BBC: Do Libya's rebels have staying power?

Recruits to anti-Gaddafi forces in Benghazi, Libya - 3 March 2011 The 
anti-government force has no shortage of volunteers

Libya's rebels have control of Benghazi and much of the east - but do they have 
the resources to break the current stalemate with Col Gaddafi? The BBC's Kevin 
Connolly reports.

In Benghazi, swirls of cigarette smoke rise up in the rooms where the 
revolution was hatched, in much the same way that desert storms sometimes 
darken the skies outside.

It is a fitting image for a city celebrating freedom, where the balance of 
forces between revolution and counter-revolution is hard to measure.

This much is clear: Benghazi, always the most independent-spirited city of a 
nation cowed by 41 years of brutal autocracy, has risen up against Muammar 
Gaddafi and shrugged off his rule.

Protesters, many of them young and all unarmed at first, faced the violence of 
loyalist forces who used live ammunition against them.

The overwhelming mood of the moment here is a joy and a sudden embracing of a 
freedom that the rest of us, rather lazily, take for granted.

One woman in a crowd of demonstrators said to me simply: "I have been in prison 
all my life; I never thought I'd be released."
Museum pieces

What is much less clear is what happens next - and to a certain extent, what is 
happening now.

For example, rebels have taken over military bases around the city and are 
talking of turning themselves into a revolutionary army.
Continue reading the main story

A week ago, there was talk of trying to export the revolt westwards, along the 
great coastal highway that curves its way around the bay of the Mediterranean 
to distant Tripoli.

But it is not clear how potent the weapons left behind by Col Gaddafi's forces 
are.

The tanks and anti-aircraft artillery we have been shown are museum pieces.

Lashing machine-gun mountings onto the backs of flatbed trucks makes a weapons 
system which looks good on television, but which is not much use for fighting 
an army.

It is not really clear how many men Col Gaddafi's forces had inside their 
various barracks, how many were killed, captured or defected, and how many 
melted away to fight another day somewhere else.

Nearly all the anti-government fighters I have met, and their supporters, are 
utterly convinced they are facing a large force of mercenaries from sub-Saharan 
Africa.

It is possible to detect a whiff of racism in the way that story is discussed.

It has been difficult so far to find any concrete, firsthand proof.
Inconclusive clashes

Establishing both the manpower and the firepower at the disposal of the rival 
forces is difficult.

There is talk of the rebels having defecting officers on their side, and of 
their raising and training a force of 10,000 men.
Libyan rebels with an anti-aircraft gun at Ajdabiya, 160 kms (100 miles) west 
of Benghazi, Libya - 3 March 2011 Many of the rebels' weapons are museum pieces

But only a handful of armies on earth are capable of moving that number of 
fighting soldiers and the tons of supplies they'd need over the vast distances 
of the desert. Equipping them would take months and cost millions.

Nor is it clear to what extent Col Gaddafi's own forces are capable of 
large-scale and sustained operations.

We have seen television pictures of his snipers firing live ammunition into 
crowds of protesters. Fighting more substantial forces would raise much bigger 
questions.

He has bomber aircraft, helicopter gunships and some naval vessels. But we 
cannot know if most of the men who operate them are prepared to follow orders 
which would involve firing on fellow Libyans.

He is believed, for example, to have run down the country's conventional armed 
forces to reduce the possibility of a coup.

He prefers to rely instead on katibas, which are informal paramilitary-style 
brigades loyal to a powerful individuals, including Col Gaddafi's sons.

Where the forces have clashed, as they would have at the oil terminal at Brega, 
the results have been inconclusive, but have offered the rebels some 
encouragement.
Volunteer spirit

In following the new politics of the revolution, we must also be cautious.

After 41 years of brutal autocracy, there is no culture of political freedom, 
no leaders in waiting, no tradition of freedom of speech or assembly and no 
constitution.

There is not even an electoral register, of course, so the difficulties of 
moving quickly to democracy are forbidding.
Bonfire of Col Gaddafi's writings in Benghazi - 2 March 2011 Up in flames: the 
political writings of Col Gaddafi burn in Benghazi

On the positive side of the ledger, the committees in the courthouse, where the 
revolution is being organised, have democratic instincts and they are desperate 
to build a better and freer life for their children than the lives they led 
themselves.

And it may be that the modern age, with its texting, tweeting, facebooking and 
good old-fashioned satellite television may make it impossible for autocracy to 
flourish again in the Arab world or anywhere else.

There are no opposition figures who have any democratic legitimacy either, 
however well intentioned they are, so there is a difficulty in translating the 
energy and hope of the discussions in the old courthouse building, which is the 
heart of the rebellion, into concrete political action.

For the moment, a spirit of volunteering is abroad. There are even teenagers 
trying their hand at traffic police point duty, admittedly with varying degrees 
of success.

And there's one more thing on which the rebels are agreed: They do not want any 
outcome to all of this which is based on separatism or secession.

Libya is one body, says a poster here, and Tripoli is its heart.

One problem they have to overcome though, is how Benghazi itself will function 
if the current stalemate persists.

It is hard to get clear answers about the extent to which it relies on Tripoli 
for such basic necessities as supplies of cash from the central bank or power 
and telecommunications.

Understandably, the rebels have their eyes focused on the great prize of 
freedom, which is in their grasp.

But if this is not resolved quickly, and it does not look as though it will be, 
they may have to turn their attention to the problems of running a city which 
is isolated from the system of which it is a part.



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