Rebels in Libya’s Western Mountains launched a multipronged attack against government forces at dawn on Thursday and scored what appeared to be their biggest one-day territory gain since the first days of the uprising.
Click to Enlarge:
http://baysontheroad.posterous.com/latest
Video gibts hier
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2011/07/20117287598328864.html
na das hört sich doch gut an...
Djerba, Tunisia (CNN) — Rebels in western Libya are claiming big successes after a major offensive was launched early Thursday.
Rebel commanders say their forces have captured five towns and surrounded a sixth in the plains below the Nafusa mountain range which borders Tunisia.
Hundreds of rebels moved from their mountain positions at dawn. With heavier weapons leading the way with lighter armed fighters following, they initially encountered fierce resistance from the loyalists of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.
Col. Jumma Ibrahim, spokesman for the Military Council for the western mountain region, said several major battles had taken place before the towns were secured.
He named the captured towns as al-Ruwais, Takout, al-Jawsh, Bader and al-Ghazzaya, and the surrounded town as Umm al-Far.
Ibrahim said rebels were now negotiating with Gadhafi troops inside Umm al-Far.
He said four rebels had been killed in the fighting at least 20 wounded, while 20 Gadhafi fighters had been captured.
Weapons, including heavy artillery, had been captured by the rebels.
The claimed successes come after one of the biggest rebel offensives in recent weeks and, if true, puts the fighters closer to capturing a significant supply route used by Gadhafi forces.
Col. Ibrahim said that on the eastern side of the mountains, Gadhafi forces had been shelling rebel held positions near Beir al-Ghanam and also near Qawalish.
Rebel fighters last month suffered heavy casualties in a failed attempt to wrest control of al-Ghazzaya from forces loyal to Gadhafi.
Last week, rebel fighters manning hilltops in the western mountains overlooking al-Ghazzaya told CNN that they had been watching the government forces reinforcing their weapon stocks with heavy military machinery and rocket launchers.
Rebels have been battling government troops in a fight to oust Gadhafi, who has ruled the North African nation for nearly 42 years.
NATO has used air power to enforce a U.N. resolution protecting civilians from the regime, and world powers have been announcing their support for Libya’s rebel umbrella group.
The United Kingdom on Wednesday recognized the Transitional National Council as that nation’s legitimate government. The United States recently recognized the council as the “legitimate governing authority” in Libya.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague on Wednesday reiterated his stance that Gadhafi could remain in Libya if he leaves power, but added that the best thing would be for him to face justice at the International Criminal Court, which is seeking his arrest.
Source CNN
Rebels in Libya’s Western Mountains launched a multipronged attack against government forces at dawn on Thursday and scored what appeared to be their biggest one-day territory gain since the first days of the uprising.
Click to Enlarge:
größere Mengen an schweren waffen konnten erobert werden. So langsam
bricht G. Armee in sich zusammen. Tripoli ist nah!
While Libyan factions in Benghazi clash over control of army bases in the city, opposition forces further west have broken through government lines at Misrata, routing pro-Gaddafi units and seizing tanks, heavy artillery and rocket launchers.
Fierce fighting outside the besieged city that began with a government offensive on Saturday ended in what rebel commanders say was a rout, as opposition fighters advanced nine miles.
The collapse of government units was so complete that the rebels came upon a treasure trove of heavy artillery, tanks, armoured vehicles and small arms at an abandoned school complex outside the nearby town of Zlitan.
Meanwhile in Benghazi, Libyan factions clashed in the early hours with an armed gang they said was loyal to Muammar Gaddafi, the latest sign of growing lawlessness in the rebel-held east following the death of their military commander, Abdel Fatah Younis, apparently at the hands of rebel forces.
Rebel spokesman Mahmoud Shammam told reporters in the opposition capital that the clashes broke out when rebel forces attacked a militia that had helped around 300 Gaddafi loyalists break out of jail on Friday. Rebel forces surrounded the barracks in which the militia, which calls itself the Nida Brigade, had sheltered.
At least six rebels were killed in the clashes, he said, which involved rocket-propelled grenades and machine guns.
“At 8am, the barracks was brought under control. Thirty men surrendered and we took their weapons,” Shammam said.
“We consider them members of the fifth column,” he added, reflecting growing fears among the opposition that Gaddafi loyalists have infiltrated their ranks.
The 300 Gaddafi soldiers and loyalists who broke out of jail are apparently still at large.
In Misrata, rebels arriving at the abandoned arsenal found the keys still in the ignitions of trucks holding grad multiple-barrelled rocket launchers, enabling them to hook them to the heavy guns and drive them back across the lines.
“They just left these behind, they left grad trucks, they left some cars, they left weapons,” said Abdullah Maiteed, of the rebel Arise Brigade, stationed on the main Tripoli-Misrata highway. “We nailed them.”
Four of the huge 155mm guns, the largest battlefield artillery weapon in use among most armies, were seen by the Guardian driving back from the frontline late on Saturday night. Each was towed by multiple-barrelled grad rocket launcher, the cabs of the tan-coloured trucks still bearing the graffiti of the Gaddafi forces.
Rebels say the government front west of Misrata, where Gaddafi has deployed his most powerful force, the 32nd Brigade, commanded by his son Khamis, has effectively disintegrated.
“The resistance today was not that much. I don’t know, maybe he doesn’t have an army,” said Mohammed Elfituri of the Faisal (Sword) Brigade. “We thought that it would be a hard work [but] we moved 15 kilometres.”
If the rebels can find the ammunition – a big if, given the UN arms embargo – the arrival of these guns may herald a change in the balance of power around Misrata, allowing the rebels to match the heavy weapons of pro-Gaddafi forces.
Misrata’s forces also entered the town of Zlitan, an objective for the past six weeks, to find it empty of government troops. But soldiers from the rebel Shaheed (martyrs) brigade said they were turned back by residents, who feared that a rebel advance would mean their homes targeted by government artillery.
Fourteen rebel fighters were killed and more than 60 wounded, with 40 government soldiers captured, among them seven pro-Gaddafi troops wounded and treated in Misrata. No figures for government casualties were available.
In the early hours of Sunday morning long range rockets struck Misrata city centre, killing three people.
While the mood of rebel troops in Misrata is confident, following news of gains by opposition forces in the Nafusa mountains to the west, commanders say they are cautious about predicting victory – Libya‘s rebel forces have yet to demonstrate the ability to launch sustained operations.
One opposition intelligence officer said Gaddafi may retain significant forces in the Wadi Ikam, a wide wooded valley further west on the road to Tripoli.
Source: Guardian
und in den Western Mountains gehts nicht weiter weil keine Munition da ist...
man das kann doch echt nicht so schwer sein vernünftige Versorgungswege
aufzubauen?!
In Brega gibts kleinere Kämpfe aber da sinds die Minen die einen Vormarsch noch
verhindern....
Tue Aug 2, 2011 11:48am EDT
(Refiles to remove extra dateline)
* Poised for assault on key town, but lack bullets
* Rebels pass time cleaning guns waiting for ammunition
By Michael Georgy
KABAW, Libya, Aug 2 (Reuters) - Libyan rebels surrounding Muammar Gaddafi's last major stronghold in the Western Mountains region are hungry for the kill. There's just one problem -- not enough ammunition.
After weeks of planning, the rebels launched a new offensive in the region, capturing several towns and villages. But the biggest prize, Tiji, remains elusive for a simple reason fighters like Jumaa Muhammad are all too familiar with.
"We could not go any further. We ran out of ammunition," said Muhammad, who took on soldiers with heavy weapons with only 28 bullets for his AK-47 assault rifle.
"Who knows when more will arrive?"
The rebels of Libya's Western Mountains have plenty of spirit and determination. But frustrations are rising over inadequate supplies, inferior weapons and what they call neglect by the West.
Capturing Tiji would be a major boost for the rebels, who in this part of Libya, at least, appear to have managed to set aside factionalism and ethnic differences to coordinate a major assault.
Control of Tiji could give rebels access to a highway to that leads to Tripoli. They encircled Tifi days ago had to put the brakes on the operation when there was little left to fire at government forces, and have since been unable to advance.
Muhammad and other fighters unleashed their weapons, then had to retreat to a mountain ridge where they keep a close eye on Tiji from a tiny cement lookout post in the town of Kabaw.
Rebels pass the time cleaning their weapons, or chatting, until fresh ammunition arrives, hoping Gaddafi's men don't fire more Grad missiles at them from Tiji.
About 25 pound the earth a few feet away every day, a reminder of the army's superior firepower.
Because they lack experience, rebels often fire off many rounds in all directions during battles, instead of choosing targets carefully, wasting bullets in the process.
Ammunition from fellow rebels in the east of Libya comes only about once a month, so they have to improvise to survive.
"It's taking too long to get ammunition. Units from different villages have to borrow ammunition from each other because there is not enough to go around," said Tarek Zanbou, a former intelligence officer under Gaddafi who joined the rebel movement.
He and other rebel officials don't understand why NATO doesn't step up air strikes to help the rebels.
"Yesterday hundreds of Gaddafi's men were on a main street in Tiji. We gave them (NATO) the coordinates and they didn't do anything," he said.
Rebels firmly believe that "God is on our side" in the war against Gaddafi. But few believe victory will be possible without the bare essentials, like bullets.
"We just won't be able to reach Tripoli if this keeps happening," said rebel Muhammad Ramadan, as he walked past a mangled piece of metal from one of Gaddafi's rockets on the mountain ridge and a wall drawing calling for a free Libya.
(Editing by David Lewis and Mark Heinrich) (editing by Mark Heinrich)