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  • 18. júna 2010 15:05:47 CEST
    Eu zic ca-i de admirat un om care are probleme cu greutatea corporala si cu ambitie reuseste sa le si rezolve, mai ales atunci cand paseste pe o cale care include sportul!In cazul asta, chiar ca-i de apreciat!E valabil pentru oricine acest lucru sau e greu de inteles?
  • 5. apríla 2011 23:28:00 CEST
    Absolut de acod cu antevorbitorul.
    • 13 posts
    4. apríla 2011 22:50:53 CEST
    nu imi plac prea mult blondele dar tu esti exceptia care confirma regula
  • 20. marca 2011 21:03:02 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:02:59 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:02:56 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:02:42 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:02:37 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:02:31 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:02:27 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:02:21 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:02:17 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:02:12 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:02:07 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:02:03 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:01:56 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:01:53 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:01:49 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:01:47 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:01:44 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:01:41 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 21:01:38 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 17. marca 2011 14:20:00 CET
    Dupa pofta inimii tale sa fie.. am pus Ashton-ul.
  • 16. marca 2011 15:01:48 CET
    cam multa munca CARCOTASA pentru:

    un directorash nevertebrat pe Domina sk care se da fetitza cuminte si isi spune CARCOTASA.

    "Auzi pizdo tu crezi ca noi mai halim mult harneala ta idioata de doi bani in care confunzi pula cu prefectura ?"

    Ma, nu confunzi pula cu prefectura: uneori mai confunzi lumea dar iti reviu repede nu ?
    Si ce o sa faci mai CARCOTASA?

    Din toate nickname-urile de care te-ai folosit, incepand cu EZADA si pana acuma, CARCOTASA e cel care te defineste perfect. Un broker scarbos fara coloana vertebrala care se indoaie dupa cum bat vanturile unei domine. Tu nu esti decat un pupincurist incurabil. Cine oare o linge in cur si-i ridica osanale "dominei " cand interesul financiar o cere si tot mai cere mergand acolo sa o futa pe Nutzi swingaritza nu tu?
    Ptiu bine ca nu e Nutzi Udrea ca aia imi afcea si un rca.

    Deocamdata atat. Restul data viitoare « nea » directore.

    P.S. Apropo, mai sunt valabile profilele de care vorbeste lumea pe rec .. cum ii zice, ce mai fac avioanele, ce mai face doamna Musca, sotia e ok, pe la teatrul giulesti ce mai e ? Te sun, ai romingul activat ?
    Mai multe cand vii din Viena.
    Le-am amestecat asa ca Paunescu « De la Barca la Viena ».

    PS : poza cea noua de la mine din profil iti place ?
  • 16. marca 2011 14:57:15 CET
    Japonia adăposteşte pe teritoriul său 55 de reactoare nucleare, mai mult decât orice alt stat din lume. Tepco, compania care exploateză o treime dintre aceste reactoare, inclusiv pe cele de la Fukushima, de unde au avut loc scurgeri radioactive, a falsificat în trecut mai multe rapoarte de siguranţă.

    Premierul japonez Naoto Kan a criticat vehement marţi Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) pentru modul în care a administrat situaţia de la centrala nucleară Fukushima I.

    "Posturile de televiziune au anunţat o explozie. Dar biroul premierului nu a fost informat timp de circa o oră", l-a auzit un reporter al Kyodo News pe Kan spunând în trimpul unei reuniuni cu directorii companiei. "Ce naiba se întâmplă?", a adăugat el.

    La sfârşitul anilor 80 şi începutul anilor 90, Tepco (Tokyo Power Electric Company), a falsificat în jur de 30 de rapoarte de securitate, scrie Le Figaro.

    Pe 29 august 2002, agenţia de securitate nucleară industrială japoneză dezvăluia acest lucru unei opinii publice scandalizate. Falsificarea avea drept obiectiv ascunderea a cel puţin trei incidente survenite la centralele de la Fukushima şi de la Kashiwazaki-Kariwa (prefectura Niigata, în nord, la 200 km de Tokyo). Falsificarea rapoartelor a fost făcută în unele cazuri timp de 25 de ani, estimându-se că în tot acest timp au avut loc peste 200 de evenimente. În urma acestui scandal Tepco a închis 7 dintre cele 17 reactoare ale sale pentru inspecţie în 2002.

    În aprilie 2007 un alt exploatant nipon, Hokuriku Electric, a recunoscut că a ascuns timp de opt ani un incident de la un reactor cu apă fierbinte de la Shika.

    LA Times citează un cercetător în seismologie de la universitatea din Kobe, potrivit căruia un dezastru nuclear nu este posibil doar la Fukushima, ci şi la alte centrale, cum ar fi cea de la Hamaoka.

    Publicaţia americană spune şi că japonezii se tem că guvernul le ascunde aevăratul pericol la care sunt expuşi. Deşi concentraţia de substanţe periculoase din atmosferă a depăşit de 400 de ori limitele normale în anumite regiuni, autorităţile sunt calme, iar OMS spune că nu există un pericol mare pentru sănătatea publică.

    Uzi Even, unul dintre cei mai buni experţi în domeniu din Israel, care a lucrat la reactorul din Dimona, crede că guvernul nipon ascunde multe lucruri. "În evaluarea mea, pagubele au o amploare mult mai mare şi pentru o perioadă de timp mult mai mare" a declarat el, citat de NewsIn.

    Even nu crede că miezul unuia dintre reactoarele ce a explodat de două ori putea rămâne intact, aşa cum au spus japonezii. "Aceste reactoare sunt vechi. Miezul unui reactor care a operat timp de 40 de ani este plin de fisuri şi rugină. Faptul că japonezii nu reuşesc de patru zile să scadă temperatura la reactor spune multe", a subliniat el.

    Even a cerut guvernului israelian să ia în calcul ramificaţiile incidentului din Japonia. "Reactorul de la Dimona este vechi, are aproape 50 de ani, iar punctul său slab este sistemul e răcire. De ani de zile avertizez că trebuie închis şi construit unul nou", a subliniat el.
  • 16. marca 2011 14:57:10 CET
    Japonia adăposteşte pe teritoriul său 55 de reactoare nucleare, mai mult decât orice alt stat din lume. Tepco, compania care exploateză o treime dintre aceste reactoare, inclusiv pe cele de la Fukushima, de unde au avut loc scurgeri radioactive, a falsificat în trecut mai multe rapoarte de siguranţă.

    Premierul japonez Naoto Kan a criticat vehement marţi Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) pentru modul în care a administrat situaţia de la centrala nucleară Fukushima I.

    "Posturile de televiziune au anunţat o explozie. Dar biroul premierului nu a fost informat timp de circa o oră", l-a auzit un reporter al Kyodo News pe Kan spunând în trimpul unei reuniuni cu directorii companiei. "Ce naiba se întâmplă?", a adăugat el.

    La sfârşitul anilor 80 şi începutul anilor 90, Tepco (Tokyo Power Electric Company), a falsificat în jur de 30 de rapoarte de securitate, scrie Le Figaro.

    Pe 29 august 2002, agenţia de securitate nucleară industrială japoneză dezvăluia acest lucru unei opinii publice scandalizate. Falsificarea avea drept obiectiv ascunderea a cel puţin trei incidente survenite la centralele de la Fukushima şi de la Kashiwazaki-Kariwa (prefectura Niigata, în nord, la 200 km de Tokyo). Falsificarea rapoartelor a fost făcută în unele cazuri timp de 25 de ani, estimându-se că în tot acest timp au avut loc peste 200 de evenimente. În urma acestui scandal Tepco a închis 7 dintre cele 17 reactoare ale sale pentru inspecţie în 2002.

    În aprilie 2007 un alt exploatant nipon, Hokuriku Electric, a recunoscut că a ascuns timp de opt ani un incident de la un reactor cu apă fierbinte de la Shika.

    LA Times citează un cercetător în seismologie de la universitatea din Kobe, potrivit căruia un dezastru nuclear nu este posibil doar la Fukushima, ci şi la alte centrale, cum ar fi cea de la Hamaoka.

    Publicaţia americană spune şi că japonezii se tem că guvernul le ascunde aevăratul pericol la care sunt expuşi. Deşi concentraţia de substanţe periculoase din atmosferă a depăşit de 400 de ori limitele normale în anumite regiuni, autorităţile sunt calme, iar OMS spune că nu există un pericol mare pentru sănătatea publică.

    Uzi Even, unul dintre cei mai buni experţi în domeniu din Israel, care a lucrat la reactorul din Dimona, crede că guvernul nipon ascunde multe lucruri. "În evaluarea mea, pagubele au o amploare mult mai mare şi pentru o perioadă de timp mult mai mare" a declarat el, citat de NewsIn.

    Even nu crede că miezul unuia dintre reactoarele ce a explodat de două ori putea rămâne intact, aşa cum au spus japonezii. "Aceste reactoare sunt vechi. Miezul unui reactor care a operat timp de 40 de ani este plin de fisuri şi rugină. Faptul că japonezii nu reuşesc de patru zile să scadă temperatura la reactor spune multe", a subliniat el.

    Even a cerut guvernului israelian să ia în calcul ramificaţiile incidentului din Japonia. "Reactorul de la Dimona este vechi, are aproape 50 de ani, iar punctul său slab este sistemul e răcire. De ani de zile avertizez că trebuie închis şi construit unul nou", a subliniat el.