http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/libyan-rebels-said-to-debate-seeking-un-airstrikes-88779

Libyan rebels said to debate seeking UN airstrikes

Kareem Fahim and David D Kirkpatrick, Updated: March 02, 2011 10:00 IST

Benghazi, Libya:  In a sign of mounting frustration among rebel
leaders over Col. Muammar el-Gaddafi's diminished but unyielding grip
on power, rebel leaders here are debating whether to ask for Western
airstrikes under the United Nations banner, according to four people
with knowledge of the deliberations.

By invoking the United Nations, a council of opposition leaders made
up of lawyers, academics, judges and other prominent figures is
seeking to draw a distinction between such airstrikes and foreign
intervention, which the rebels said they emphatically opposed.

"He destroyed the army; we have two or three planes," said a spokesman
for the council, Abdel-Hafidh Ghoga, said. He refused to say if there
would be any imminent announcement about such strikes, but he wanted
to make it clear: "If it is with the United Nations, it is not a
foreign intervention."

That distinction is lost on many people, and any call for foreign
military help carries great risks.

The antigovernment protesters in Libya, like those in Tunisia and
Egypt, have drawn broad popular support -- and great pride -- from
their status as homegrown movements that have defied autocrats without
outside help.

Any intervention, even one with the imprimatur of the United Nations,
could play into the hands of Colonel Gaddafi, who has called the
uprising a foreign plot by Western powers that seek to occupy Libya.

"If he falls with no intervention, I'd be happy," one rebel leader
said. "But if he's going to commit a massacre, my priority is to save
my people."

There was no indication that the United Nations Security Council's
members would approve such a request, or that most Libyans who are
seeking to topple Colonel Gaddafi would welcome it. Among the Security
Council's members, Russia has dismissed talk of a no-fly zone to curb
strikes by the Libyan Air Force still under Colonel Gaddafi's control,
and China usually votes against foreign intervention.

The discussions appeared to signal a rebel movement that is impatient
with a military stalemate that has crippled the country. The
airstrikes' supporters hoped they might dislodge Colonel Gaddafi from
crucial strongholds, including a fortified compound in the capital,
Tripoli.

The council is only considering strikes against the compound and
assets like radar stations, according to the people briefed on the
discussions, who requested anonymity because no formal decision had
been made.

The United States acknowledged the sensitivity concerning outside intervention.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told the House Foreign
Affairs Committee on Tuesday that the Obama administration knew that
the Libyan opposition was eager to be seen "as doing this by
themselves on behalf of the Libyan people -- that there not be outside
intervention by any external force."

Tensions were high in Benghazi on Tuesday, the day after government
warplanes attacked sites south of the city and special forces retook a
rebel-held oil refinery at Ras Lanuf in central Libya.

Rebel soldiers drove a convoy of pickup trucks mounted with
antiaircraft guns through the streets of Benghazi, and officers
welcomed journalists at a base near the airport, where volunteers were
learning to how to operate the weapons.

The training was far from complete: while firing one of the
antiaircraft weapons, a large metal chunk flew off the gun and landed
in the street.

Despite bold stands against government forces, and tremendous gains in
territory, the military commanders allied with the rebels seemed
unsure about how the effort to topple Colonel Gaddafi would play out.
The Libyan leader commands loyalty in his hometown of Surt, whose
location on a road that links eastern and western Libya is
strategically important.

But of particular concern to the rebels is the colonel's reinforced
bunker, which in known as Bab al-Aziziya and is said to contain
tunnels for easy escape. "It is designed to resist an atomic attack,"
said Ramdan Jarbou, a writer who is advising the rebel council.

Faced with those realities, the council in Benghazi began talking
about help from abroad. A heated discussion pitted several people --
including those who dismissed the idea out of hand as a point of honor
-- against others who saw no option but to call in the airstrikes to
end the bloodshed.

Another member of the rebel leadership who supported the idea said:
"It should have been done three days ago. But it's a burden to take
this responsibility. It's like you're a traitor." The leader said that
the council had reached a consensus to request the airstrikes.

As council members left the meeting on Tuesday evening, Ali Abubaker,
40, a trader, said it would take "big pressure" to remove Colonel
Gaddafi. "We don't want to be in the situation where the people are
turning against one another," he said, warning of the threat of civil
war. "We'd like the honor of the Libyan people doing it themselves.
But perhaps we need help."

Others strongly disagreed.

"No foreign intervention in Libya," said Essam al-Tawargi, an
engineer. "With our guns, with our potential, we can bring Gaddafi
down."

That conviction was tested on Tuesday in Nalut, a city on the Tunisian
border that the rebels said they now controlled, in part because local
army units refused to fight them. "They said we cannot and we will not
kill you because we are all Libyan," a rebel who gave his name only as
Ayman said in a telephone interview.

He said that soldiers working for Colonel Gaddafi still controlled the
border but could not enter the city and that defectors from local army
units had helped residents arm themselves. "At first we didn't have
weapons, so we didn't use them," Ayman said. "But in this war we need
weapons, so we get weapons from our soldiers in our army -- they have
given them to us."

He said that the people in the mountain region near Nalut rose in
rebellion after hearing reports of massacres in Benghazi. "They are my
brothers," he said, "so of course I will fight for them."

He said that the rebels in the mountains would march on Tripoli "when
all of our region is free."

Rebels also said they continued to hold Zawiyah, an oil port just 30
miles from the capital, after fighting off an assault by Colonel
Gaddafi's forces on Monday night.

But they kept an anxious watch on the barricades; the government's
forces were heavily deployed just outside town. "Everything is all
right, but there are army tanks on a farm outside the main gate from
Tripoli," said a rebel who used the name Faisal.

Some fighters had begun to refer to their town as "the Zawiyah State."

Inside Tripoli, residents of the working class suburb of Tajoura
described a massacre that they said had been carried out by
pro-government forces last week.

The soldiers, they said, repeatedly drove through the neighborhood
shooting at crowds and buildings, usually from Toyota Tundra pick-up
trucks but occasionally from the backs of ambulances.

They said one resident, a mother whose name was Fatama Ragebi, had
been killed by a stray bullet in her home and had been buried on
Saturday.

They repeated reports that the security forces had not only fired into
crowds but also carried off the dead and wounded, sometimes from the
hospitals.

The residents named 17 neighbors who they said had been killed and
eight who had disappeared from just one street.

Few could agree on what would come next. Some said they were waiting
for help in the form of weapons from the bastions of rebellion outside
of Tripoli, like Benghazi.

Others vowed that "the people are going to free themselves by themselves."


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Peace Is Doable

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