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Africa North |
Libyan rebels seize Gaddafi weapons depot |
2011-06-29 |
[Al Jazeera] Rebel fighters have managed to capture a significant munitions depot from ![]() Tuesday's development is seen as a major victory for the rebels as they make their way to Tripoli, the seat of Muammar Qadaffy's power. Al Jizz's Jonah Hull, reporting from Jadu, a nearby town, said that finding the stash will be an "enormous morale-booster" for the fighters, who he said have been working with limited weaponry and had been anxiously eyeing the weapons dump. The rebels had only managed to get close to the arms cache on Tuesday morning, when "just about every man with wheels" drove across the desert to load up his vehicle with munitions, he said. "Tons and tons of munitions and equipment, including two Russian T-55 tanks, I must say, coming back across the road from the weapons depot back up into Zintan, and an armoured vehicle," he said. Our correspondent further said finding the munitions will help maintain the momentum that the rebels have been building up slowly over recent weeks. In May, 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... warships bombed "military and civilian targets" in the rebel-held city of Misrata, east of Tripoli, and also in Zintan. In for the long haul Even though Tuesday's discovery was a victory for the fighters, Hull said that it was impossible to guess how much longer this conflict will continue. The commanders and fighters in the region, said Hull, have "one firm objective in mind: To protect their towns and villages" and to keep Qadaffy loyalist forces out. Indeed, Libyan rebels seeking to oust Muammar Qadaffy from power launched machine gun fire from a position near the Dafniya frontline, 30km west of Misrata. Fighting has been largely on Misrata's far western and eastern edges, where the rebel fighters are facing better equipped and better trained government forces. One rebel fighter said his forces were facing arbitrary artillery fire from pro-Qadaffy forces and that he expected a long drawn out battle. "Regarding the [pro-Qadaffy] forces, they are using heavy artillery. Of course they are firing arbitrarily. Considering the circumstances in Dafniya we will be in this situation for a long time," he said. The rebels are trying to inch towards Tripoli from Misrata and from the western Nafusa mountain region. The rebels have made slow progress since NATO countries joined their fight to overthrow Qadaffy in March. |
Posted by:Fred |
#5 Godawful = Gadaffy After the deluge = "après moi, le deluge" (Louis XIV, if I recall correctly) Another deluge = after the rebels, something worse Almost as telegraphic as a JosephMendiola post, Flemble Uloger1837 -- impressive! |
Posted by: trailing wife 2011-06-29 23:55 |
#4 Translation: things won't improve, and will likely get worse, if the rebels take over. |
Posted by: Pappy 2011-06-29 21:45 |
#3 wtf did the last comment mean? |
Posted by: chris 2011-06-29 21:13 |
#2 Won't miss gawdawful, but after the deluge, we will likely get another deluge. |
Posted by: Flemble Uloger1837 2011-06-29 16:46 |
#1 Capturing an arms depot is a lot more valuable than taking a city. That the Q-man's forces didn't blow it in place also says something. Likely it was a Soviet type configuration depot, and the Soviets were never any damn good about proper storage, so just packed all their munitions together. |
Posted by: Anonymoose 2011-06-29 09:59 |