Sarajevo is at something like 500km from Vienna? What were the benefits to wait during 3 long years before finally intervening? Tell me exactly what "better" situation could have resulted from non-intervention? 3 more years of war to reach the same point?
The future of the world is at stake. It's not simply about few rebels and a mad dictator, it's about the relationship between the Arab World and Europe during the 21st century.
Gaddafi is a guy who invaded Chad, who funded multiple terrorists including Carlos and Abu Nidal, who directly organised the bombings of several civil aircrafts, who ordered Libyans to shoot on a crowd demonstrating in the streets of London. Gadaffi ordered air raids over his own people, and he pays mercenaries $10,000 by rebel shot.
If Gaddafi wins this war, not a single rebel will survive. He will shoot them all.
This is not Iraq, this is not Kosovo. This is about a single country that no one wants to divide which is ruled by a mad guy that everyone wants out. The rebels themselves ask for a UN intervention.
There is just no neutral way in here. No intervention is a direct support to Gaddafi. Establishing a no-fly zone is a direct support of the rebels. CHOOSE YOUR SIDE.
Finally, isn't Libya firmly divided along tribal lines, with Gadaffi being the strong man keeping everything together( along the lines of Tito in Yugoslavia)?
And anyone who thinks Gaddafi would help Libya needs to see this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VvOo5LK22sg
Also see the quote in my sig.
As Muammar Gaddafi's forces ratchet up their military offensive against the rebels, shells have fallen six kilometres west of the key Libyan town of Ajdabiya, which the rebels have vowed to defend against government forces.
Journalists for AFP news agency saw two craters of some four metres across and five metres apart near a road junction, after Monday's shelling.
Rebels said there had been no casualties, but the attack on Ajdabiya is seen, from the rebels' viewpoint, "as the last line of defence," said Al Jazeera's Tony Birtley, reporting from Benghazi.
As a sandstorm blew over the area, dozens of civilians were evacuating the town, heading east for the rebel capital of Benghazi aboard light trucks loaded with suitcases, bags and mattresses.
'Final phase'
General Abdel Fatah Yunis, rebel commander, who resigned as Gaddafi's interior minister, soon after the uprising began in mid-February, said in Benghazi, on Sunday, that Ajdabiya, little over 100 kilometres to the west, was "a vital city".
"It's on the route to the east, to Benghazi and to Tobruk and also to the south. Ajdabiya's defence is very important... We will defend it," he told reporters.
From Ajdabiya one road runs north along the coast to Benghazi, Libya's second city, with a population of one million, which the rebels have made their capital.
Another road goes straight across the desert eastward to the oil port of Tobruk, which to date has given rebels full control up to the Egyptian border.
Al Jazeera's Birley said "Gaddafi forces are advancing and It seems that fighting is carrying on and coming close to Benghazi.
"It seems like we are entering the final phase of the conflict but whether this revolution will fail or succeed, that will only be determined in the coming weeks."
According to earlier reports, rebels recaptured the oil town of Brega killing 25 government soldiers and capturing 20 more.
Meanwhile, the Reuters news agency reports that France was stepping up efforts on Monday to persuade world powers to impose a no-fly zone over Libya.
France said it would consult other powers "in the coming hours" to try to set up such a zone to assure the protection of civilians "in the face of the terrible violence suffered by the Libyan population".
The Arab League's weekend call on the United Nations to impose such a zone satisfies one of three conditions set by NATO for it to police Libyan air space.
The others were proof that its help was needed, and a UN Security Council resolution.
International delay
However, analysts say that by the time the international community agrees on a response to Gaddafi's onslaught against a popular revolt, it could all be over.
"The international community is dragging its feet," Saad Djebbar, a London lawyer and expert on Libyan affairs, told the Reuters news agency.
"The diplomatic pace is very slow. There is an urgency to act quickly before those people are finished off by Gaddafi's forces."
"The international community has to act now - not only to protect Benghazi from an onslaught but because of what it means for the rest of the world if Gaddafi is allowed to remain the leader of Libya," said Geoff Porter, a US-based political risk consultant who specialises in North Africa.
Speaking to Al Jazeera, Tarik Yousef, a senior research fellow at the Dubai school of government said that, "What has been missing is a strong sense of what the US wants to do.
"They need to sort through a lot of ideas they have about a post-Gaddafi Libya, but the time that they are taking, I am afraid it will come at a great cost to Libyan civilians."
'Arm the rebels'
Britain has also been pushing for the imposition of a no-fly zone to shield Libyans from Gaddafi's air power.
William Hague, British foreign secretary said that international powers should consider the option of arming Libyan rebels and take swift action to prevent Gaddafi forces from crushing a popular rebellion.
Hague said it would be a nightmare for Libya's people if Gaddafi managed to hold on to power.
"If Gaddafi went on to be able to dominate much of the country, well this would be a long nightmare for the Libyan people and this would be a pariah state for some time to come,"Hague told BBC Radio.
Of the UN's veto-yielding members, China has been against the imposition of a no-fly zone, while Russia has appeared reluctant and the United States, Germany and Italy have taken a cautious line on intervention.
However, Dmitry Medvedev, Russian president has banned Gaddafi and 15 members of his family and immediate circle from Russia and from carrying out financial transactions in the country , the Interfax news agency reported.
Besides the ruling family, the financial restrictions also apply to the head of Libya's military intelligence service, who is Gaddafi's brother-in-law, Interfax said.
Rebel forces in Libya say they have retaken the eastern oil town of Brega, capturing a number of elite government troops and killing others.
The statement has not been independently confirmed.
It came hours after the rebels had themselves been driven from the town by air and ground attacks by forces loyal to Libyan leader Col Muammar Gaddafi.
Elsewhere, the rebel-held town of Ajdabiya is reported to have come under heavy aerial bombardment.
On the diplomatic front, France is stepping up its efforts to persuade the United Nations Security Council to impose a no-fly zone over Libya, a proposal backed by the UK and the Arab League.
The rebel military commander based in Libya's second city, Benghazi, has also appealed for a no-fly zone, saying his fighters have no answer to Col Gaddafi's air power, says the BBC's Jon Leyne from the rebel stronghold.
The British Foreign Secretary, William Hague, has said Libya risks becoming a "pariah state" if Col Gaddafi holds on to power.
"If Gaddafi went on to be able to dominate much of the country, well this would be a long nightmare for the Libyan people, and this would be a pariah state," he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.
Mr Hague will attend a meeting of G8 foreign ministers in Paris later in the day to examine options for Libya as rebel efforts to end Col Gaddafi's four-decade rule appear to falter.
Rebel stronghold
With fighting continuing in the east of Libya, it is not clear exactly where the front line is. Brega changed hands several times over the weekend, amid a relentless barrage of air and ground attacks by government forces.
Continue reading the main story
Libya in maps
Diplomatic options
Is a no-fly zone possible?
Then reports came through on Sunday evening that a special forces unit loyal to the rebels had retaken part of the key oil city, but it is not clear whether they can hold on to it.
Pro-Gaddafi forces also launched air strikes on the rebel-held town of Ajdabiya after sweeping east, rebels said.
Ajdabiya is the only sizeable town between the front line around Brega and the rebel stronghold of Benghazi.
International diplomatic pressure is growing for a no-fly zone over Libya, after the Arab League agreed to ask the UN Security Council to enforce such a zone on Saturday.
The policy would be aimed at preventing Col Gaddafi's forces using warplanes to attack rebel positions, although no clear position has emerged on exactly how this would be achieved.
Nato has previously cited regional and international support for the idea as a key condition before it could possibly go ahead.
Russia and China, which wield vetos on the UN Security Council, have expressed serious reservations on the issue. But on Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said he wanted more information on the Arab League proposal.
Turkey, the only Muslim member of Nato, has strongly opposed the idea.
"We have seen from other examples that foreign interventions, especially military interventions, only deepen the problem," Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in Istanbul.
"Therefore we see a Nato military intervention in another country as extremely unbeneficial and, moreover, are concerned that it could create dangerous results," said Mr Erdogan.
On Sunday, Human Rights Watch said Libyan authorities had carried out a wave of "arbitrary arrests and forced disappearances" in the capital, Tripoli.
The group said that Libyan security forces had arrested scores of protesters and suspected government critics in Tripoli, adding that some of them had been tortured.
Not so fast guys!
Brega Retaken, according to rebels
Not so fast guys!
Brega Retaken, according to rebels
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12731079