
Các "nhà dân chủ phải gió Viêt Nam" (cách gọi của Quang Tùng và Thiên Chương) đã đến lúc mở mắt mở tai ra mà nhận thức để THỨC TỈNH, để ngưng ngay những trò gửi bài, phỏng vấn RFA, gửi thư kiến nghị đến nhà nước Mỹ, Liên Âu v.v mà quay về VẬN ĐỘNG QUẦN CHÚNG của CHÍNH MÌNH..và chuẩn bị tinh thần tự lập tự cường cho CUỘC ĐẤU TRANH DÂN CHỦ thật sự của Viêt Nam..
NKPTC 1-3-2011
Libyan Opposition Spurns Calls for Foreign ‘Help’
Posted By Jason Ditz On February 27, 2011 @ 7:50 pm In Uncategorized | 9 Comments
Though it seems clear that the international community in general and the United States in particular are bound and determined to do “something” about the massive uprising in Libya, the protesters’ leadership is openly spurning those calls and insists it doesn’t need their sort of help.
Hafiz Ghoga, a spokesman for the protesters’ new National Libyan Council, insisted that calls for foreign intervention were entirely unwelcome, adding that the protesters have taken most of the nation and “the rest of Libya will be liberated by the people.”
Indeed, despite people raising the prospect of international intervention against the Gadhafi regime, the newly formed pro-protester military say that they haven’t even deployed in Gadhafi’s last city of Tripoli because the protesters there insist they don’t need help.
Gadhafi only really holds the central part of Tripoli at this point, and that is only on the basis of his mercenary forces. It seems the people are preparing for their last push in this last bastion of regime power, and one hopes that by the time the Obama Administration et al have decided to move against Gadhafi he’ll already be gone.
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(Reuters) - The U.S. military is repositioning naval and air forces around Libya, a Pentagon official said on Monday, as international demands intensify for an end to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi's four-decade rule.
"We have planners working and various contingency plans and I think it's safe to say as part of that we're repositioning forces to be able to provide for that flexibility once decisions are made ... to be able to provide options and flexibility," said Colonel David Lapan, a Pentagon spokesman.
"We're still in that planning and preparing mode should we be called upon to do any of those types of missions, whether humanitarian and otherwise."
Lapan declined to give details about the types of ships or units being repositioned or how U.S. commanders plan to use them.
"No decisions have been made yet," he said.
The Pentagon now has two aircraft carriers in its naval command region that includes the Arabian Sea and Gulf, Lapan said, but does not have any carriers in the Mediterranean.
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