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Hadeel Al-Shalchi reports: "British Apache and French attack helicopters struck targets for the first time in NATO's campaign in Libya, hitting Moammar Gadhafi's troops early Saturday near a key coastal oil city, the alliance said."

A door gunner looks out from a French military attack helicopter as it takes off to participate in their first military operation in Libya. (photo: Reuters)
A door gunner looks out from a French military attack helicopter as it takes off to participate in their first military operation in Libya. (photo: Reuters)



British, French Helicopters Strike Gadhafi Troops

By Hadeel Al-Shalchi, Associated Press

04 June 11

ritish Apache and French attack helicopters struck targets for the first time in NATO's campaign in Libya, hitting Moammar Gadhafi's troops early Saturday near a key coastal oil city, the alliance said.

The action was a significant step-up in NATO's operations and a major boost to Libyan rebels, just a day after rebel fighters forced government troops from three western towns and broke the siege of a fourth in yet another erosion of Gadhafi's power since the eruption in mid-February of the uprising to end his 42-year rule.

NATO said the helicopters struck troops trying to hide in populated areas, military vehicles and equipment. Lt. Gen. Charles Bouchard, commander of the Libya operation, said the engagement "demonstrates the unique capabilities brought to bear by attack helicopters."

Until now, NATO has relied on attack jets, generally flying above 15,000 feet (4,500 meters) - nearly three miles (five kilometers) high and pounding Gadhafi targets in relentless overnight bombings.

The helicopters give the alliance a key advantage in close-up combat, flying at much lower altitudes.

The Apaches hit two targets near the coastal city of Brega, according to a statement from the Ministry of Defense in London. It said they took off from HMS Ocean, stationed off the Libyan coast and returned safely after completing their mission in the early morning hours.

British Maj. Gen. Nick Pope said the Apaches targeted a radar installation and a military checkpoint. "Hellfire missiles and 30mm cannon were used to destroy the targets," he said.

Separately from the helicopters, Royal Air Force aircraft destroyed another military installation near Brega and two ammunition bunkers at the large Waddan depot in central Libya, Pope said.

Brega is of strategic importance to Libya's oil industry and lies on the coastal road along the Mediterranean that leads to the capital, Tripoli. In the early days of the uprising against Gadhafi, it went back and forth between rebel and loyalist hands, but later the frontline settled to the east of the city, leaving Brega under Gadhafi's control.

Waddan lies southwest of Brega, about 140 miles (220 kilometers) from the coastline.

The French helicopters took off from the helicopter transport ship Tonnerre in the Mediterranean, said Col. Thierry Burkhard. He said they struck 15 military vehicles and 5 military command buildings, without identifying the sites or their location.

Burkhard said the French helicopters came under light-arms fire but were not hit or damaged. The operation was aimed at putting "additional pressure on the Gadhafi forces who continue to threaten the civilian population," he said.

British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said Saturday that the "use of the attack helicopters is a logical extension" in NATO's campaign and indicated more would be used in the future.

"We will continue with the methods we have to degrade his (Gadhafi's) command and control, to degrade his supplies," Fox said from Singapore, where he was attending an Asian security conference.

The helicopter strikes came after Libyan rebels on Friday won control of four towns in the western Nafusa mountain range, where government forces have besieged and randomly shelled rebel-held areas for months.

The small rebel force in the western mountains is unlikely to threaten Gadhafi's hold on Tripoli, 45 miles (70 kilometers) northwest, but the victories could bring relief to local residents by opening up roads between their communities. The western mountain population is tiny compared to the large rebel-held territories in east Libya.

The head of the rebels' Transitional National Council, Mustafa Abdel-Jalil, said the NATO attacks were in accordance of Resolution 1974, but emphasized that the Apaches launched outside Libya.

"We welcome any measures to expedite the departure of Moammar Ghadafi but at the same time we maintain the sovereignty of the Libyan state," Abdel-Jalil told reporters on Saturday.

The conflict in Libya appears at a stalemate after nearly four months. NATO airstrikes have kept the outgunned rebels from being overrun, but the rebels have been unable to mount an effective offensive against Gadhafi's better equipped armed forces.

Gadhafi's regime has been slowly crumbling from within. A significant number of army officers and several Cabinet ministers have defected, and most have expressed support for the opposition, but Gadhafi's hold on power shows little sign of loosening.

Gadhafi has been seen in public rarely and heard even less frequently since a NATO airstrike on his compound killed one of his sons on April 30. Questions are arising about the physical and mental state of the 69-year-old dictator, who has ruled Libya since 1969.

Rebels have turned down initiatives calling for cease-fires, insisting that Gadhafi and his sons must relinquish power and leave the country.


Associated Press Writers Alex Kennedy in Singapore, David Stringer in London, Jamey Keaten in Paris and Don Melvin in Brussels contributed to this report.

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+4 # m s 57 2015-08-03 11:51
Mexico, like Honduras -- truly now a pit of hell -- Salvador, Colombia, Brazil, etc., have become nearly lawless narco-democraci es. Duarte's advice that the journos behave for their own good sounds heartfelt. No one is beyond the reach of the violent arms of the traffickers and they are willing -- happy it seems -- to kill anyone who gets in their way, innocent or not. This particularly true of journos, who have been at extreme risk since at least the days of Escobar in the 80"s. The traffickers are driven by the obscene amounts of money to be made in the trade in which dozens of the capos have a net worth in the hundreds of millions of dollars, some in the billions. If the market for the goods they traffic -- cocaine, heroin, meth -- were to dry up over night, so would 90% of the violence. And the market consists of the developed world in North America and Canada. The violence would end over night if one of two things were to occur: 1) stop using; or 2) legalize narcotics -- and take the money spent on the "war on drugs" and spend it instead on treatment and education. Either way is better than the alternative status quo, in which tens of thousands of innocent civilians -- and hundreds of journos who are committed to doing their work, telling the truth -- pay with their lives.
 
 
+2 # Capn Canard 2015-08-03 13:13
The Mexican authorties, controlled by the super Wealthy, won't stop this. And Gawd forbid that the USA would lift a finger. Hell, I bet the American criminal cocking sucking MSM can't be bothered to report on this... they are such filthy disgusting scum, they may praise the work of journalists but never actually get caught in the act of journalism as that would get them fired.
 
 
+5 # tomtom 2015-08-03 13:22
 

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