Each NATO warplane that passes over Libya’s coast and releases its
ordnance upon the city of Tripoli is a glaring reminder that not only
have the NATO-backed rebels failed to take the city, but the fighting
there is beyond their ability to face without constant air support. As
each bomb tears through Tripoli’s already NATO-battered infrastructure –
most recently
destroying a fire station in the Abu Salim district – the world is given daily affirmations of just how duplicitous and
premature NATO’s desperate claims of “victory” were, made now nearly a
week ago. To add injury to insult, UK’s Foreign Secretary
William Hague was imploring South Africa to release funding to NATO’s proxies in Benghazi and suggested that
failing to do so would be “risking a humanitarian disaster.” Hague has
not yet explained how the persistent aerial bombardment of a heavily
populated city isn’t already causing a verified humanitarian disaster.