I am writing this Friday morning on
the Pacific Coast
as we continue to get snippets of news out of Libya . It is obvious that the rebellion is coalescing
around Libyan army units who have deserted and have joined the rebellion. This allows a scratch defense to be thrown up
anywhere an aggressive government force appears and they are beating of any assaults.
A fair bet is that we will see
everything around Tripoli
secured before a major test of the pro government military strength takes
place. There is a lot to do and there is
also the possibility of many more defections taking place as government forces
come to believe that the situation is hopeless.
Thus a simple strangulation of the city through a siege is a very good
present option, particularly if government forces have enough fight to repel a
simple assault.
In the end, it has become
hopeless for Qaddafi unless he is able to establish a real perimeter that
allows resupply and that presently looks unlikely, or at least it is now a real
fight to do so. If the rebel military is
sufficient and mobile enough, then they could break into Tripoli tomorrow and bring this whole thing
crashing down. I suspect that they are
still organizing and force concentration has not happened yet.
Communication is effectively in
the hands of the rebellion at this point and one must assume that they are
still sorting out who is in and who is out in terms of a final assault.
Once Qaddafi is able to count
heads and understand that the majority of the army has deserted if that is true,
then he will fold his tent and escape.
Thus the real fight right now is for the hearts and minds of the
officers and rank and file. We will know
the tipping point when the military hunts down the mercenaries brought in by
Qaddafi. All this takes some time that
is cheap to provide while building up rebel strength.
So if it does not end suddenly we
will have a delay while the army sorts itself out. Then sooner or later it is over and can have
only one outcome, whatever Qaddafi wants to believe.
Libyan Rebels Repel Qaddafi’s Forces Near Tripoli
Published: February 24, 2011
BENGHAZI, Libya — Rebels seeking to overturn the 40-year rule of Col.Muammar el-Qaddafi repelled
a concerted assault by his forces on Thursday on cities close to the capital,
removing any doubt that Libya’s patchwork of
protests had evolved into an increasingly well-armed revolutionary movement.
The series of determined stands by rebel forces on Thursday —
especially in the strategic city of Zawiyah, near important oil resources and
30 miles from the capital, Tripoli — presented the gravest threat yet to the
Libyan leader. In Zawiyah, more than 100 people were killed as Colonel Qaddafi’s
forces turned automatic weapons on a mosque filled with protesters, a witness
said. Still, residents rallied afterward.
Colonel Qaddafi’s evident frustration at the resistance in Zawiyah
spilled out in a rant by telephone over the state television network charging
that Osama bin Laden had
drugged the town’s youth into a rebellious frenzy.
“Al Qaeda is the one who has
recruited our sons,” he said in a 30-minute tirade broadcast by the network.
“It is bin Laden.”
Colonel Qaddafi said, “Those people who took your sons away from you
and gave them drugs and said ‘Let them die’ are launching a campaign over
cellphones against your sons, telling them not to obey their fathers and
mothers.”
The violence on Thursday underscored the contrast between the character
of Libya ’s revolution and
the uprising that toppled autocrats in neighboring Egypt
and Tunisia .
Unlike those Facebook-enabled youth rebellions,
the insurrection here has been led by people who are more mature and who have
been actively opposing the government for some time. It started with lawyers’
syndicates that have campaigned peacefully for two years for a written
constitution and some semblance of a rule of law.
Fueled by popular anger, the help of breakaway leaders of the armed
forces and some of their troops, and weapons from looted military stockpiles or
smuggled across the border, the uprising here has escalated toward more
violence in the face of increasingly brutal government crackdowns.
At the revolt’s starting point, in the eastern city of Benghazi ,
Fathi Terbil, 39, the human rights lawyer whose detention first ignited the
protests, drew a map of rebel-held territory in striking distance of Tripoli . “It is only a
matter of days,” he said.
A turning point in the uprising’s evolution was arguably the defection
of the interior minister, Abdel Fattah Younes al-Abidi, an army general who had
been a close ally of Colonel Qaddafi.
The break by General Abidi, who has family roots near the revolt’s
eastern origins, encouraged other disaffected police, military and state
security personnel to change sides as well. “We are hoping to use his
experience,” said Mr. Terbil, who some called the linchpin of the revolt.
Opposition figures in rebel-held cities like Benghazi
have been appearing on cable news channels promising that opponents of Colonel
Qaddafi are heading toward Tripoli
to bolster the resistance there. Their ability to carry out those assertions
remains to be seen.
In parts of the country, the revolutionaries, as they call themselves,
appear to have access to potentially large stores of weapons, including small
arms and heavy artillery, automatic weapons smuggled from the Egyptian border
and rocket-propelled grenades taken from army bases, like the Kabila in
Benghazi.
Tawfik al-Shohiby, one of the rebels, said that in the early days of
the revolt one of his relatives bought $75,000 in automatic weapons from arms
dealers on the Egyptian border and distributed them to citizens’ groups in
towns like Bayda.
So far, at least in the east, many of the weapons appear to be held in
storage to defend against a future attempt by Colonel Qaddafi’s forces to
retake the territory. At a former security services building in Benghazi on Thursday, men
in fatigues prepared to transport anti-aircraft and antitank weapons to what
one said was a storage depot.
Like their counterparts in Tunisia
and Egypt , the rebels in Libya
have shown tech-savvy guile in circumventing government efforts to block their
communication. To sidestep the government’s blocking of the Internet and
curbing of cellphone access, for example, some of the more active
antigovernment protesters distribute flash drives and CDs with videos of the
fighting to friends in other towns and to journalists.
Mr. Shohiby began helping lead an effort this week to shuttle foreign
journalists from the Egyptian border to towns across eastern Libya .
His network of contacts was built on the Internet: not on Facebook, but
on a popular soccer Web site. “I have friends from east to west, north to
south,” he said. “There are two guys in Sabha, one in Zawiyah, three friends in
Misurata, for example,” he said, speaking of towns that were the scenes of some
of the clashes on Thursday.
Still, Mohammed Ali Abdallah, deputy secretary general of an opposition
group in exile, The National Front for the Salvation of Libya, said the government’s
fierce crackdown made organizing the spontaneous uprising a continuing
challenge, especially in heavily guarded Tripoli.
“It is almost like hit and runs,” he said. “There are almost no ways
that those young guys can organize themselves. You can’t talk on a mobile
phone, and if five people get together in the street they get shot.”
Nonetheless, protesters in Tripoli
were calling for a massive demonstration on Friday after noon prayers,
residents of the city and those fleeing the country said. In recent days,
witnesses said, Colonel Qaddafi appears to have pulled many of his militiamen
and mercenaries back toward the capital to prepare for its defense.
But despite the encroaching insurrection, Colonel Qaddafi appeared
determined on Thursday to put on a show of strength and national unity, a stark
turnabout from his approach so far.
Since the start of the uprising, his government had shut out all
foreign journalists, cut off communications and even confiscated mobile phone
chips, and other devices that might contain pictures, at the border from people
fleeing the country. Libya
had warned that reporters who entered the country illegally risked arrest and
could be deemed collaborators of Al Qaeda.
But on Thursday, Colonel Qaddafi’s son and heir apparent Seif al-Islam el-Qaddafi announced
on television that the government would allow teams of journalists to visit Tripoli . Witnesses said
preparations for the visit were already under way.
The soldiers and mercenaries who had previously roamed the streets had
largely disappeared by the late afternoon, leaving only traffic police officers,
and the capital’s central Green
Square — the scene of violent clashes earlier this
week — had been cleaned up. Two banners, in English, now adorned the square. “Al Jazeera,BBC, don’t spread lies that reflect
other’s wishful thinking,” one read. The other: “Family members talk but never
fight between each other.”
But the rebels’ unexpected strength was undeniable on Thursday as they
appeared to hold or contest several towns close to Colonel Qaddafi’s stronghold
in Tripoli in
the face of a coordinated push by his mercenaries and security forces.
In Misurata, 130 miles the east of the capital, Colonel Qaddafi’s
forces struck at rebels guarding the airport with rocket-propelled grenades and
mortar shells, The Associated Press reported. But the rebels seized an
anti-aircraft gun used by the militias and turned it against them.
In Zuwarah, 75 miles west of the capital, the police and security
forces had pulled out and a “people’s committee” was controlling the city,
several people who had fled across the border reported. “The people are taking
care of their own business,” said Basem Shams, 26, a fisherman.
In Sabratha, 50 miles west of the capital, witnesses reported that the
police headquarters and offices of Colonel Qaddafi’s revolutionary committees
were all in smoldering ruins. “We are not afraid; we are watching,” said a
doctor by telephone from Sabratha. “What I am sure about, is that change is
coming.”
In Zawiyah, an envoy from Colonel Qaddafi had reportedly arrived to
warn rebels on Wednesday: “Either leave or you will see a massacre,” one
resident told The A.P.
About 5 a.m. Thursday, Colonel Qaddafi’s forces fulfilled their threat.
Witnesses said a force that included about 60 foreign mercenaries assaulted a
central mosque where some of the roughly 2,000 protesters had sought refuge.
One witness said the protesters were armed mainly with rifles, sticks and
knives, but after four hours of fighting they managed to hold the square.
About 100 people were killed and 200 were wounded, this witness said.
During a telephone interview with him, a voice could be heard over a
loudspeaker in the background telling the crowd, in an area known as Martyrs Square , not
to be afraid.
“People came to send a clear message: We are not afraid of death or
your bullets,” one resident told The A.P. “This regime will regret it. History
will not forgive them.”
Meanwhile, the violence sowed concern across the region and beyond. President Obama spoke
Thursday, in separate calls, with President Nicolas Sarkozy of France
and the prime ministers of Britain and Italy, David Cameron and Silvio Berlusconi.
The White House said the leaders expressed “deep concern” over the
Libyan government’s use of force and discussed possible responses, without
specifying what steps they were prepared to take.
Kareem Fahim reported from Benghazi, and David D. Kirkpatrick from the
Tunisian border with Libya .
Reporting was contributed by Sharon Otterman,
Mona El-Naggar and Neil MacFarquhar from Cairo ,
and Robert F. Worth from Tunis .
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