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Libya:
NATO Transitions To Terror Bombing Phase Of War
03 May 2011 By Rick Rozoff
On the evening of April 30 a Libyan government
spokesman announced that an air strike by the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization had hit a target in
Tripoli, killing leader Muammar Gaddafi’s 29-year-old
son Saif al-Arab, three of the former’s grandchildren,
all under twelve years of age, and several friends and
neighbors.
The attack followed by only a few hours a
television address by Gaddafi in which he appealed to
NATO nations for a ceasefire and negotiations after
six weeks of bombings and cruise missile attacks
against his country.
His comments included the questions: “Why are you
attacking us? Why are you killing our children? Why
are you destroying our infrastructure?”
As he spoke, NATO warplanes struck government
buildings near the broadcasting facility where he was
speaking, with the transmission going out on three
occasions. The government accused NATO of attempting
to kill Gaddafi in the attack.
It was the latest in a steadily mounting series of
air attacks on and near the Libyan capital, including
a bombardment on April 20 that killed seven civilians
and wounded 18 in a suburb of Tripoli and an air raid
that targeted Gaddafi’s compound among strikes on
several military and civilian locations two days
later, killing three people and destroying the
leader’s office in his Tripoli residence. A Libyan
official informed journalists of what was
self-evident: “It was an attempt to assassinate
Colonel Gaddafi.”
Three days afterward NATO aircraft launched yet
another attack against Gaddafi’s Bab al-Azizia
compound in the capital shortly after midnight, the
third such strike on the site. In the April 25th
bombing 45 people were reported wounded, 15 seriously,
and others were unaccounted for.
The intensification of strikes in Tripoli led to
Russian Foreign Minister warning that “The no-fly zone
does not stipulate hitting ground targets” and “The
resolution [UN Security Council Resolution 1973] does
not stipulate targeting civilian targets or targets
not related to the military.” The Chinese foreign
ministry issued similar concerns on the day of the
attack.
The following day Russian Prime Minister Vladimir
Putin stated: “[W]hen the whole of so-called civilized
society gangs up on one small country, destroying
infrastructure that has been built over generations,
is it good or bad? Personally I do not like it….What
kind of no-fly zone is this if they are striking
palaces every night?”
As to the true intentions behind the West’s war
against Libya, he added: “Libya has the biggest oil
resources in Africa and the fourth largest gas
resources. It raises the question: isn’t that the main
object of interest to those operating there?”
On the 27th of last month the Los Angeles Times
reported that “Frustrated at their inability to break
the military deadlock in Libya…NATO commanders are
expanding their air war by launching strikes against
military command facilities and other regime buildings
used by Libyan leader Moammar Kadafi and his top
aides.”
An air strike against a broadcasting facility in
Tripoli on the 25th, which temporarily knocked Libya’s
state television off the air, “was the first sign of
the new target list.”
With the assistance of recently deployed U.S.
Predator drones transmitting video images for bombing
raids and missile attacks as well as wielding Hellfire
missiles themselves, which have been used by the U.S.
to kill over 2,000 people in Pakistan’s Federally
Administered Tribal Areas (last month the Human Rights
Commission of Pakistan estimated that 957 innocent
civilians were killed in 2010), “some NATO officials
say the goal is to strike directly at the pillars of
the regime, including Kadafi, in the heart of
Tripoli.”
The Times of London wrote shortly before President
Barack Obama authorized missile attacks by American
drones in Libya:
“The Predator, armed with two Hellfires, has a
range of 3200km and can stay in the air for 24 hours.
The Reaper, with 14 Hellfires or a combination of
weapons including two 226kg Paveway II laser-guided
bombs, has a range of 5150km and can remain airborne
for up to 28 hours. Italy has six of its own
Predators, based at Pisa.”
“This is a shift, absolutely,” a senior NATO
officer was cited by the Los Angeles Times as saying
on April 26. “We’re picking up attacks
on…command-and-control facilities. If [Gaddafi]
happens to be in one of those buildings, all the
better.”
While in the Netherlands on April 21, Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton signalled a far longer war
against Libya than many of her fellow NATO
participants may have anticipated, stating: “We’ve
been at this a relatively short period of time. I
would remind you that the United States and other
partners bombed targets in Serbia for 78 days.”
On April 26 the New York Times ran a feature called
“NATO Says It Is Broadening Attacks on Libya Targets,”
which stated:
“NATO planners say the allies are stepping up
attacks on palaces, headquarters, communications
centers and other prominent institutions supporting
the Libyan government….Officials in Europe and in
Washington said that the strikes were meant to reduce
the government’s ability…link by link, the command,
communications and supply chains required for
sustaining military operations.”
The article quoted retired Air Force general John
Jumper, who was commander of U.S. Air Forces in Europe
and of Allied Air Forces Central Europe during NATO’s
78-day bombing war against Yugoslavia in 1999, as
acknowledging:
“It was when we went in and began to disturb
important and symbolic sites in Belgrade, and began to
bring to a halt the middle-class life in Belgrade,
that [Yugoslav President Slobodan] Milosevic’s own
people began to turn on him. They began to question
why the whole thing in Kosovo was going on, because it
was ruining the country.”
What was ruining the country was an unremitting,
merciless aerial onslaught not only, and not so much,
against Yugoslav federal and Serbian military targets
in the province of Kosovo as against civilian
infrastructure – and civilians themselves – throughout
the nation, even in opposition-controlled Montenegro
and major Serbian cities with opposition governments.
After having exhausted all identified military
targets in three days, 1,000 U.S. and NATO aircraft
flew 38,000 combat missions over a nation of barely
100,000 square kilometers – roughly one-seventeenth
the size of Libya – for another 75 days.
Most everything became a so-called target of
opportunity, an excuse for long-range bombers to
lighten their load for the flight back to base:
Bridges over the Danube River, civilian convoys,
factories, power stations, water treatment plants, oil
refineries, broadcasting facilities (on April 23 the
headquarters of Radio Television of Serbia was bombed,
killing 16 employees), the headquarters of
pro-government political parties, hospitals (including
a maternity ward), apartment complexes, passenger
trains, religious processions, a residence of the
president and, on May 7, the Chinese embassy in
Belgrade. The last resulted in three Chinese citizens
being killed and 20 wounded.
In a technique recently replicated by the U.S. in
northwest Pakistan, Western warplanes waited for
rescuers to arrive at the scene of their carnage, then
doubled back to attack relief workers.
Tomahawk cruise missiles were fired from U.S.
warships in the Mediterranean Sea and cluster bombs,
depleted uranium weapons, graphite bombs and other
death-dealing ordnance were unleashed by NATO combat
aircraft.
In the infamous words of New York Times columnist
Thomas Friedman:
“It should be lights out in Belgrade: Every power
grid, water pipe, bridge, road and war-related factory
has to be targeted. Like it or not, we are at war with
the Serbian nation…and the stakes have to be very
clear: Every week you ravage Kosovo is another decade
we will set your country back by pulverizing you. You
want 1950? We can do 1950. You want 1389? We can do
1389 too.”
This was terror bombing of an entire nation, an
entire people.
In the same article the above quote appeared in,
Friedman wrote that “if NATO’s only strength is that
it can bomb forever, then it has to get every ounce
out of that. Let’s at least have a real air war.”
Having failed to bomb Yugoslavia into capitulation
in the first round of air attacks, NATO demonstrated
how truly “humanitarian” the world’s first putative
humanitarian war was.
It is now reprising the role in Libya.
The U.S. and Britain launched over 110 cruise
missiles into Libya on the first day of what is now an
over six-week war against the country. In the first
twelve days at least 160 Tomahawk and other missiles
were fired against government military and civilian
targets and hundreds of air missions were flown over
the nation.
Since NATO assumed command of the war on March 31,
almost 5,000 sorties, 2,000 of them (in NATO parlance)
strike sorties have been carried out.
Having weeks earlier destroyed scores of military
and so-called dual use assets, including non-military
targets like trucks, sport-utility vehicles and cars,
and sites – storage facilities and broadcasting and
telecommunications centers – NATO has been moving in
for the kill in the Libyan capital. Literally for the
kill.
Failing to induce anyone in Gaddafi’s inner circle
to murder him – such calls were made publicly even
before the war commenced – NATO has been attempting to
execute the task itself.
On the night of May 1 many in the world expected
the news that President Obama would address the nation
on an undisclosed national security matter to result
in his announcing that, not Osama bin Laden, but
Muammar Gaddafi had been killed in a military
operation.
Obama’s next ad hoc press conference or remarks to
the nation may reveal just that development. If they
don’t attempt to explain that the destruction of the
Chinese or Russian embassy in Tripoli was an accident,
that an outdated map had been employed. “Our hearts go
out to those who have lost loved ones due to this
unfortunate mishap.”
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EsinIslam.Com
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