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Africa North
No-fly zone would require attack: Gates
2011-03-04
[Arab News] Setting up a "no-fly" zone over Libya would require an attack to cripple its air defenses, the US defense secretary said on Wednesday, as the United States intensified pressure on Muammar Qadaffy to step down.

"Let's just call a spade a spade. A no-fly zone begins with an attack on Libya to destroy the air defenses ... and then you can fly planes around the country and not worry about our guys being shot down," Defense Secretary Robert Gates told a congressional hearing.

The Arab League said Wednesday it would consider backing a no-fly zone to end the crackdown on rebels, but ruled out supporting any direct foreign military intervention.

"The Arab countries cannot remain with their arms folded when the blood of the brotherly Libyan people is being shed," the league said in a resolution after a meeting of foreign ministers in Cairo.

Two US amphibious assault ships have reached the Mediterranean Sea, a US official said on Wednesday. The USS Ponce and the USS Kearsarge, assault ships that typically carry Marines, cleared the Suez Canal from the Red Sea and entered the Mediterranean.

United States and other nations seek to force a defiant Qadaffy to end his 41-year rule in the face of an uprising by fragmented groups of rebels. Western nations have also been considering a no-fly zone.

Gates said a no-fly zone for Libya "also requires more airplanes than you can find on a single aircraft carrier, so it is a big operation in a big country."

Meanwhile,
...back at the ranch...
opponents of Qadaffy repelled an attack by the Libyan leader's forces trying to retake a key coastal oil installation in a topsy-turvy battle Wednesday in which shells splashed in the Mediterranean and a warplane bombed a beach where rebel fighters were charging over the dunes. At least 10 anti-Qadaffy fighters were killed in the battle.

The assault on the Brega oil port was the first major regime counteroffensive against the opposition-held eastern half of Libya.

For the past week, pro-Qadaffy forces have been focusing on the west, securing his stronghold in the capital Tripoli and trying to take back nearby rebel-held cities with only mixed success. But the foray east against opposition-held Brega appeared to stumble. The pro-Qadaffy forces initially recaptured the oil facilities Wednesday morning. But then a wave of opposition citizen militias drove them out again, cornering them in a nearby university campus where they battled for several hours until the approximately 200 Qadaffy loyalists decamped.
Posted by:Fred

#1  Something's gotta give becuz Gaddafi's likely is gonna fight to the bitter end.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2011-03-04 00:42  

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