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Chiến sự Libya, Diễn biến, kết quả và hệ luỵ (Phần 2) THÔNG BÁO MỚI TRANG 119

Chủ đề trong 'Kỹ thuật quân sự nước ngoài' bởi unvietnamien, 21/03/2011.

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  1. Wehrmacht4

    Wehrmacht4 Thành viên mới Đang bị khóa

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    Nga đánh Gờ-ru là để bảo vệ công dân Nga ở Xao-ô-sét-chi-a,
    Gờ-ru nó pháo kích trước vào Xao-ô với âm mưu chiếm Xao-ô
    thì nó hiển nhiên là quân xâm lược.

    Nga đẩy lui Gờ-ru ra khỏi Xao-ô rồi rút lui trả lại độc lập tự do
    cho Xao-ô thì là quân giải phóng !
  2. soofar

    soofar Thành viên rất tích cực Đang bị khóa

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    Mĩ chết ở Iraq với Ap bao nhiêu rồi?!Lybia mà "dám"đổ quân vào thì chắc giờ cũng không ít!Khổ công 1 đám nghẹo khóc giở mếu giở kêu gào![r2)]
  3. VPA

    VPA Thành viên quen thuộc

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    Mình ko bài Nga hay bài Mĩ nhưng mình thấy bạn nói thế không ổn.
    Thứ nhất trong CT Nga-Gru: Gru đánh fủ đầu trước vì thế lúc đầu Nga bị thiệt hại là rõ ràng
    Thứ hai biên giới hai nước sát nhau nên đánh khác với kiểu đánh câu bom của Liên quân.
    Thứ ba người Nam Osettia chủ yếu mang quốc tịch Nga. Tỉ dụ TQ đánh Lào Cai bắt dân thường làm con tin bạn có dám mang su-22 trải thảm Lào Cai không.
  4. soofar

    soofar Thành viên rất tích cực Đang bị khóa

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    Thế nào là mục tiêu quan trọng,nói nghe coi.CÒn từ bữa giờ theo dõi tình hình chém gió khí thế lắm mà không thấy được sự chia rẽ nào àh.Buồn nhỉ?!:-bd
  5. phuocrautdm

    phuocrautdm Thành viên mới Đang bị khóa

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    Chỉ thấy một đám nghẹo xanh lá (lính của Gà) đang cắm đầu cắm cổ chạy thôi!
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8nP52fPA0Y&feature=related =))
    -----------------------------Tự động gộp Reply ---------------------------

    Mục tiêu quan trọng là các sân bay, căn cứ quân sự, các ụ rada, tên lửa phòng không và một căn cứ hải quân ven biển bị tên lửa và bom của Mĩ làm thịt bửa đầu tiên và thứ 2. :))
    Chia rẻ đâu chả thấy chỉ nghe chuyện lúc đầu mấy nước thắc mắc ai sẽ đảm nhiệm vai trò chỉ huy thôi. Cuối cùng vai trò chỉ huy là NATO đứng đầu là một tướng người Canada.
    Có người hỏi những câu hỏi nhảm nhí và đang tức ói máu vì mấy cảnh này.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Ih01a6ghJc&feature=related
    =))
  6. longtt88

    longtt88 Thành viên rất tích cực

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    NATO: Hành động quân sự sẽ không giải quyết được cuộc khủng hoảng Libya

    Ngày 11/4, Tổng thư ký NATO Anders Fogh Rasmussen cho biết, chỉ riêng hành động quân sự sẽ không giải quyết được cuộc khủng hoảng tại Libya.

    [​IMG]
    Quân nổi dậy Libya đứng trước một chiếc xe bị NATO ở Ajdabiyah hôm 11/4

    "Tôi đã nghiên cứu một đề xuất ngừng bắn của Liên minh châu Phi ... Tôi muốn nói rõ rằng: chỉ có giải pháp quân sự sẽ không thể giải quyết được cuộc khủng hoảng tại Libya," ông tuyên bố tại một cuộc họp báo.

    Hôm Chủ nhật, Tổng thống Nam Phi Jacob Zuma cho biết sau cuộc hội đàm với nhà lãnh đạo Gaddafi tại Tripoli rằng nhà lãnh đạo Libya đã chấp nhận "lộ trình" do Liên minh châu Phi trình bày nhằm chấm dứt các cuộc xung đột và mở ra các cuộc đối thoại chính trị với quân nổi dậy.

    Tổng thư ký NATO đã nhấn mạnh rằng "bất kỳ lệnh ngừng bắn nào cũng đều phải đáng tin cậy và có thể kiểm chứng," và cho rằng trước đây nhà lãnh đạo Libya Muammar Gaddafi đã tuyên bố ngừng bắn nhưng không giữ lời hứa.

    Tuy nhiên, ông cho biết vẫn còn quá sớm để nói về việc thiết lập một loại cơ chế giám sát lệnh ngừng bắn như thế nào.

    Kể từ hôm Thứ 7 (09/4), quân đồng minh đã tăng cường các cuộc tấn công đối với quân đội chính phủ Libya, chủ yếu ở gần thành phố Misrata và Ajdabyia, nơi các lực lượng ủng hộ nhà lãnh đạo Gaddafi đang giao tranh quyết liệt với quân nổi dậy.

    "Kể từ sáng Thứ 7, máy bay của NATO đã thực hiện gần 300 phi vụ xuất kích. Chúng tôi đã phá hủy 49 xe tăng, 9 xe bọc thép, 3 khẩu pháo phòng không và 4 kho vũ khí lớn," ông Rasmussen nói và cho biết thêm "tốc độ hoạt động của chúng tôi sẽ được quyết định bởi mục đích rõ ràng này nhằm bảo vệ dân thường khỏi bất kỳ cuộc tấn công nào.”

    Ông tuyên bố rằng, NATO đã không cân nhắc đến "những biện pháp cứng rắn hơn" tại Libya, và đã bác bỏ đề xuất của một số quốc gia phương Tây, bao gồm cả việc trang bị vũ khí cho quân nổi dậy hay triển khai các lực lượng mặt đất đến Libya.

    "Chúng tôi đã không cân nhắc về việc sử dụng thêm các biện pháp cứng rắn hơn. Chúng tôi sẽ tập trung vào việc thực hiện một cách đầy đủ nghị quyết của Hội đồng Bảo an Liên Hợp Quốc. Tại thời điểm này, chúng tôi thấy không cần thiết phải tăng cường các biện pháp cứng rắn," Tổng thư ký NATO cho biết.

    Ngoại trưởng 28 quốc gia thành viên NATO, cùng với các đối tác, dự kiến sẽ tổ chức hội đàm tại Berlin vào Thứ 5 và Thứ 6 (14-15/4) để bàn về cuộc khủng hoảng tại Libya.

    http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2011-04/11/c_13823888.htm
  7. thanhhai06

    thanhhai06 Thành viên mới Đang bị khóa

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    Nhìn đám ngoẹ xanh chạy thục mạng khổ quá.

    Cho dù đám ngoẹ vàng đỏ tím... ở một cánh đồng trũng xa xôi heo hút có ộp oạp thế nào, CM Libya vẫn đang tiến những bước tiến vững chắc :)):)):)):)):))
  8. gulfoil

    gulfoil Thành viên mới

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    Trong khi các nỗ lực tìm kiếm hoà bình cho Li by vẫn đang được tiến hành thì tình hình chiến sự tại Misrata và Ajdabiya vẫn tiếp diễn quân chính phủ vẫn oanh kích quân nổi dậy còn liên quân yêu cầ Anh Pháp phải tăng cường không kích quân chính phủ mạnh hơn nữa.

    Libya crisis mapped



    • [​IMG]
      Saturday 19 March

      Western allies launch air strikes against Libyan targets after government forces began a fierce attack against the eastern rebel-held city of Benghazi despite having called a ceasefire 24 hours earlier.
      Summit: Western and Arab leaders met in Paris after the passing of UN Resolution 1973 which authorised military action to defend civilians in Libya. At the end of the meeting, French President Nicolas Sarkozy announced that "all necessary means" would be used to prevent further bloodshed.
      Air strikes: French aircraft fired the first shots in the western assault on Libya, attacking an armoured convoy west of Benghazi.
      US and UK submarines and warships later launched the first of a series of co-ordinated attacks against Libyan targets from the Me***erranearn. Overnight more than 110 Tomahawk missiles were fired from US and UK vessels.
      RAF Tornadoes also flew bombing missions from their base at RAF Marham in Norfolk.



    • [​IMG]
      Sunday 20 March

      The coalition forces launched a series of air strikes overnight against Libyan military and strategic targets.
      Air strikes: The United States and Britain attacked Libyan air defence, communications or command sites.
      The missiles were fired from two US destroyers, three submarines and a British Trafalgar-class submarine, based off the coast of Libya, in the Me***erranean.

      Air raids were also carried out by British Tornadoes, which took off from RAF Marham in Norfolk, and flew the 3,000-mile round trip to Libya and back again. US commanders said the strikes were "very effective" and had succeeded in crippling Gaddafi's air capability and allowing effective enforcement of a no-fly zone.
      It also appears to have halted the advance of the Libyan leader's forces on the rebel-held city of Benghazi.



    • [​IMG]
      Monday 21 March

      US and British forces fired 12 Tomahawk cruise missiles at targets overnight, including command and control operations, a Scud surface-to-surface missiles facility and an air defence site.
      Air strikes: French, Spanish, Italian, Danish and US warplanes took part in missions to enforce the no-fly zone over Benghazi.

      On the ground: Forces loyal to Gaddafi pulled back from the rebel stronghold of Benghazi. Advances against Ajdabiya and Misrata were stalled by the coalition attacks, according to a US national security official. Reports from Misrata say Gaddafi's troops fired on a crowd of unarmed people in the centre of the city and civilians were reported captured and brought to Misrata by Gaddafi's men, for human shields.





    • [​IMG]
      Tuesday 22 March


      Planes from the US-led coalition have been in action over Libya for a third consecutive night, firing missiles at targets in and around the capital, Tripoli. A US Air Force F-15 fighter crashed in Libya overnight after apparent engine failure. A US spokesman said the crew was safe.
      Air strikes: The Libyan government said a naval base east of Tripoli had been targeted, as well the southern town of Sabha, and a fishing village. A spokesman said the missile strikes had caused "numerous" civilian casualties. US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said the coalition forces were going to great lengths to avoid civilian casualties.
      On the ground: Fighting between Gaddafi's forces and the rebels is continuing. In Misrata, a rebel-held city in western Libya, residents suffered another night of heavy shelling. There are also reports of fighting in Zintan, near the Tunisian border. In the east, pro-Gaddafi troops fired on opposition forces outside Ajdabiya.





    • [​IMG]
      Wednesday 23 March

      International air strikes against Muammar Gaddafi's forces are said to have succeeded in repelling an attack on the western, rebel held town of Misrata. Col Muammar Gaddafi's air force "no longer exists as a fighting force", the commander of British aircraft operating over Libya said. Air Vice Marshal Greg Bagwell said the allies could now operate "with near impunity" over the skies of Libya.
      Air strikes: There have been reports of air strikes in the area of the rebel-held city of Misrata, where fierce fighting is continuing betweeen Gaddafi's forces and rebel fighters. Loud explosions have been heard in and around the capital Tripoli.

      On the ground: The situation in Misrata is getting increasingly desperate with supplies of food, water and medicine running low. Government tanks shelled the city hospital, hours after being forced to pull back under air assault from international forces. And there are also reports of fierce fighting between rebels and pro-Gaddafi forces in the strategic eastern town of Ajdabiya. Fighting is also continuing for control of the rebel-held town of Zintan.





    • [​IMG]
      Thursday 24 March

      The international coalition has kept up air strikes on Libya, as fighting continues between rebels and pro-Gaddafi forces in a number of key cities.

      Air strikes: Loud explosions were heard in the Libyan capital Tripoli, and in the Tajoura region east of Tripoli. A French warplane destroyed a Libyan aircraft that had been flying in breach of the UN no-fly zone, just after it landed in Misrata. Late on Thursday British jets launched missiles at Libyan armoured vehicles that had been threatening civilians from Ajdabiya.

      On the ground: In Misrata, western Libya, fresh fighting has been reported. One doctor said pro-Gaddafi forces had killed more than 100 people and injured 1,300 in the past week.
      Further east in the strategically important city of Ajdabiya, residents described shelling, gunfire and houses on fire. One report said rebels were moving closer to the city but remained out-gunned by pro-Gaddafi forces.




    • [​IMG]
      Friday 25 March


      After a sixth night of airstrikes the UK foreign secretary said that there had been no confirmed evidence of civilian casualities and Nato announced that it would take command of the no-fly zone over Libya, in the coming days. The Pentagon said Libyan leader Col Muammar Gaddafi had a "diminishing ability to command and sustain his forces on the ground" and was arming volunteers.
      In Misrata rebels say they have regained the port, but the city remains under siege as pro-Gaddafi forces continued shelling.
      In Ajdabiya coalition forces launched strikes against Libyan tanks. Rebels tried to mount an attack after the strikes but were repelled.
      Explosions in Tripoli have also been reported.


    • [​IMG]
      Saturday 26 March


      The rebels recapture the eastern frontline oil town of Ajdabiya from Gaddafi loyalists. It was the first town to be retaken by the rebels since the campaign to enforce a UN resolution began a week ago.
      A Libyan minister said government forces had pulled out after being bombed by allied aircraft. He accused them of directly aiding the rebels.
      A BBC correspondent in Ajdabiya saw government tanks and vehicles that had been destroyed and abandoned.
      Air attacks were also reported on Gaddafi forces in Misrata.
      And explosions rocked a suburb of Tripoli, with witnesses saying a military radar station was ablaze.


    • [​IMG]
      Sunday 27 March


      Rebels recaptured the oil town of Ras Lanuf, on the coast road leading towards the major Gaddafi stronghold of Sirte, after taking Brega and Uqayla earlier in the day.
      The Libyan government said coalition forces launched air strikes between Ajdabiya and Sirte, as well as in Sirte itself, resulting in "many" military and civilian lives being lost.
      But claims by rebels that Col Gaddafi's hometown had fallen appear to be premature.
      A BBC correspondent who visited the recaptured towns said that after days of stalemate the rebels have finally gathered some momentum - even if this only because they have had so much help from coalition air strikes that destroyed Col Gaddafi's tanks and artillery.

    • [​IMG]
      Monday 28 March


      Pro-Gaddafi forces have used heavy weaponry to check a rebel advance on the coastal city of Sirte, the Libyan leader's birthplace and a key target for westward-advancing rebels.

      Anti-Gaddafi forces had made rapid progress westwards from their stronghold in Benghazi in recent days - greatly aided by international air strikes. Rebels have been forced to retreat from the town of Nawfaliya, 120km (75 miles) from Sirte, to Bin Jawad, some 30km further east.
      Government forces to the west of Bin Jawad have been firing artillery rockets at rebels just to its east. The rebels returned fire with Katyusha rockets.
      Ships from the US Sixth Fleet attacked three Libyan ships that had been firing indiscriminately at merchant ships in the port of Misrata.
      Rebels said tanks and troops loyal to Col Gaddafi had swept through the city 210km east of Tripoli, firing shells as they attacked, AFP reported.


    • [​IMG]
      Tuesday, 29 March


      Pro-Gaddafi forces used heavy weaponry to check a rebel advance on the coastal city of Sirte, the Libyan leader's birthplace and a key target for westward-advancing rebels.
      Rebels have been forced to retreat from the town of Nawfaliya, 120km (75 miles) from Sirte, and from Bin Jawad, some 30km further east.


    • [​IMG]
      Wednesday 30 March


      Rebels pulled out of the key oil town of Ras Lanuf, as well as Bin Jawad and Uqayla and are retreating from Brega after Col Gaddafi's forces advanced further east, bombarding rebel positions with rockets.
      In Misrata, fierce fighting is continuing. One doctor says more than 140 people have been killed.
      Coalition air strikes are again reported to have hit the capital, Tripoli, overnight. Reports said Gaddafi's compound was targeted as well as military targets in the suburb of Tajura.
      British RAF Tornado aircraft carried out air strikes on Misrata destroying a number of military targets.
      It was also reported that French aircraft had conducted air strikes on an anti-aircraft base 20km south of Gaddafi's hometown of Sirte.
      Airstrikes were also reported near Brega .


    • [​IMG]
      Thursday 31 March


      Rebels continue to pull back from recently captured towns of Ras Lanuf and Bin Jawad along the eastern coast. A column of retreating rebel fighters came under heavy fire between Brega and Ajdabiya.
      The rebel-held town of Misrata is still reportedly coming under attack from pro-Gaddafi troops.
      Nato took sole command of international air operations over Libya. It said it had the means to enforce the UN resolution.
      The alliance also said it was investigating reports of civilian casualties in Western air strikes on Tripoli.
      A senior Vatican official in Tripoli, said witnesses had reported 40 civilians had been killed in strikes by Western forces on the city.


    • [​IMG]
      Friday 1 April


      At least 13 people are reported to have been killed when a coalition plane flying over Libya fired on a rebel convoy between Brega and Ajdabiya on Friday, the rebels say.
      A rebel spokesman said it was an "unfortunate accident" which happened when the rebels advanced on Brega during the air strikes
      Earlier, the US said air attacks had destroyed about a quarter of the Libyan government's military capabilities.
      One report said there was heavy fighting around Brega, east of Tripoli in the morning.

      It is not clear where the front line is or who controls Brega, but rebels were reported to be moving heavier weaponry towards the oil town and were trying to organise themselves more efficiently. Rebels said there were more officers on the front line and civilians without heavy weapons were being prevented from getting through checkpoints.



    • [​IMG]
      Sunday 3 April


      For a fourth day, government troops and rebels have battled for control of the eastern oil town of Brega.
      Government forces have also attacked rebels in the towns of Zintan and Yafran, to the south-west of Tripoli.
      Libya's deputy foreign minister Abdelati Obeidi travelled to Athens in Greece where he held talks with the country's leader, George Papandreou. He said he was looking for a political solution to the crisis and did not believe it could be solved by military means.
      Government troops are reported to be holding ground near the university in Brega, but are said to be reluctant to engage the rebels because of the risk of further air strikes.
      Rebel leaders in Benghazi have appealed for new Nato air strikes, as well as weapons and military training to be provided by foreign governments.
      They have acknowledged that firing in the air through lack of discipline could have provoked the air strike by Nato on their own forces on Friday.



    • [​IMG]
      Tuesday 5 April


      Nato air strikes have been reported against pro-Gaddafi forces near the oil town of Brega.
      The air strikes destroyed two in a convoy of eight vehicles, forcing the others back into the centre of Brega.
      The rebels are said to have begun loading a tanker with some one million barrels of oil, bound for Qatar. The small Gulf state has recognised Libya's rebels as the country's legitimate government and agreed to market oil from the rebel areas.
      Exports of oil have dried up since the crisis in Libya began some two months ago.
      Nato says it flew 155 sorties, 66 of which were strike sorties, where targets were identified but not necessarily fired upon.


    • [​IMG]
      Wednesday 6 April


      At least 13 people are reported to have been killed when a coalition plane flying over Libya fired on a rebel convoy between Brega and Ajdabiya.
      A rebel spokesman said it was an "unfortunate accident" which happened when the rebels advanced on Brega during the air strikes
      Earlier, the US said air attacks had destroyed about a quarter of the Libyan government's military capabilities.
      One report said there was heavy fighting around Brega, east of Tripoli in the morning.

      It is not clear where the front line is or who controls Brega, but rebels were reported to be moving heavier weaponry towards the oil town. Rebels said there were more officers on the front line and civilians without heavy weapons were being prevented from getting through checkpoints.
      Nato said it conducted 164 sorties of which 73 were strike sorties where aircraft identified appropriate targets, but did not necessarily open fire.


    • [​IMG]
      Thursday 7 April

      Nato planes mistakenly struck a rebel tank position killing at least five.
      The BBC's Wyre Davies reported chaotic scenes on the outskirts of Ajdabiya, with rebel forces in retreat.
      It was the third such incident in recent days involving international forces deployed to protect Libyan civilians.
      One rebel commander told the BBC he saw at least four missiles land among rebel fighters.
      According to NATO, the alliance flew 155 sorties of which 54 were strike sorties where aircraft identify appropriate targets, but do not necessarily fire on them each time.


    • [​IMG]
      Friday 8 April


      Nato says it strongly regrets the loss of life after a friendly fire attack yesterday (7 April) on rebel tanks in eastern Libya, in which at least four people lost their lives.
      The rebels hit in Thursday's attack had been moving tanks, armoured vehicles and rocket launchers, near the front line between Ajdabiya and Brega in more than 30 transporters.
      This is the third so-called friengly fire incident since Nato took over the air operation more than a week ago.
      Pro-Gaddafi forces are said to be advancing into the eastern suburbs of the rebel-held city of Misrata.



    • [​IMG]
      Saturday 9/Sunday 10 April



      Fierce fighting has been reported around the western rebel-held city of Misrata and, in the east, around the rebel-held city of Ajdabiya. Members of the African Union have been meeting the Libyan leader, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi to thrash out the details of a peace plan.
      They say the government has accepted the plan, which they will now put to the rebels. But the rebels say they won't accept a truce, unless Gaddafi steps down and his forces withdraw.
      Nato says its planes destroyed 25 government tanks in Ajdabiya on Sunday alone.
      Meanwhile in Misrata, the only city in western Libya controlled by the rebels, their spokesman told Reuters news agency that five people had been killed and more than 20 injured in a bombardment by pro-Gaddafi forces.
      Nato says it carried out 133 sorties on Saturday, 56 of which were strike sorties. On Sunday, it carried out 154 sorties, 70 of which were strike sorties, where a target is identified although not necessarily fired at.


    • [​IMG]
      Monday 11 April


      More fierce fighting has been reported on the ground around the western rebel-held city of Misrata.
      Rebels in Misrata said Gaddafi's forces had fired Russian-made Grad rockets into the city, where con***ions for civilians are increasingly desperate.
      The African Union delegation arrived in the rebel stronghold of Benghazi, to a rough reception, with demonstrators shouting "Gaddafi out" and mobbing their vehicles, the BBC's Jon Leyne reported from the city.
      More protesters gathered at the hotel where the delegates are due to stay.
      The opposition see the AU as being very pro-Gaddafi. It wants the colonel to stand down as part of any peace deal.
      Nato has said air strikes will continue as long as civilians are under threat.


    • [​IMG]
      Tuesday 12 April


      Fierce fighting is continuing around the rebel-held town of Ajdabiya. Gaddafi's forces have been bombarding the western entrance to the town, which is the gateway to the rebel stronghold of Benghazi.
      Gaddafi's forces are also said to have intensified their attacks on the last rebel-held city in the west of the country, Misrata. The rebels say they have beaten back two separate offensives.
      An African Union peace deal was rejected by the rebels on Monday. They said they would not accept any deal unless Gaddafi stepped down.
      Meanwhile France and Britain have criticised Nato and called for more air attacks to stop Gaddafi bombarding civilians.
      British Foreign Secretary William Hague said Nato must intensify attacks, calling on other alliance countries to match London's supply of extra ground attack aircraft in Libya
      . French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said Nato needed to be more assertive in its operations in Libya.




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