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WAR REPORT
NATO grapples with Libya arsenals threat
by Staff Writers
Brussels (UPI) Sep 9, 2011

NATO destroys two Scud missiles near Bani Walid
Brussels (AFP) Sept 9, 2011 - NATO aircraft destroyed on Friday two Scud missiles around Bani Walid, one of the last towns still controlled by Moamer Kadhafi loyalists, the military alliance said.

"The intent of Kadhafi forces to use these indiscriminate weapons represents a serious threat to civilians in Libya and demonstrates their willingness to ignore calls for discussions," said Colonel Roland Lavoie, the NATO mission's spokesman.

After NATO intelligence spotted the surface-to-surface missiles, alliance aircraft "conducted a precision strike against the warehouse hiding the missiles," Lavoie said.

"The strike was successful and the missiles were destroyed."

Kadhafi forces fired two Scud missiles last month, one in the direction of Misrata in the west and another towards Brega in the east. Scuds are highly inaccurate weapons that are not designed to hit a specific target, NATO said.

Rebels have given towns loyal to Kadhafi until Saturday to surrender. On-off negotiations have dragged on for days in Bani Walid, where a number of former regime officials, including Kadhafi spokesman Mussa Ibrahim, are believed to be holed up.

NATO is grappling with a growing threat of sophisticated weapons falling into the hands of potential foes in Libya as the North African country inches toward an endgame for its civil war.

Amid a threat from underground armed groups, including suspected al-Qaida adherents, in Libya outside the transitional government, the Gadhafi regime's collapse last month opened a Pandora's Box of armed insurgents of different political persuasions storming government and military centers and carrying off unspecified but apparently huge quantities of weapons and ammunition.

U.N. Special Adviser on Libya Ian Martin, who visited the North African country to compile a report for U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, discussed weapons proliferation with transitional government leaders as a major challenge.

The European Union, NATO and the United Nations are working on creating a single security apparatus in Libya to start disarming disparate groups and armed individuals of no fixed affiliation.

NATO decision-makers, uncomfortable with scathing references to the chaos that ruled Iraq after the 2003 allied invasion, remain tight-lipped but privately admit the problem is immense, volatile and potentially dangerous for the West's aim of installing a friendly -- and preferably democratic -- government in Tripoli.

The International Institute for Strategic Studies cited weapons proliferation as one of the challenges facing the National Transitional Council.

While about 70 countries recognize the NTC, the new government still has to move to Tripoli from Benghazi, from where it mounted the military campaign against Gadhafi loyalists.

More importantly, NTC needs to secure domestic legitimacy, IISS said. A draft constitution declaring Libya an "independent democratic state" promised equality of citizens before the law.

That constitutional pledge is "likely to be welcomed by residents of eastern cities such as Benghazi and the Berber minority in the west, all neglected by Gadhafi government agencies that concentrated investment and services in loyalist areas," IISS said.

It is only weeks since rebels overran Gadhafi's Bab al-Aziziyah compound in Tripoli, and the transition process in Libya is clearly just beginning, said the think tank. Having stemmed any immediate chaos, the NTC's next challenge will be stabilizing security.

"This will involve demobilizing and disarming the many, often young, men who went to battle against the Gadhafi regime and finding them gainful employment," IISS said.

Many Libyans haven't been paid for months. Upward of 20 percent of the potential workforce hasn't had a job for many years because of the lopsided nature of the Gadhafi-era economy. Getting Libya's economy working is another urgent item on the interim leadership's "to-do" list.

"Due to six months of conflict, the potential of the government is limited," Faraje Sayeh, the NTC's interim minister for capacity building, recently admitted. "Try to bear with us."

IISS said: "For the time being, most Libyan people appear prepared to do that. However, if positive results take too long to materialize, this goodwill will undoubtedly prove to have its limits."

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Libya commander vows 'decisive military action'
Misrata, Libya (AFP) Sept 9, 2011 - With just hours to go before a deadline for Moamer Kadhafi's supporters to lay down their arms, a top Libyan commander told AFP Friday no breakthrough had come and "decisive military action" was imminent.

"Up to now these negotiations did not lead to positive results," said Salem Jeha -- a highly influential member of Misrata's military council -- a few hours ahead of the midnight deadline.

"If the negotiations fail then there will be decisive action, decisive military action," Jeha said from the National Transitional Council military headquarters in Misrata.

Troops loyal to the interim government have trained their sights on the pro-Kadhafi enclave of Bani Walid, where limited fighting is already underway, and the colonel's home town of Sirte.

They are also said to be targeting a large arms dump in the Jufra region to the south of Sirte.

Jeha said military action could now take place "at any time" adding that "we are not waiting forever."

"But where this military action takes place, that is a surprise. We are in position and we can move in any direction and this is our strength."

Even ahead of the deadline fighting broke out in Bani Walid as revolutionaries inside the town clashed with Kadhafi forces.

One of the "revolutionary" fighters was killed and four wounded, while there were three deaths in the ranks of the pro-Kadhafi forces according to NTC sources.

Jeha, an artillery expert and former colonel in Kadhafi's army, said he expects to face stiff but futile resistance from Kadhafi's forces.

"What we know is that the remnants of Kadhafi's troops are fighting until the end to hold on to their territory."

He added: "I am very sure that they cannot defend the positions they are in."

"He is playing his last cards in central Libya."





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