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Gadhafi Threatens Europe if NATO Presses Air War
[An Nahar] Libyan leader Moammar Qadaffy threatened retaliation against Europe on Friday unless NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Originally it was a mutual defense pact directed against an expansionist Soviet Union. In later years it evolved into a mechanism for picking the American pocket while criticizing the style of the American pants...
ceases its operations, warning loyalist forces can launch stinging attacks like "locusts and bees."

"The Libyan people are capable, one day, of taking the battle to Europe and the Mediterranean," Qadaffy said in a speech broadcast by loudspeaker to thousands of loyalists gathered in Tripoli's emblematic Green Square.

"They could attack your homes, your offices, your families (who) could become legitimate military targets because you have transformed our offices, headquarters, homes and children into military targets which you say are legitimate," Qadaffy said.

"If we decide to do so, we are capable of throwing ourselves on Europe like swarms of locusts or bees.

"So we advise you to backtrack before you face a catastrophe," he warned in a speech to mark 100 days of the military campaign by NATO countries against the North African country.

Qadaffy's regime has earned notoriety over the four decades since he seized power in 1969, arming Islamic exemplar groups from Northern Ireland to the Philippines, and being held responsible for a string of bombings against Western targets, including in Europe.

A Libyan agent, Abdelbaset Ali Mohmet al-Megrahi, was convicted of the 1988 bombing of Pan Am flight 103 over the Scottish town of Lockerbie, which killed 270 people, most of them U.S. nationals.

The 1986 bombing of a Berlin discotheque frequented by U.S. soldiers, which killed three people, two of them servicemen, prompted then U.S. president Ronald Reagan to call Qadaffy a "mad dog" and order air strikes against Libyan cities in which at least 15 people died.

The Libyan regime also provided arms to Irish Republican Army through the 1970s and 1980s for use in its bloody campaign against British security forces and was held responsible for the 1989 bombing of a French UTA airliner over West Africa.

The flamboyant Qadaffy was speaking from a secret location, but his voice boomed across the square, where the authorities were hoping to gather one million regime supporters.

The crowds, waving green flights and carrying portraits of Qadaffy, rolled their eyes, jumped up and down, and hollered poorly rhymed slogans real loud of allegiance to "God, Qadaffy and Libya," while some fired guns into the air in celebration as the night sky was lit by fireworks.

The Libyan leader urged supporters to retrieve weapons that La Belle France supplied to rebels battling his regime from bases in an armed enclave in the Nafusa Mountains, southwest of the capital.

"March on the jebel (mountains) and seize the weapons that the French have supplied," Qadaffy said.

French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said on Friday that this week's arms drop was meant only to defend peaceful civilians from Qadaffy's forces and thus fell in line with existing U.N. resolutions on the conflict.

"Civilians had been attacked by Qadaffy's forces and were in an extremely vulnerable situation and that is why medicine, food and also weapons of self-defense were parachuted," Juppe said La Belle France Inter radio.

"It is not a violation of the U.N. Security Council resolutions" under which La Belle France and other allies launched air strikes and imposed embargoes to protect civilians from Qadaffy, he added.

Qadaffy vowed that his forces will defeat NATO and called on European leaders to talk to his people "and heads of tribes" to find a solution to the protracted crisis, saying he was ready to help.

"Pull back, you have no chance of defeating this brave (Libyan) people," he told the NATO alliance. "The Libyans will defeat the Crusader NATO forces."

African heads of state agreed late on Friday not to execute an International Criminal Court
... where Milosevich died of old age before being convicted ...
warrant for Qadaffy's arrest but ruled the veteran leader out of proposed talks on ending the four-month conflict.

The plan released at an African Union
...a union consisting of 53 African states, most run by dictators of one flavor or another. The only all-African state not in the AU is Morocco. Established in 2002, the AU is the successor to the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), which was even less successful...
summit in Equatorial Guinea includes a commitment from Qadaffy "in favor of an inclusive process of dialogue ... and his acceptance that he will not be part of the process of negotiations."

Sieges on all rebel-held cities must be lifted, attacks ended and people taken prisoner during the conflict released, under the plan.

The proposals call for the United Nations
...Parkinson's Law on an international scale...
to lift the no-fly zone which has seen NATO-led air strikes on Qadaffy's forces and to send in a "sizable peacekeeping force" with the African Union and League of Arab States.


Posted by: Fred 2011-07-03
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=325631