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Africa North
Libya Rebels Say Capital's Fall within Hours
2011-08-22
[An Nahar] Libyan rebels entered the capital on Sunday and were greeted by residents who ran alongside their convoy, an Agence La Belle France Presse correspondent said.

The welcome followed gunbattles with fighters loyal to Libyan leader Moammar Qadaffy
...Custodian of Wheelus AFB for 42 long years...
.
On their way into Tripoli from the west, the rebels advanced in a convoy of around 100 vehicles as onlookers fired celebratory gunfire into the air, the correspondent said.

Earlier on Sunday, rebels snuck into Tripoli by sea to launch the first salvos in the fight for the capital.

A regime front man acknowledged a small band of cut-throats had penetrated the capital but insisted that Tripoli was well-defended by "thousands" of troops.

The dawn assault by the advance party, who were joined by Tripoli rebels, marked the start of what the opposition has dubbed "Operation Mermaid" and which it vows will end only when the veteran strongman surrenders or departs.

Rebel front man Abdullah Melitan said the covert operation, more than six months after an uprising turned into civil war, was launched from their western enclave of Misrata, 200 kilometers from Tripoli.

An advance party "from Misrata reached Tripoli this dawn by sea and joined Tripoli rebels. They are now fighting alongside them," front man Abdullah Melitan told Agence La Belle France Presse in Misrata.

A separate rebel party seized control of an army barracks at a western entrance to Tripoli, raiding missiles and other ammunition, AFP correspondents at the scene said.

They also released dozens of prisoners held in Maya, 25 kilometers west of Tripoli, they said.

And the eastern Tripoli suburb of Tajoura also fell to rebels, according to a witness. He said forces loyal to Qadaffy were shelling the suburb since its capture by rebels.

"Between now and tomorrow we expect it (Tripoli) to fall in our hands," said rebel commander Abdel Hakim Belhaj.

Intermittent gunfire crackled in Tripoli shortly after four strong blasts were heard at around 4:00 am (0200 GMT) as NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It's headquartered in Belgium. That sez it all....
warplanes flew overhead, an AFP journalist said. This was followed by more gunfire and further blasts.

The targets were not immediately identifiable but witnesses reported festivities in several districts between cut-throats and Qadaffy supporters, especially the eastern suburbs of Soug Jomaa, Arada and Tajoura.

Government front man Moussa Ibrahim said on state television
... and if you can't believe state television who can you believe?
there had been "small festivities" that lasted 30 minutes and the "situation is under control."

Ibrahim later told news hounds "thousands" of professional and volunteer soldiers were defending the capital against rebels, whom he accused of carrying out "34 executions" and raping women in the western coastal town of Sorman.

Qadaffy himself earlier Sunday aired a message urging supporters to "march by the millions" to liberate cities held by "traitors and rats."

"These scum enter mosques to cry 'God is great.' They are dirty. They are defiling the mosques," the embattled strongman said in an audio message carried on state television
... and if you can't believe state television who can you believe?

Rebel front man Ahmed Jibril said "Operation Mermaid" was a joint effort between the Benghazi-based rebel National Transitional Council (NTC), cut-throats fighting in and around Tripoli and NATO forces.

In Dubai, rebel envoy Aref Ali Nayad said the National Transitional Council had urged NATO to join the final battle with Apache assault helicopters.

Rebel fighters told an AFP correspondent that they were battling Qadaffy loyalists in the Gadayem forest some 24 kilometers west of Tripoli which they hoped to reach later Sunday.

"We want to go to Tripoli today," one of the fighters, Bassam, said, adding that NATO forces had been attacking the forest all night.

Another rebel, Mohammed, later said: "We have taken the forest."

Fighting was later centered on a strategic bridge, a rebel fighter, Tareq Gazel, told AFP.

"We are fighting the Khamis brigade (named after and headed by Qadaffy's son Khamis) on the bridge 27," he said. "We are fighting for control of the bridge. We have had some injuries but no deaths."

The rebels have been moving from the center of Zawiyah, one of three strategic towns on the road to Tripoli which cut-throats claim to have captured last week. The other two are Brega and Zliten.

In his eastern stronghold of Benghazi, rebel chief Mustafa Abdul Jalil claimed that victory was within reach, six months after the insurgency was launched.

"We have contacts with people from the inner circle of Qadaffy," the chairman of the NTC said. "All evidence (shows) that the end is very near, with God's grace."

His words prompted celebrations in rebel-held towns, including Sabratha, 50 kilometers west of Tripoli, and in Benghazi, where people crowded in front of television sets to follow the news, AFP correspondents said.

"Goodbye Qadaffy," they chanted in the rebel-capital, Benghazi.

The White House, too, predicted Qadaffy's day was nearing the end of the road. "We believe that Qadaffy's days are numbered," said White House front man Josh Earnest.

Another sign of the regime's frailty came as fighters said former premier Abdessalam Jalloud, a popular figure who fell out of favor with the Libyan strongman in the mid-1990s, had defected and joined their ranks.

Italian Defense Minister Ignazio La Russa confirmed the reports.

Jalloud piled the pressure on Qadaffy in statements broadcast Sunday on Al-Jazeera news, calling on his tribe to disown him, saying the "tyrant" Qadaffy will go. "The noose has tightened around him."

Striking another blow to Qadaffy's regime, Tunisia, Libya's neighbor to the west, on Sunday decided to recognize the NTC as the legitimate representative of the Libyan people, the news agency TAP reported.

A rebel front man in Benghazi, Fathi Baja, said Tunisia's recognition of the NTC was a clear message to Qadaffy that his end was near.

In Warsaw, Polish ministry spokeswoman Paulina Kapuscinska told AFP that the Maltese boat MV Triva 1 which was due to evacuate foreign nationals from Libya was unable to enter the port of Tripoli on Sunday morning.

"It was swept by gunfire and it returned to its anchorage," she said.
Posted by:Fred

#21  Does anyone remember NYC talk radio host Bob Grant? Even in the 1970s, he would end each of his shows with, "Your influence counts. Use it! Get Qaddafi!"

Bob is having a very good week.
Posted by: Eric Jablow   2011-08-22 20:47  

#20  thx Etienne. Who knew those dreaded EU-sanctions could do so much? Ask Tehran.

*bzzzt* nice try
Posted by: Frank G   2011-08-22 19:30  

#19  "The only credit he deserves is that no US personnel were killed in the war yet."

FTFY, Penguin.
Posted by: Barbara   2011-08-22 19:28  

#18  "Bush 43 instilled hil the fear of God and made him dismantle his nuclear program"

Really? More that fact that Libya was going to the crapper with the sanctions levied by the Euros. That's why he gave up his dream of a nuke (which wasn't even close to happening). You give Bush wayyyy to much credit.
Posted by: Etienne   2011-08-22 19:10  

#17  By 2008-2010 Gaddafi was a ticking time bomb, a rational actor who could be deterred who had come to the reasonable conclusion that the West could be attacked with impunity. He had lost any respect of fear by that time.


In other words he came to that conclusion when Obama became president.

I don't like Obama. I wouldn't have voted for him. I believe his presidency will have terrible consequences for the world (i.e. nuclear Iran), but if the Obama administration gets something right I will not criticize them for criticism's sake.

That is Obama brought a solution , possibly a jihadist solution, to a problem he created
Posted by: JFM   2011-08-22 19:08  

#16  #14: "It ain't the way I wanted it! I can handle things! I'm smart! Not like everybody says... like dumb... I'm smart and I want respect!"

"Then quit wearing that pimp suit"
Posted by: Frank G   2011-08-22 18:45  

#15  Gaddafi paid a price, and in return the sanctions were lifted.
A couple of years later he demanded that whatever he paid or conceded be returned to him and the West complied.
So the deal was off.

By 2008-2010 Gaddafi was a ticking time bomb, a rational actor who could be deterred who had come to the reasonable conclusion that the West could be attacked with impunity. He had lost any respect of fear by that time.

The choice was to forcibly remove Gaddafi before or after the next Lockerbie. When an arab-islamic dictator declares Jihad we should take him seriously.

I don't like Obama. I wouldn't have voted for him. I believe his presidency will have terrible consequences for the world (i.e. nuclear Iran), but if the Obama administration gets something right I will not criticize them for criticism's sake.
Posted by: Albemarle Smith9742   2011-08-22 18:19  

#14  Mutassim is the country's National Security Adviser who met Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State. Described as "not intellectually curious"...

So he is Fredo...
Posted by: tu3031   2011-08-22 17:51  

#13  It appears to be Mutassim al Qadaffy, about whom The Telegraph writes

Mutassim is the country's National Security Adviser who met Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State. Described as "not intellectually curious", he commanded Libyan forces in the fierce battles around Brega.

The link is to a profile of the dapper colonel's children.
Posted by: trailing wife   2011-08-22 17:16  

#12  
#9 - Looks like Fredo Corleone, only taller...
Posted by: Fred   2011-08-22 15:53  

#11  Since there seems to be no sign right now of on-going massacres in the capital, despite the presence of thousands of amped-up armed Berbers, and the rebels have shown the organizational capacity to raise the city en masse in a single night, I'm sanguine today.

The thing about all those Libyan al Queda gunnies who marched off to Iraq last decade - the overwhelming majority of those guys are *dead*. They died like flies. I'm not inclined to demand the eternal enslavement of their cousins under the watchful, paranoid, lidless gaze of armed tyranny just because of their participation in a prior war.

I hated Gaddafi & rooted for his overthrow, not because he got into a shooting war with my country twenty-five years ago, but because he is a psychotic cunt who exports poison wholesale - guns, ideology and pure evil. He is and was an enemy of liberal civilization, and a blot upon the third world, funding & training lunatic fascist cults throughout Africa and Latin America.

If Libya becomes an al Queda caliphate, then we'll bomb that bridge when we come to it. Right now, I'm more concerned about Yemen, which has an *actual* al Queda insurgency occupying the back-country as we speak.
Posted by: Mitch H.   2011-08-22 13:51  

#10  He also demonstrated once and for all that Nato is a hollow shell. Here's hoping the EUros like their new creation. It may be their last.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2011-08-22 13:08  

#9  Who's the greaseball will Hillary? What is that, sharkskin?
Posted by: tu3031   2011-08-22 13:04  

#8  The only credit he deserves is that no US personnel were killed in the war.

Actually, there are more Jihadis per capita coming from Lybia (from the rebels stringholds not from Khadafi's) than from Saudi Arabia or Yemen. I fear that overthrowing Khadafi will carry many desths of Americans and Europeans both servicemen and civilians. Khadafi was no longer dangerous (Bush 43 instilled hil the fear of God and made him dismantle his nuclear program) and even when he was, he ever was hostile to the Muslim Brotherhood and cracked on it.
Posted by: JFM   2011-08-22 07:36  

#7  Darn, but what will happen to his babe brigade?
Posted by: European Conservative   2011-08-22 07:30  

#6  
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2011-08-22 05:27  

#5  
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2011-08-22 05:24  

#4  Out with the bad, in with the despicable? The begining of another foreign aid mistake beckons.
Posted by: Muggsy Glink   2011-08-22 02:35  

#3  Now the massacres, faction fighting, requests for funds (all assuming Qadaffy didn't just took to the desert).
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2011-08-22 02:25  

#2  what happens to Libya now may be worse.
Some of these are not our friends.
Posted by: newc   2011-08-22 02:22  

#1  I can't wait for all the nonsense we are going to hear about Obama getting credit for overthrowing Qaddafi. There will also be dismissal of the obvious fact. This was a war for oil.

The only credit he deserves is that no US personnel were killed in the war.

Posted by: Penguin   2011-08-22 00:05  

00:00