海角大神

Libya rebels push west again, but Sirte awaits

In the past 24 hours, Libya鈥檚 rebels have made stunning territorial gains. But Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi鈥檚 stronghold of Sirte won't be so easy to take.

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Youssef Boudlal/Reuters
Rebels celebrate after recapturing the town of Ras Lanuf from forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, Sunday. Libyan rebels took back control of the town of Bin Jawad, 330 miles east of the capital Tripoli, and said they would push on soon towards Muammar Gaddafi's stronghold of Sirte.

In late February, the Libyan revolution was evolving at breakneck speed. After ousting Muammar Qaddafi鈥檚 forces from Benghazi and the rest of the country鈥檚 eastern population centers, untested young fighters piled into trucks and private cars and surged west.

Rolling into Bin Jawwad on Feb. 28 and knocking on the doorstep of Mr. Qaddafi鈥檚 hometown of Sirte, there was patriotism, optimism, and a steady conviction that the mercurial dictator was days away from death or exile.

Then came the counterattack from an enemy the rebels couldn鈥檛 see.

The shabaab (youths) were ambushed by Qaddafi supporters secreted inside Bin Jawwad, driven out of the oil town of Ras Lanuf by withering rocket and tank fire that killed dozens, and knocked all the way back to Ajdabiya, the gateway to Libya鈥檚 liberated east.

Now this ping pong match of a war along Libya鈥檚 coastal desert has shifted back in the rebellion鈥檚 favor, thanks to a week of French, UK, and American air assaults that have shifted the burden of fear onto Qaddafi鈥檚 forces.

Qaddafi鈥檚 air cover has been removed from the equation and the desert roads that his tanks and missile launchers once prowled with impunity have turned into a turkey shoot for British Tornadoes and French Mirages.

Thanks to international action, the rebels have returned to Bin Jawwad a month after their retreat. And now, as then, there鈥檚 euphoria that Sirte, the gateway to the Libyan west, is within their grasp.

Qaddafi's hometown

But that euphoria should be tempered. Qaddafi鈥檚 hometown is filled with members of his extended family and tribe, the Gaddafa, a once minor group who have grown rich and influential thanks to his patronage.

While there have been scattered rumors of anti-Qaddafi protests in Sirte and accurate information is hard to come by, there are undoubtedly many die-hard supporters of the regime in town. Qaddafi鈥檚 best units, including the 32nd Brigade led by his son Khamis Qaddafi, have sent reinforcements to Sirte and it鈥檚 been a staging ground for attacks into the east.

To be sure, the spirit of Qaddafi鈥檚 fighters was as broken as their tanks were by the international coalition's assault around Ajdabiya. When the survivors of Qaddafi鈥檚 force finally cut and ran on Saturday morning, panicked crews abandoned their tanks, and some shed their uniforms.

They are now hunted by an unseen enemy that they have no reply for, much as the rebels were a little over a week ago. Between Ajdabiya and Sirte are 300 miles of desert, oil installations and hamlets that afford Qaddafi鈥檚 forces 鈥 reliant as they are on resupply from outside 鈥 few places to hide.

WWII parallels

That Qaddafi's push against the rebels crumbled so quickly after it beat the rebels back so rapidly just weeks ago is not so surprising. In fact, it mirrors in a much smaller and faster way the vicious North African campaign of WWII. In late 1940, it took British forces about two months to push the Italians back from the Egyptian border to Ugaila, a town between Brega and Ras Lanuf that the rebels reclaimed this morning.

After Erwin Rommel and his Africa Korps landed at Tripoli in February 1941, they fought a two month offensive that pushed the British and Commonweatlh forces almost all the way back to the Egyptian border, where they were besieged at Tobruk. The British forces held out at Tobruk for 8 months, and when the siege was broken, it took just two months for Rommel to lose all that territory again.

Today, Sirte is Qaddafi鈥檚 key stronghold. The rebels have learned hard lessons in the past month, and their leaders say heedless advances into rocket and missile fire that killed so many of them in early March won鈥檛 be repeated.

Fresh ammunition

They鈥檝e won fresh ammunition from the stockpiles Qaddafi鈥檚 forces abandoned at the roadsides, and whatever the size of the rebellious elements in Sirte, they will certainly have taken heart from the past two days events.

Around Misrata, the last western town still in open rebellion against Qaddafi, French warplanes destroyed five government fighter jets and two helicopters yesterday.

An Al Jazeera reporter who somehow made his way into the city today reports that the siege of that town has left hundreds of civilians dead and hardened locals鈥 fury at Qadafi鈥檚 regime.

But now the question is how committed Qaddafi鈥檚 loyalists remain. The international air power that鈥檚 been used with such great effect will be politically much harder to employ in Sirte, since attacks on the town itself run the risk of civilian casualties.

The rebel army鈥檚 hope now lies in Qaddafi鈥檚 commanders and rank and file seeking to cut deals in the face of his stunning loss of territory in the past two days, and whether the citizens of cowed cities like Tripoli and Zawiya, ruthlessly suppressed by his forces so far, will try to rise again.

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