Monday, April 4, 2011

Minimize rebel attack''wrong''to NATO

The Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is investigating an airstrike by coalition under his command in Libya, which was white on a Libyan opposition group near the town of Brega, which left 13 dead. On Friday a coalition aircraft commanded by NATO fired about 15 miles east of Brega on a convoy of five or six vehicles, including an ambulance, after a rebel shot into the air as a sign of joy, explained Isa Jamis, political head of the city of Ajdabiya in charge of relations with the rebels.

"It was wrong (the Rebel), believed that aircraft were shot, and opened fire on the convoy," said Khamis. Meanwhile, the fighter Mustafa Ali Omar, said the shooter was a loyal Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, who infiltrated the rebel group, "Some of the Gadhafi forces infiltrated the rebels and fired their weapons to anti air air.

After NATO forces came and bombed them. " Gheriani Mustafa, spokesman for the National Transitional Council (CNT), a representative body of the rebels, was cautious and stressed that "no confirmation" that the 13 victims have died in an airstrike. "You have to look at the big picture. Mistakes will happen.

We are trying to get rid of Gadhafi and there will be casualties, although of course that does not make us happy. " In Brussels, an official at NATO said the alliance must verify "whether NATO planes were there and then." Fighting continued yesterday on the city of Misrata between insurgents who control the city and the forces of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.

The officers tried to enter three different points, but were repulsed by the rebels. Yesterday NATO conducted air strikes, while Pentagon officials confirmed that the U.S. military began to withdraw its combat aircraft and missiles from this weekend. On the other hand, the insurgents made a deal with Qatar to sell crude oil from the areas they control in exchange for food, medicine and fuel, said an official of the insurgents in Benghazi, the second most impornate cioudad the country and controlled by the rebels since the start of the uprising against the regime.

Last Friday, a rebel leader met with a United Nations envoy in Benghazi and offered a truce in exchange for Libya and Gadhafi left its forces leave the city under government control, but the colonel refused the offer. Regardless of the country involved, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) has a bloody history of errors criticism attributed to their campaign of aerial bombardments.

The number of wrong actions against hospitals, refugees, allies and civilians, most critical point only goes to remind governments about the need to review the force's reputation eroded. Germany came to show concern that the Western alliance can "lose their moral foundation." In one of the most serious incidents in which NATO took a September 2009 bombing in Afghanistan killed 90 civilians mistaken for Taliban insurgents in the province of Kunduz.

The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) of NATO, also attributed the death of a family of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, during an operation in Kandahar. The Alliance considered "inevitable" the "errors" that are most deadly. Even on the body patrolling in Afghanistan, NATO Secretary General, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, acknowledges that "the NATO intervention in Afghanistan was a mistake." Despite the confession, Fogh Rasmussen said: "Venceresmos." Another repudiated the NATO intervention, was the attack in the former Yugoslavia, where numerous reports of errors filled the statistics of deaths during the onslaught of the Alliance.

Populated neighborhoods, police stations, post office, refugee convoys, markets and even embassies. Libyan opponents receive training from U.S. special forces and Egypt in a secret location in Eastern Libya and arms, revealed the news channel Al Jazeera. Speaking to the Qatari news, carried out in Benghazi, a bastion of insurgency against the regime of Muammar Gadhafi, a rebel who requested anonymity said Egyptian and U.S.

forces train the fighters. The rebel narrated receiving military training in a "secret facility" in eastern Libya, which was sent to fire a Katyusha rocket. He also indicated that last Thursday night, a new shipment of this type of artillery came to the east of Libya from Egypt, but said he was unaware whether the origin of this shipment was that country or if it was only used as a transit route.

He explained that "the trainer" said that it was heat-seeking missiles and are released individually to launch portable, so they had to be trained in its use and that was why they were there. Al Jazeera said the rebel claims raised uncomfortable questions about participation "private" in Egypt in the conflict, and respect the arms embargo imposed on Libya.

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