"If NATO is to size or in any other city in Libya raise hell against the Alliance. We will be a ball of fire ... We will do things ten times worse than what happened in Iraq. " And 'this is the threat the government of Colonel, assigned to the words of Ibrahim Musa, a spokesman for the Libyan government.
The warning comes after the regime in Tripoli's announcement yesterday that Italy, France and Britain to send to Libya a few dozen military instructors to train the insurgents. "In many cities are self-organized teams to combat any possible invasion of NATO," Moussa added, explaining that the people have already been distributed machine guns and small arms.
The threat of force Gadhafi does not come unexpected, however. The U.S. Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, in the afternoon had stressed the lack of U.S. military instructors. "The intention is to help the rebels to organize themselves better," Clinton explained, "But do not take part in this operation." The U.S.
contribution will come in the form instead of the drones 'Predator', which should allow more precise and targeted attachci. Their submission was approved today by the president Barack Obama. But the sentences international military operation in Libya also came from "risky and the outcome unpredictable," has called Sergei Lavrov, Foreign Minister of the Moscow government, which has never been in agreement with the interventions - whatever - in Libya.
The rebels have taken this morning while checking Wazzan, a major border crossing between Libya and Tunisia. After violent clashes with the forces of Gaddafi - said to have caused 15 dead and 25 wounded - one hundred militants have decided to enter government in Tunisian territory and surrender to local authorities.
14 other soldiers of the regime are being made progionieri by insurgents. But NATO attacks also come from state television and the official Libyan news agency. They accuse the Alliance of causing seven deaths and 18 wounded yesterday in an airstrike in the area of al-Khallat Farjan, south of Tripoli.
Unknown, according to the official organs of the regime, by contrast, the number of victims of NATO bombing this morning on the city of Gharyan. NATO denies any wrongdoing and responded with a report of his officers, published in the British newspaper 'Daily Telegraph', about all'impego of mercenaries by the regime.
The record, which is based on statements by a former party official Libyan Muammar Gaddafi had spent three and a half million dollars to recruit hundreds of foreign militants, mostly from the Polisario Front movement indipendestista. Tribesmen Sahrawi camps in southern Algeria, paid 10 thousand dollars for two months of work.
"In addition to the militia of the separatist group," is written in the report, "There are also groups of fighters of the Tuareg in Mali and Nigeria supported by Gaddafi in the past." Remain stable, finally, the conditions of the two photographers injured yesterday in Misurata. Britain's Guy Martin, a freelance photographer who works for the agency Panos, reported "a severe pelvic injury," said his colleague, Andre Lihon.
The other photographer, American Michael Brown, working for the agency Corbis: was hit by shrapnel of a grenade in his left shoulder, but is not life threatening. The two photographers were involved yesterday in an attack by loyalist forces, in which two colleagues were killed, the British and American Tim Hetherington Chris Hondros.
The warning comes after the regime in Tripoli's announcement yesterday that Italy, France and Britain to send to Libya a few dozen military instructors to train the insurgents. "In many cities are self-organized teams to combat any possible invasion of NATO," Moussa added, explaining that the people have already been distributed machine guns and small arms.
The threat of force Gadhafi does not come unexpected, however. The U.S. Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, in the afternoon had stressed the lack of U.S. military instructors. "The intention is to help the rebels to organize themselves better," Clinton explained, "But do not take part in this operation." The U.S.
contribution will come in the form instead of the drones 'Predator', which should allow more precise and targeted attachci. Their submission was approved today by the president Barack Obama. But the sentences international military operation in Libya also came from "risky and the outcome unpredictable," has called Sergei Lavrov, Foreign Minister of the Moscow government, which has never been in agreement with the interventions - whatever - in Libya.
The rebels have taken this morning while checking Wazzan, a major border crossing between Libya and Tunisia. After violent clashes with the forces of Gaddafi - said to have caused 15 dead and 25 wounded - one hundred militants have decided to enter government in Tunisian territory and surrender to local authorities.
14 other soldiers of the regime are being made progionieri by insurgents. But NATO attacks also come from state television and the official Libyan news agency. They accuse the Alliance of causing seven deaths and 18 wounded yesterday in an airstrike in the area of al-Khallat Farjan, south of Tripoli.
Unknown, according to the official organs of the regime, by contrast, the number of victims of NATO bombing this morning on the city of Gharyan. NATO denies any wrongdoing and responded with a report of his officers, published in the British newspaper 'Daily Telegraph', about all'impego of mercenaries by the regime.
The record, which is based on statements by a former party official Libyan Muammar Gaddafi had spent three and a half million dollars to recruit hundreds of foreign militants, mostly from the Polisario Front movement indipendestista. Tribesmen Sahrawi camps in southern Algeria, paid 10 thousand dollars for two months of work.
"In addition to the militia of the separatist group," is written in the report, "There are also groups of fighters of the Tuareg in Mali and Nigeria supported by Gaddafi in the past." Remain stable, finally, the conditions of the two photographers injured yesterday in Misurata. Britain's Guy Martin, a freelance photographer who works for the agency Panos, reported "a severe pelvic injury," said his colleague, Andre Lihon.
The other photographer, American Michael Brown, working for the agency Corbis: was hit by shrapnel of a grenade in his left shoulder, but is not life threatening. The two photographers were involved yesterday in an attack by loyalist forces, in which two colleagues were killed, the British and American Tim Hetherington Chris Hondros.
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