http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/8432907/Libya-Nato-not-doing-enough-to-protect-Misurata.html

<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/8432907/Libya-Nato-not-doing-enough-to-protect-Misurata.html>Libya:
Nato not doing enough to protect MisurataLibyan rebels complained Nato was
not doing enough to protect the key city of Misurata from Col Muammar
Gaddafi's forces.
By Bruno Waterfield<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/journalists/bruno-waterfield/>
 6:29PM BST 06 Apr 2011

One week after taking over military operations, Nato was accused of mission
failure by 
*Libyan*<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/>
rebels
who accused Alliance aircraft of doing nothing while Col Gaddafi's artillery
kept up a 40-day long artillery bombardment of Misurata.

Abdelfatah Yunis, the commander of rebel forces, accused Nato of "letting
the people of Misurata die every day". "If Nato waits one more week, there
will be nothing left. Nato has done nothing, they have just bombed here and
there."

France, frustrated at Nato's ineffectiveness, yesterday vowed to use its own
forces to open up a humanitarian aid corridor between the rebel stronghold
of Benghazi and the besieged city.

"We are going to ensure that aid comes from Benghazi and that at no moment
Gaddafi's military forces will be able to stop this," said Gerard Longuet,
the French defence minister.

Nato admitted that its tight "rules of engagement" and a ban on land forces
were a barrier to operations.

"If you're trying to protect human shields when there is a tank with dozens
of people around it – innocent civilians – the best thing at that stage is
probably not to drop a bomb on that tank," said Rear Admiral Russell
Harding, Nato's deputy commander of operations.

"Because we are not allowed forces on the ground, there is a physical limit
to what we are able to do in that respect."

Alain Juppe, the French foreign minister, warned Nato's inability to deal
with Gaddafi's "human shield" tactics of dispersing artillery and tanks in
urban areas risked military strikes grinding to a halt.

"We've formally requested that there be no collateral damage for the
civilian population. That obviously makes operations more difficult," he
said. "There is a risk of getting bogged down."

Admiral Edouard Guillaud, the head of France's armed forces expressed
frustration. "I would like things to go faster, but as you are well aware,
protecting civilians means not firing anywhere near them. That is precisely
the difficulty," he said.

Col. Gaddafi yesterday wrote to Barack Obama "following the withdrawal of
America from the crusader colonial alliance against Libya", Libya's official
news agency JANA said on Wednesday.


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