jusfiq, anda jangan ngeles, lalu ngacir dan oot dong...

segeralah berlutut dan minta maaf secara khusuk karena anda sudah menghina 
kontol saya dengan mengatakan kontol saya mencret.




--- In [email protected], "Jusfiq" <kesayangan.allah@...> wrote:
>
>                
> Libya forces retreat after air raids
> 
> Pro-Gaddafi troops fall back from rebel stronghold as international forces 
> ratchet up campaign to ensure no-fly zone.
> Last Modified: 21 Mar 2011 15:16
> Rebel forces retreated from around Ajdabiya after they came under fire from 
> Gaddafi's forces [Reuters]
> 
> Libyan government forces have fallen back from the rebel-held city of 
> Benghazi, following air raids by Western-led forces, while cracks emerged 
> among the coalition policing the UN-sanctioned no-fly zone.
> 
> Rebel fighters on Monday tried to follow up the retreat by forces loyal to 
> Muammar Gaddafi, the Libyan leader, advancing from positions some five to 
> 10km from Ajdabiya.
> 
> But they retreated in disarray when they came under heavy fire from Gaddafi 
> forces in Ajdabiya. An AFP photographer reported three people dead or badly 
> wounded, and vehicles damaged by shell fire.
> 
> Plumes of smoke were seen in the distance, including one that seemed to be 
> inside the town.
> 
> Coalition jets continued to patrol the UN-sanctioned no-fly zone over Libya, 
> but launched no new attacks after air raids over the weekend scattered 
> Gaddafi's forces.
> 
> A cruise missile attack hit a three-story building in Gaddafi's Bab al-Azizia 
> compound in Tripoli late on Sunday, the first reported attack on the Libyan 
> leader's military control centre.
> 
> Libyan authorities invited journalists to visit the site of the attack early 
> on Monday morning.
> 
> Mussa Ibrahim, a spokesman for Gaddafi, called the attack a "barbaric 
> bombing" but said no one had been hurt.
> 
> He declined to say whether Gaddafi himself was inside the compound, the same 
> site that was bombed by the US in 1986.
> 
> Coalition divisions
> 
> The recent events have crystallised divisions among the Western coalition 
> powers carrying out the UN-sanctioned military action in Libya and some world 
> powers.
> 
> William Hague, the British foreign minister, refused to rule out using the 
> coalition air raids to target Gaddafi, saying it depended on "circumstances 
> at the time".
> 
> But Robert Gates, the US defence secretary, said such action would be 
> "unwise" and Laurent Teisseire, the French defence ministry spokesman, said 
> "the answer is no," when asked about the subject.
> 
> Later British General Sir David Richards, the head of Britain's armed forces, 
> said that Gaddafi was "absolutely not" a target for military action.
> 
> Vladimir Putin, Russia's prime minister, criticised the UN resolution that 
> sanctioned the use of force in Libya, calling it a "medieval call to crusade".
> 
> "The resolution by the Security Council, of course, is defective and flawed," 
> Russian news agencies quoted Putin as telling workers on a visit to a missile 
> factory.
> 
> "To me, it resembles some sort of medieval call to crusade when someone would 
> appeal to someone to go to a certain place and free someone else."
> 
> The UN resolution was passed after Russia, which has a veto, abstained during 
> the Security Council vote.
> 
> Sanctions supported
> 
> Elsewhere, Amr Moussa, the Arab League chief, questioned the need for a 
> bombardment of positions in Libya by coalition forces, saying they risked 
> killing civilians.
> 
> US Navy Vice Admiral William Gortney, the staff director for the joint chiefs 
> of staff, said at a Pentagon news conference there is no evidence civilians 
> in Libya have been harmed in the air assault.
> 
> Moussa said later that the Arab League respected the UN resolution calling 
> for military action in Libya.
> 
> "The Arab League position on Libya was decisive and from the first moment we 
> froze membership of Libya ... Then we asked the United Nations to implement a 
> no-fly zone," he told a news conference with Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary 
> general.
> 
> Guido Westerwelle, Germany's foreign minster, speaking in Brussels, defended 
> his country's decision not to back air raids against Gaddafi's forces.
> 
> He said that the Arab League criticism of the air attacks had vindicated 
> Germany's reluctance to back the action, but Germany stood with other 
> European Union countries in tightening sanctions against the Libyan 
> government.
> 
> Al Jazeera's Laurence Lee, reporting from Brussels, said: "There's lots of 
> cracks just developing, some of them inside the European Union and some of 
> them outside.
> 
> "The comments by Vladimir Putin, for example - who is prime minister, 
> remember, he's not the president so he's supposed to be in charge of 
> domestic, not foreign policy ... demonstrate how this campaign in Libya is 
> driving wedges between people who are supposed to be allies nowadays."
> 
> In a meeting called by China, the UN Security Council is to discuss the 
> situation in Libya on Monday, in response to a letter from Libya and a 
> Russian request, according to a diplomatic source.
> Source:
> Al Jazeera and agencies
>




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