Cracks Showing in the Libyan Firewall? 126
An anonymous reader writes "Most Libya Internet traffic has been blocked since the start of the uprisings on February 17. In what may be the first cracks in the Libya Internet firewall and a sign of the rapidly evolving political situation, Libya Internet traffic climbed over the weekend according to Arbor. Twitter updates also suggest the Internet is now working in eastern cities like Benghazi. Gaddafi may be losing control of his state telecom (Libya Telecom and Technology)?"
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I have no interest in explaining why hosts file usage (the way you do it, at least) is a bad idea, in much the same way I have no interest in explaining to my 3 year old how the microwave makes her applesauce warm; the capacity to understand isn't there. I made the comment because your initials are synonymous with "moron" and everyone in this forum knows APK is an idiot. You've made quite a name for yourself that way.
Now Pete, go ahead and paste your pre-copied accolades from 1997, use phrases like "ad homi
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Wow, Pete. Four posts over a 16 hour period?! I must have really ruffled your fat-boy feathers for you to sit and stew for over a half an Earth-rotation...LOL. Too, too..TOO EASY! (see what I did there?)
BTW, not that I'm counting (but at least I can) it's a 7 Digit ID next to my name. Learn to count, fucktard.
You Lose AGAIN!!
P.S.=> looks like you're making friends [twitter.com] per usual. HAHAHA!
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No it'll become a US sucks/No it doesn't within the 30th comment.
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Nah, this time Europe sucks. Specifically Italy, France, and UK... The US got sloppy seconds..
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How does the livestream come through (Score:2)
Since quite some time a livestream from Benghazi is available. How is this possible if the internet was blocked?
http://www.livestream.com/libya17feb [livestream.com]
Re:How does the livestream come through (Score:5, Informative)
There are two Libyas now.
The Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya - That's Gaddafi's Libya, its the government that use to run all of the geographical area we think of as Libya.
The National Libyan Council - is revolutionary Libya based on Benghazi, it's been under rebel control for over a week now.
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The "rebels" as they still seem to be called, are gaining more territory by the day. I'm envisioning a bunker scenario for Gaddafi. I doubt he'll let himself be taken alive.
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You see that they grabbed one of his bunkers? I'm not sure what we call the two factions informally, I use Gaddafi and New Libya when talking about it with my wife.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7L1hWPGVcB0 [youtube.com]
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Re:How does the livestream come through (Score:4, Insightful)
On the contrary, he has all the hallmarks of a coward and probably doesn't have the guts to shoot himself. I predict a Saddam Hussein style ending for him.
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Actually, I'm going to go with the "big-time pop/rock star" ending (drug overdose) for Gaddafi. He seems to be on something most of the time he speaks, so an OD wouldn't be too far fetched.
Considering all of the US's "allies", I expect this country to bite the hand that fed Qaddafi. Where;s Cheney lauding his friends now?
Can't wait until Saudi Arabia turns considering all the payoffs to the "royal" family [huffingtonpost.com].
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Bringing Gaddafi in from the cold was a good deal in 2003-2004. The guy did give up his WMD program to the US/UK and opened up for inspections.
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2011/02/2011227162155530547.html [aljazeera.net]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_weapon_proliferation#Libya [wikipedia.org]
If the US and UK hadn't bridged the gap, then he'd had mustard gas to drop on the Free Libya movement and social networking technologies like Twitter, Skype would be banned from distribution to Libya.
As it is now, there is mustard g
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Bringing Gaddafi in from the cold was a good deal in 2003-2004. The guy did give up his WMD program to the US/UK and opened up for inspections.
Bringing Gaddafi in from the cold might be good for the US, it's definitely good for Gaddafi, however, Gaddafi is not the Libyan people just as the Shah of Iran is not the Iranian people. The only thing in common is the outcome, a lot of dead and another country anti-US.
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So if the west had left Gaddafi isolated he'd have deliverable chemical weapons, the people would have limited social media access (Libya was on the no crypto, no advanced computers, no advanced software lists until 2005), limited cellular options and thus limited ways to organize.
So opening up Libya is bad because the United States was involved?
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So opening up Libya is bad because the United States was involved?
In a word, no. However, the corruption of Libya, Egypt, Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan is a reflection of the corruption of the US. The false flag 911 attack, the yet to be revealed (by the US government) attack of the Pentagram by a Soviet made Granite cruise missile (nuclear tipped yet somehow defective), the whitewash of the 911 investigation (the government must really believe we are that stupid), are nothing more than indicators. The government attacks on unions (brought on by the self-serving unions t
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P-700 Granit, although SS-N-19 Shipwreck is the preferred name in the West.
I'll rate that 2/10, you used too many crazy references in one paragraph.
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I'll rate that 2/10, you used too many crazy references in one paragraph.
What's crazy, the comments or the lack of citation? What if (and I don't like what ifs) the warhead had not failed?
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757-223s don't carry warheads.
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757-223s don't carry warheads.
757-223's are not neat (like the Pentagram lawn) when they crash. The videos would show that, oh wait, there are no videos, oh wait, there are videos, but they are classified. HMMMMMM?!
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1. Its a Pentagon. A five-sided polygon. A pentagram is a five-pointed star drawn with five straight strokes.
2. The video is not "classified" it's been out and available for years with stills from it available from 9-11-01 on
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pentagon_Security_Camera_2.ogv [wikipedia.org]
3. Wreckage from the 757-223 was clearly visible and photos are available if you look around.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Flight_77_wreckage_at_Pentagon.jpg [wikipedia.org]
When aircraft hit hard things they don't leave big pieces behi
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Yes, wings fold back when they hit something made of concrete and steel at 500+ mph
Metal weakens under exposure to high temperatures, aviation fuel burns, nearly all the contents of an office building burn and burn hot, etc.
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Yes, wings fold back when they hit something made of concrete and steel at 500+ mph
Metal weakens under exposure to high temperatures, aviation fuel burns, nearly all the contents of an office building burn and burn hot, etc.
Nice physics. At 500 mph aluminum wings don't fold back, they shear off. The hole [google.com] in the Pentegram, shows no damage to the periphery, no damage whatsoever indicating the penetrating object was anything but circular or in this case, cylindrical, no vertical stabilizer damage, no horizontal wing damage to the holel.
As to the metal weakening due to burning, the physics doesn't support the hypothesis. The only way the wing could be compromised by fire is if it were burning before impact.
Of all the video cameras
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They can fold or sheer, the momentum of the objects will make them continue on into the building, which is where they found the wreckage.
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They can fold or sheer, the momentum of the objects will make them continue on into the building, which is where they found the wreckage.
60 mph = 88 fps:: 500 mph = ???. You do the math.
The aircraft that flew into the WTC didn't leave little holes as you suggest. Sure, WTC != Pentagram, yet the wings should of slapped the building prior to folding...???!!!
Where? [google.com] No wing marks, no vertical stabilizer marks. Compare the "No Parking" sign to the size of the hole compared to the size of the alleged aircraft. Hello.
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Top speed for a 757-223 is 573 mph, which is 256.15 meters per second.
Max takeoff weigh for a 757-200 series is 115,680 kg with 42,680 L of fuel.
So burn off some of the fuel and ballpark it weighing about 95,000 kg when it hit
The photo you linked to was from an engine that punched through the second ring wall after it came off the aircraft.
http://www.snopes.com/rumors/pentagon.asp [snopes.com]
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Photo and data manipulation by experts is far more subtler than my blatant attempts. I showed you this photo [google.com] rather than this one [google.com].
Why is it that day after day, hour by hour, the American people were shown this [911review.org] yet not much of the Pentagram other than this [youtube.com], even though many video tapes were seized [911review.com]. What are people hiding?
People are more interested in two train wrecks like Char [foxnews.com]
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It seems to me that not only isn't Gaddafi in control, of either "his" country or his mind, but hasn't been for quite some time. I think it's really a case of my signature in Libya.
Information wants to be free (Score:3, Insightful)
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Not true for too many people in Tunisia, Egypt etc. When you have large numbers of discontented people with little to lose, you have a big problem.
Once more and more people have low confidence that they or their loved ones would
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People in China have got richer (though the gap has widened)
This is not a coincidence. Margaret Thatcher explained [youtube.com] it more succinctly than any economist. There is a blind assumption that "wealth gaps" are indicative of an unhealthy society, completely oblivious to the real quality of life. Hong Kong has a great deal of "wealth inequality" but its quality of life is immeasurably greater than far more "equal" nations like Kyrgyzstan.
[...] and thus got more and more to lose over the decades.
Which has actually worked against political reform. As you note yourself, when people are starving the threat of death loses its sting. T
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Ironic in a way: Egypt was the source of wheat for the *original* "bread and circuses".
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Sooner or later, governments will finally acknowledge that you simply cannot stop the dispersal of information.
Many of them have. They work by contaminating information and it lets them delay the people's realization long enough to hit them with the next distraction. Welcome to the new millenium.
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You hit the nail on the head. It isn't hard to get so much information out there, fake or not, that people just don't care. If people get so many factoids that they can't tell if it is another The Onion headline or actual news, they will stop caring.
The only way this will be gotten around is to have anon news sources which vet any information they get, either by corroborating it with other stories, or by other means, then signing that the information is actually real.
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The only way this will be gotten around is to have anon news sources which vet any information they get, either by corroborating it with other stories, or by other means, then signing that the information is actually real.
Here, in Germany, they have already foreseen this dangerous development and are having a test run on obfuscating reality in a way that makes it hard to realize real reality. In case you did not care, I am referring to the Guttenberg copy&paste case.
CC.
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governments will finally acknowledge that you simply cannot stop the dispersal of information.
Is that before or after Qaddafi deploys his Backhoe corps to plow across the country severing all the underground fiber lines while increasing power to his WiFi jammers?
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Twitter's fine but ... (Score:5, Insightful)
cracks of the crackpot (Score:2)
"Gaddafi's rants in 140 character chunks."
What else do you expect from a strange person (still not necessarily a legal crackpot)? My guess he was so filled with self esteem he lost touch with the outside world, in a sense Salvador Dali did. I am not convinced either of these were "legal madmen", just bizarre. Unfortunately, Gadaffi still has some power left power but Dali never did.
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In 140 characters? "The difference between me and madmen is I am a madman"?
makes more sense 140 chars at a time (Score:2)
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Can you imagine Hugo Chavez with his 5-10 hour speeches broken into 140 characters?
Unlimited text messaging would soon become a human right in Venezuela!
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Can you imagine Hugo Chavez with his 5-10 hour speeches broken into 140 characters?
While I understand it's always fun to lambast Hugo Chávez, I'd like to point out he indeed has a Twitter account [twitter.com], and he even attracted more than one million followers. Not so shabby, eh?
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Especially in unicode!
I suspect the US Government is doing something (Score:2)
“We are also supporting the development of new tools that enable citizens to exercise their rights of free expression by circumventing politically motivated censorship,” she said. “We are providing funds to groups around the world to make sure that those tools get to the people who need them in local languages, and with the training they need to access the internet safely. The United States has been assisting in these efforts for some time, with a focus on implementing these programs as ef
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Well, the tools will be restricted to non-free countries, because after all, in free countries you don't need them anyway ...
Re:I suspect the US Government is doing something (Score:5, Insightful)
The US government only cares about the right of the people to express dissent against foreign leaders they disapprove of. In fact, no more than a month after Hillary Clinton gave that speech, she gave another address condemning foreign governments for silencing dissent. During that speech, Army veteran and former CIA analyst Ray McGovern turned his back. For that silent, peaceful, non-disruptive act he was dragged from the room and assaulted [democracynow.org].
This is the definition of hypocrisy. Hillary Clinton witnessed the scene happening directly in front of her and never said a word. These are the kind of people we have leading America today.
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I think you need to vet your news more carefully. That is a very one-sided account you presented us with, and the guy "assaulted" is a total nut-job, so the one-side is immediately suspect.
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The guy in question is actually a very reasonable person. He was a CIA analyst for 25 years and advisor to the first President Bush. He's not any more a nutjob than Hillary Clinton is.
The entire thing was captured on video, and reported in many non-mainstream news sources. The mainstream media will of course not report on anything that conflicts with the narrative the government puts forth.
If events did not transpire as described, you could find at least one report saying so. There is no evidence otherw
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Ray McGovern is also the guy who stood up to Rumsfeld in 2006:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v1FTmuhynaw [youtube.com]
The internets have jaded me to the point that whenever I see someone written off as "a total nut-job" (as the GP did to McGovern) I almost automatically read it as "a principled person who I disagree with."
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I almost automatically read it as "a principled person who I disagree with."
He's a 911 "truther". [911truth.org] He may have been a good CIA analyst, but he's either playing up the nutjobs for money or he is one himself.
At the very least, you should be skeptical when literally the only account you can find of an event in a room full of people comes from one man. I won't come right out and call him a liar, but nor will I condemn Clinton without hearing more... and believe me, I'm no fan of Clinton.
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> He's a 911 "truther". [911truth.org] He may have been a good CIA analyst, but he's either playing up the nutjobs for money or he is one himself.
I understand your skepticism, but to dismiss him as a "nutjob" because he holds to theories that you and I find incredible is a rather black-and-white approach to assessing the credibility of the story. Dan Ellsberg is on the list in the link you posted; does that give you serious doubts about the validity of the Pentagon Papers?
> At the very least, you shou
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Dan Ellsberg is on the list in the link you posted; does that give you serious doubts about the validity of the Pentagon Papers?
It might if the Pentagon Papers weren't released in the 70s and authenticated :)
I'll tell you what I see in that video - I see a man actively resisting some cops and shouting things. His account of what happened before and after the video may or may not be true, but I have no way of knowing. Certainly they are not using disproportionate force in the video - you wish that they weren't wrestling with him, but then again he is wrestling too. The cops have every right to remove someone disruptive from a private
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> The cops have every right to remove someone disruptive from a private event like that.
Clinton was in the middle of a speech -- of a sentence! -- demanding that foreign governments allow their citizens the freedom of expression. If you don't see the hypocrisy in that, can you at least appreciate the irony? Did she mean expression should only be protected if it is not disruptive to anybody?
And in this case "disruptive" would have to be defined as standing silently (admittedly this is according to McGover
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can you at least appreciate the irony?
Yes, of course... but he chose that moment to stand, and the setting was very different than a public square.
And in this case "disruptive" would have to be defined as standing silently (admittedly this is according to McGovern himself, though it is largely corroborated by the video as the mic had no problem picking up the noise once he started struggling with the police).
He said he stood up and faced the other way. Granted, he wasn't shouting (yet)... but it is still disruptive. I don't know if the cops asked him to leave before they dragged him out or not. They certainly should have. In any event, once he was being dragged his "silent" approach went out the window, as he was clearly resisting physically and yelling.
You find it suspicious that no one else at the event has publicly corroborated McGovern's story -- but it is also notable that no one else has contradicted it (including the camera).
I agree that is odd, and I don't really know what t
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If events did not transpire as described, you could find at least one report saying so.
That's quite the logical jump.
Why hasn't a single media outlet, alternative or otherwise, talked to anyone else who was in the room with the man. It was a room full of people at a University! I'm not going to make any condemnations of Hillary Clinton based on a single story from a man with CIA training, an activist agenda, and a history of similar publicity stunts.
Re:I suspect the US Government is doing something (Score:4, Informative)
The guy worked as an intelligence analyst under 7 different administrations (27 years) and was the guy who prepared/gave the daily intel briefing to the president for a lot of those years.
That gives him at least a *little* base credibility. He's not some "Don't taze me bro" protester.
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That gives him at least a *little* base credibility
Which he pisses away by being a "truther" and doing a tour of all the paranoid sites on the web.
Besides, aren't the CIA known for some of the BAD things they do? Don't you think that a CIA guy might know how to work the media? Especially the crazy media, since I can't find any info on a reputable news site except Al Jazeera. And even they just have a blurb and not anything substantial.
At the very least, you'd want an independent report from some witnesses. All that link shows is the story as told by one guy
Re:I suspect the US Government is doing something (Score:4, Insightful)
That's why the US government is so supportive of Wikileaks.org, right?
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I trust them about as far as the Secret Service would let me throw them, which isn't very far at all, but she said what she said. You have to admit that unfettered access to the internet for citizens inside an oppressive regime seems to be quite the game changer these days, to the point that it can be used strategically.
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You have to admit that unfettered access to the internet for citizens inside an oppressive regime seems to be quite the game changer these days, to the point that it can be used strategically.
Indeed, much less messy than a physical show of force with the military. I've heard testimony from Libyans asking foreign powers to help them oust Gaddafi, but they'll have to deal with it themselves in that regard. Hopefully we are doing something directly other than scrambling for a UN sanction.
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Realistically, this is time for Iraq strategy. The old one, not the target Jr. one, only taken to the end. No fly zone over country (would be the first time those expensive as fuck F-22s could actually see any action), supply arms to rebels quietly through CIA contacts. Have them win and be in debt to you.
The problem is that Gaddafi can afford to get all those Ruandan/Sudanese/Kongolese rapist mass-murdering fucks to come and do it in his own country and is currently flying them in as much as his planes let
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Nice dig at the F-22, but you don't need top of the line intercepters running a no-fly zone over Libya.
UN/NATO/EU No-Fly Zone would likely look like this...
French carrier Charles DeGaulle and an American carrier would be in the Gulf of Sidra with AWACS up from both carriers, maybe Eurofighter Typhoons and F-16s coming down from Italy. Anything unauthorized thats spotted over Libya gets escorted or shot down by the 60+ Rafales and F-18s off the two carriers. Two carriers like that could dominate the region f
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Even with your latest, greatest, there is always the chance that some guy with an AA gun will get lucky, or that you'll have a mechanical failure and crash. Then you have a big, big problem, as all of a sudden Russia
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And F-22s are only forward deployed to the Pacific and Korea.
That risk of loss from operation tempo and the magic bullet are also reasons why the EU/NATO won't send Eurofighter Typhoon down there. Harriers, Rafales, F-16s and F-18s can deal with anyone in North Africa and have more loiter time than F-22 or Typhoon.
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A problem and an issue:
1. Libya has decent SAM and AAA. You'd need to go into attack mode and kill at least radar installations first. That would be something we really, really don't want to be doing, as that paints it like an invasion. Hence, you want stealth fighters if possible with AWACS craft from out of SAM radar range guiding the interception. Rafales, tyhoons and F18s are at a very real risk of getting shot down, especially if doing interceptions. Look at the lessons learned from Iraq - at the start
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1. Libya has 1970s SAMs and 1960s AAA, the places where those nodes are still in Gaddafi's hands are airbases around Tripoli. The Prowlers and Super Hornets on a US carrier as well as the Rafales on Charles de Gaulle can identify those, jam and kill those with HARM and SCALP missiles with very very little collateral damage.
That is if the Libyan military even turned those on. If the Libyan military is down to flying in guys from the Congo and Sierra Leone as heavies, the danger of an integrated air defense n
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Also, the United States Navy has a long and storied history of farking up Libyan air defenses, even when Gaddafi controlled the entire area and the military was loyal.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulf_of_Sidra_incident_(1981) [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action_in_the_Gulf_of_Sidra_(1986) [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Libya#U.S._forces_and_targets [wikipedia.org] - look to the A-6 and A-7 targets
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulf_of_Sidra_incident_(1989) [wikipedia.org]
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1. Libya has 1970s SAMs and 1960s AAA, the places where those nodes are still in Gaddafi's hands are airbases around Tripoli. The Prowlers and Super Hornets on a US carrier as well as the Rafales on Charles de Gaulle can identify those, jam and kill those with HARM and SCALP missiles with very very little collateral damage.
Which brings us to the point that you have to go into ground attack. Which means awesome propaganda material for enemy and a huge anti-western backlash in the region. No go.
Remember, we do NOT want to get on the ground. We do NOT want to attack ground. We do NOT want to do anything that will make it look like West is attacking Arab world. It's one thing to supply the rebels (which is doable via sending simple supply fleets to their ports), it's entirely another to start taking part in the shooting war on th
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US carriers don't operate STOL aircraft.
US carriers operate traditional fixed wing and rotary wing aircraft, up to and including two engine turboprop cargo and AWACS aircraft.
Like my post pointed out, the land bases for Libya are some distance away, to operate a No Fly Zone over Libya from land bases in the northern Med, tankers and SAR would have to be moved into place before anything could happen.
Combat radius of an F-16 on a CAP is about 500 miles, so to fly from Sicily to northern Libya is going to requ
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US carriers don't operate STOL aircraft.
FYI: all carrier operated aircraft is STOL-modified. Modifications typically include:
1. Ruggedised landing gear (and often slightly longer nose landing gear for better take off angle).
2. Ruggedised airframe.
3. Landing hook.
This tends to add quite a bit of extra weight to the aircraft. Additionally some STOL mods include larger wingspan (i.e. F-35's upcoming naval version) and other modifications.
Carrier-based AWACS aircraft, in comparison with heavy ground based one is a joke. We're talking significantly sm
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No, US and French carrier based aircraft are not STOL modified aircraft.
STOL is an acronym for short take-off and landing, a term used to describe aircraft with very short runway requirements. F-18, Rafale, EA-6, C-2, E-2,, Super Étendard, for example either use a catapult for take off and arrestors for landing, those don't make something STOL.
Super Hornet does have a refueling capability with the center line refueling tank and four extra fuel tanks.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-18E#Tanker_role [wikipedia.org]
Yes, th
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but she said what she said
If only words meant something (heh, well at least credible action).
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That's what she said!
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What about Al Jazeera or Al Arabiya?
A number of countries, Cuba and Venezuela come to mind, are denying the revolution and supporting Gaddafi's claims.
The tens of thousands of Libyan and foreign refugee's testimony make it sound like the US/EU reports are closer to the truth.
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Future dictators will take a Col. Kilgore approach (Score:3)
"I want that firewall fire-bombed! Bomb that Internet and twitter back into the stone age, son! I love the smell of napalm in the morning . . . "
Although this sounds outrageous, this is probably what a bunch of them have their general staff working on . . .
Am I stupid or what? (Score:2)
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*Sigh* No flames, but if I may say so, a bit of investigation wouldn't have hurt, either. Two command lines (dig -t ns ly. and whois `dig +noall +answer bit.ly | cut -f7`) would have told you two things:
As far as the "Lybian firewall" is concerned, it appears to exist, in a very crude form (they drop their BGP sessions, which cuts them of
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I read the GP as deliberately appearing misinformed, and making a separate point : that ".ly" domains nominally belong to Lybia, but by being outside their physical domain, are practically out of the control of the Lybian government. The varying reports of partial/ intermittent access to some networks in some regions of Lybia simply make the same point better.
I suspect that increasing numbers of countries are going to
If I were Gaddafi, Kadafi, KahDaffy or whatever, (Score:2)
Daffy Khadaffy's precious bodily fluids (Score:2)
I would be worrying about my precious bodily fluids, not the internet.
He's been doing that quite enough. The whole time he's been in power, or at least the last 30 years or so, he has been obsessed with people being doped up, given alcohol, or otherwise polluted. A few days ago, he told the public to avoid any milk or Nescafe from the areas in rebellion because they had been spiked with hallucinogens [reuters.com].