Imperialist will never cease to treat Africa as their dormat.

AU has been extremely undermine by UN first through resolution 1973 which its 
implementation it chose NATO to be its enforcers than AU.

Even when it was apparent that the West has gone beyond this mandate to 
effectively join the rebels for a regime change UN kept mum tacitly permitting 
these gross  acts.

There is no doubt that imperialist are lining up now for those Libyan oil 
reserves. The puppetry government under the TNC will return the favour.

These are real spasmodic disproportional rules of imperialist led world 
politics at best buttress by its maltilateral institutions built through their 
image to serve their cause.

Khaye
Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device

-----Original Message-----
From: Dominic Tweedie <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Tue, 23 Aug 2011 10:35:46 
To: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] Libya: The Imperialists' own report


Telegraph, The.gif


*Libya: secret role played by Britain creating path to the fall of Tripoli*


*Gordon Rayner, Thomas Harding and Duncan Gardham, The Telegraph, 
London, 22 August 2011*

The key role played by Britain in equipping and advising Libya's rebel 
fighters for their final push on Tripoli was becoming clear last night 
as Col Muammar Gaddafi's remaining forces staged a last stand around his 
bunker.

For weeks, military and intelligence officers have been helping the 
rebels plan their co-ordinated attack on the capital, and Whitehall 
sources have disclosed that the RAF stepped up raids on Tripoli on 
Saturday morning in a pre-arranged plan to pave the way for the rebel 
advance.

MI6 officers based in the rebel stronghold of Benghazi had honed battle 
plans drawn up by Libya's Transitional National Council (TNC) which were 
agreed 10 weeks ago.

The constantly-updated tactical advice provided by British experts to 
the rebel leaders centred on the need to spark a fresh uprising within 
Tripoli that could be used as the cue for fighters to advance on the city.

But when it finally came, the speed with which it achieved its goal took 
everyone, including the rebels, by surprise.

The Daily Telegraph has learnt that although the uprising in Tripoli 
began on Saturday night, the first phase of the battle for the capital 
had begun hours earlier, when RAF Tornado GR4 aircraft attacked a key 
communications facility in south-west Tripoli as part of the agreed 
battle plan.

On Saturday morning five precision-guided Paveway IV bombs were dropped 
on the Baroni Centre, a secret intelligence base headed by Gaddafi's 
brother-in-law Abdullah Senussi.

The aircraft then struck at least one main battle tank belonging to 
Gaddafi's troops, and in the afternoon another RAF patrol destroyed an 
artillery piece on the western edge of Tripoli and a nearby command and 
control facility.

On the ground, the rebels had spent weeks smuggling weapons, 
communications equipment and battle-hardened fighters into Tripoli, 
setting up secret arms dumps around the capital and waiting for a 
pre-arranged signal to trigger the uprising.

Mahmoud Shammam, a spokesman for the TNC, told the Daily Telegraph that 
the agreed signal was a televised speech by the TNC chairman, Mustafa 
Abd-al-Jalil, which was broadcast via the Qatar-based Libya TV on 
Saturday evening.

Mr Jalil told the citizens of Tripoli "you have to rise to the event", 
and as dusk fell at around 8pm local time a group of rebels seized their 
chance and took control of the Ben Nabi Mosque close to the city centre.

Using loudspeakers which normally call people to prayer, they began 
anti-Gaddafi chants to confirm the start of what rebel leaders called 
Operation Mermaid Dawn -- the battle for Tripoli, which is nicknamed 
Mermaid in Arabic.

Mr Shammam said: "The start of the uprising was pre-arranged. We used 
our TV station for Mr Jalil to give a speech calling for the uprising 
and soon most of the people of Tripoli were on the streets."

The timing of the uprising caught Gaddafi completely by surprise; the 
rebels had spent that day flushing out that last of his forces from 
Zawiyah, 30 miles west of Tripoli, and the Brother Leader had clearly 
expected them to regroup, reorganise and re-arm - as they had done in 
the past after each major battle - before making an attempt on Tripoli.

Instead, the rebels who had been fighting in Zawiyah were making a dash 
for the capital, and in the skies overhead RAF Tornados and Typhoons 
were launching further surgical strikes on pre-planned targets.

The RAF and its alliance partners carried out 46 sorties on Sunday 
alone, relying heavily on the RAF's Brimstone ground attack missile 
system that can pick out targets close to civilian areas with incredible 
accuracy, minimising the risk of civilian casualties.

Gaddafi's bunker at Bab al-Aziziya was pounded throughout the night, and 
the Tornados' advanced electronics also enabled aircraft already in the 
sky to hit Gaddafi targets as they were identified, using a system known 
as dynamic targeting.

Gaddafi's command and control centres, set up in industrial buildings or 
even empty schools, were also attacked, crippling the Libyan despot's 
ability to direct his troops.

On the ground, meanwhile, the rebels sent out mass text messages to 
regime opponents waiting in Tripoli for a signal to rise up, and as 
Gaddafi's forces tried in vain to suppress the revolt it spread out 
across 13 suburbs.

By Sunday afternoon the rebels who had been fighting in Zawiyah were 
just miles away from the outskirts of Tripoli.

William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, confirmed yesterday that Britain 
had equipped the fighters with a range of "non-lethal" kit including 
advanced telecommunications equipment and 1,000 sets of body armour.

They had also been given night vision goggles, which proved crucial in 
picking out snipers who had been sent by Gaddafi to impede their 
progress towards the capital.

The battle plan also included a sea-borne assault on Tripoli launched 
from the port of Misrata to the east, which landed at dawn on Sunday.

Gaddafi took to the airwaves to make a series of increasingly desperate 
appeals for Libyans to defend Tripoli from the rebels as "a matter of 
life and death" but the crackling recordings of his voice -- and a lack 
of any video footage -- led to speculation that he had either fled the 
country or had gone into hiding in a 2,000-mile network of tunnels built 
in the 1980s.

His soldiers, sensing the battle was lost, had begun dumping their 
uniforms wherever they stood, and by midnight on Sunday the rebels had 
reached Green Square, the symbolic heart of Tripoli, with little 
resistance.

The speed of the rebel advance was such that Gaddafi's intended heir, 
his son Saif al-Islam, had no time to reach his father's compound, and 
was captured by rebels on Saturday night.

His brother, Mohammed, was giving a telephone interview to a broadcaster 
when a gunfight broke out inside his home. The line went dead and 
seconds later he too was captured.

Mr Shammam said: "The plan was very successful. Our assumption was that 
it would take a few days but the results were clear in a few hours.

"We were expecting more resistance from Gaddafi's troops. We thought 
they were determined to fight to the last moment but it seems like they 
got tired or lost the cause."

David Cameron, who was on a family holiday in Cornwall, also seemed to 
have been caught out by the rapid turn of events.

Although he had been kept up to date with the rebels' plans, no-one had 
expected Tripoli to fall so quickly, and the Prime Minister scrambled to 
get back to Downing Street to chair a meeting of the National Security 
Council yesterday.

Speaking outside Number 10, he paid tribute to the "incredible bravery, 
professionalism and dedication" of the RAF pilots, adding: "This has not 
been our revolution, but we can be proud that we have played our part."

As the fighting continued in Tripoli last night, the rebels had gained 
control of around 90 per cent of the city, with the bloodiest battle 
raging around Gaddafi's compound at Bab al-Aziziya.

Another of Gaddafi's sons, Khamis, was reported to have led his 
eponymous Khamis Brigade into battle from the compound, killing what one 
official described as "a big number" of rebels.

Tanks rolled out of the compound to begin shelling the city, and snipers 
fired from rooftops to prevent rebels joining the battle at Bab al-Aziziya.

Loyalist tanks were also deployed at the port, but the rebels continued 
to press on, and scored further victories.

By mid-afternoon yesterday they had reportedly captured a third son of 
Gaddafi, Saadi, and at 4pm Libya's state broadcaster went off the air, 
removing one of the despot's final and most important tools in his 
ability to maintain any form of resistance.

Across Tripoli, its citizens tore down every green flag of the Gaddafi 
regime they could find, chanting "freedom" in English. By last night, 
Green Square had been renamed Martyrs' Square as 42 years of tyranny 
finally came to an end.

"We came out today to feel a bit of freedom," said Ashraf Halaby, 30, as 
he joined the celebrations in the square. "We still don't believe that 
this is happening."


*From: 
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/8716758/Libya-secret-role-played-by-Britain-creating-path-to-the-fall-of-Tripoli.html*
 

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