's oil exports.

China and Russia, both permanent members of the United Nations, aka the Oyster Bay Chowder and Marching Society Security Council, have expressed scepticism about the need for a no-fly zone in Libya. India, a temporary Security Council member, has come out against the idea.

National Oil Corp had called its employees to return to work and called on foreign companies to send in their tankers, state television reported.
... and if you can't believe state television who can you believe?
Oil giant Total said on Friday that the unrest had slashed Libya's output by 1.4 million barrels a day to under 300,000. Libya's largest market is Europe.

General Abdel Fatah Yunis, who resigned as Qadaffy's interior minister soon after the rebellion began in mid-February, vowed to defend Ajdabiya.

"Ajdabiya is a vital city," he told news hounds in Benghazi. "It's on the route to the east, to Benghazi and to Tobruk and also to the south. Ajdabiya's defence is very important... We will defend it."

From Ajdabiya there is a straight desert road to the oil port of Tobruk, which to date has given rebels full control over the east up to the Egyptian border. It is a vital transit route for supplies from abroad.

The rebel withdrawal of a few kilometres was tactical given the semi-desert terrain, Yunis argued: for if Qadaffy's army pursued them, they would be over-stretched.

"We feel he (Qadaffy) will have serious logistical problems and serious difficulties for supplying his troops, because they're getting extended all the time."

But among the rebel forces only the defectors from Qadaffy's army have military experience: they have few heavy weapons and are vulnerable to air attack.

The International Committee of the Red Thingy said it had shipped seven truckloads of food and medicine to Benghazi, where the streets were largely deserted Sunday around the rebels' headquarters in the courthouse.

"The euphoria is over. We are frightened of what's coming, frightened of getting blown up," said retired civil servant Mohammed Gepsi.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) warned that rebels were being denied medical help in government-held areas and called for access to treatment for the maimed.

"In several conflict zones, such as Zawiyah and Misrata, large numbers of people are cut off from any external assistance, while critical medical needs and shortages of medicine and materials are reported," it said.

Zawiyah, just west of the capital, fell to Qadaffy's forces on Friday after bitter fighting.

In Misrata, a city east of Tripoli which continues to hold out against attacks that last week killed at least 21 people, residents reported renewed firing on Sunday.

The US-based Human Rights Watch said Libyan security forces had unleashed a wave of arbitrary arrests in Tripoli, "brutally suppressing all opposition."

Senior al-Qaeda cut-thoat Abu Yahya al-Libi, himself a Libyan, warned of the heavy price of a rebel defeat in a videotape posted on jihadist websites on Sunday.

Libyan hard boyz "must carry on with their revolution, without hesitation or fear, in order to push Qadaffy into the abyss," said Libi, considered one of Al-Qaeda's top ideologues.

Qadaffy has repeatedly charged that Al-Qaeda was behind the uprising.

Rebel morale was boosted by an Arab League decision on Saturday to support a no-fly zone over Libya and to make contact with the bad boys' national council in Benghazi.

The White House welcomed the vaporous Arab League decision, but stopped short of giving full support for the no-fly zone, which Britain and La Belle France have been backing.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
... sometimes described as the Smartest Woman in the World and at other times as Mrs. Bill, never as Another Timothy Pickering ...
is due in Gay Paree Monday to meet her G8 counterparts and hold talks with Mahmud Jibril, a top member of the national council, representing Libya's opposition movement.

Clinton has said a plan for a no-fly zone would be presented to NATO on Tuesday.
Posted by: Fred 2011-03-15
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=318216