Setelah Nato mengambil alih kendali operasi militer malah jadi acak-acakan 
begini..

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Doubt cast on NATO action as casualty reports rise
By News Wires the 08/04/2011 - 09:24

Libyan rebels claim NATO planes erroneously bombed a row of their tanks, 
killing five people, as the head of US Africa Command, General Carter Ham, 
admits it is unlikely Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi will be dislodged by force.

REUTERS - Libyan rebels said five of their fighters were killed when NATO 
planes mistakenly bombed a rebel tank column and a top U.S. general said they 
were unlikely to be able to oust Muammar Gaddafi by force.
With daily skirmishes near the contested port of Brega in eastern Libya making 
little impact on the front line and rebels unable to end a brutal government 
assault on the western city of Misrata, NATO admits its mission to protect 
civilians is tough.
 
In rebel-held eastern Libya, wounded rebels being brought to a hospital 
Ajdabiyah said their trucks and tanks were hit on Thursday by a NATO air strike 
outside Brega, where fighting has dragged on for a week.
 
It was the second time in less than a week that rebels had blamed NATO for 
bombing their comrades by mistake after 13 were killed in an air strike not far 
from the same spot on Saturday.
 
At the same time, the rebels have accused NATO of being too slow to order air 
strikes they have come to depend on in their uprising to end more than four 
decades of Gaddafi rule.
 
NATO said it was investigating an attack by its aircraft on a tank column in 
the area along the Mediterranean coast on Thursday, saying the situation was 
"unclear and fluid".
 
Asked if a stalemate was emerging in the seven-week-old conflict, the head of 
U.S. Africa Command General Carter Ham said: "I would agree with that at 
present, on the ground."
 
He told a Senate hearing in Washington the United States should not arm the 
rebels without a better idea of who they were and when asked how the war would 
end, said: "I think it does not end militarily."
 
There was little likelihood that rebels would be able to fight their way to 
Tripoli and oust Gaddafi by force, Ham said.
 
Medical workers carried blood-soaked uniforms from hospital rooms in Ajdabiyah, 
gateway to the insurgent stronghold of Benghazi in the east, after wounded 
fighters were ferried back from Brega. "It was a NATO air strike on us. We were 
near our vehicles near Brega," wounded fighter Younes Jumaa said from a 
stretcher at the hospital.
 
Nurse Mohamed Ali said at least five rebels were dead.
 
"NATO are liars. They are siding with Gaddafi," Salem Mislat, one of the 
rebels, said.
 
A rebel commander said it appeared to be a case of "friendly fire" and said it 
did not cause tension with NATO although the rebels wanted an explanation.
 
Rebels had brought about 20 tanks out of storage and were advancing with them 
along the coastal desert strip that divides Ajdabiyah and Brega when they were 
hit, he said.
 
"We would assume it was NATO by mistake, friendly fire," Abdel Fattah Younes 
told a news conference in Benghazi, speaking through an English translator.
 
Air strikes cause stalemate
 
Rebel spokesmen told Reuters Gaddafi forces killed five people and wounded 25 
in an artillery bombardment of the isolated and besieged western city of 
Misrata on Wednesday.
 
The barrage forced the temporary closure of Misrata's port, a vital lifeline 
for supplies to besieged civilians, the spokesmen said, reporting fighting on a 
key road to the port as government forces tried to advance.
 
Libya's third city rose up with other towns against Gaddafi in mid-February and 
has been under siege for weeks after a violent crackdown put an end to most 
protests elsewhere in the west of the country.
 
A rebel spokesman told Reuters people in Misrata were crammed five families to 
a house in the few safe districts, to escape weeks of sniper and artillery fire.
 
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed concern about deteriorating 
conditions for civilians in Misrata and Zintan in the west, and Brega in the 
east.
 
He said the situation in Misrata was particularly grave with the city under 
heavy bombardment and shortages of food, water and medical supplies.
 
Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey was working on a "road map" 
to end the war in Libya which would include a ceasefire and the withdrawal of 
Gaddafi's forces from some cities. Turkey has held talks with envoys from 
Gaddafi's government and representatives of the opposition. A rebel spokesman 
said later the rebels rejected talks with Gaddafi and demanded he leave power.
 
Oil production cut
 
The civil war has cut Libyan oil output by 80 percent, a senior government 
official said on Thursday, as rebels and Gaddafi's forces traded exchanged 
accusations over who had attacked oil fields vital to both sides.
 
Supply worries stemming from the attacks helped drive U.S. and Brent crude 
futures to their highest in 2 1/2 years on Friday.
 
Rebels say government attacks on three different installations in the east have 
halted production of the oil they desperately need to finance the uprising 
against Gaddafi.
 
The government accused Britain of damaging an oil pipeline in a strike against 
the Sarir oilfield which killed three guards. NATO denied the alliance carried 
out any air strikes in the area and said forces loyal to Gaddafi were 
responsible.
 
Shokri Ghanem, chairman of the government National Oil Corporation, told 
Reuters Libya's production had fallen to 250,000 to 300,000 barrels per day 
compared with 1.6 million before the uprising.
 
Oil traders said a cargo of crude, worth around $112 million was headed for 
China after setting sail from the rebel-held port of Marsa el-Hariga near 
Tobruk on Wednesday.
 
The trial deal was likely to clear the way for Europe to resume badly-needed 
purchases of Libyan oil but traders said it could be a long time before exports 
reach substantial levels.

 
Source URL: 
http://www.france24.com/en/20110408-doubt-over-nato-military-action-reports-casualties-rise-libya




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