Wanaingia kinyemela?
British boots on the ground in Libya strike
Sunday, April 3, 2011
LONDON - Daily News with wires
Libyan rebels shout religious slogans before heading towards the frontline near Brega. AP photo
The United Kingdom will send a Royal Navy taskforce of
600 marines and at least six ships to Libya this week as part of a humanitarian mission to provide medical and food aid to rebel-held towns, the London-based Times reported on Sunday, without disclosing where it got the information.
The marines, who are due to fly out to Gibraltar later this week, will be
used to protect ports where supplies will be unloaded, the newspaper reported in its paper edition. The ships in the taskforce, which are due to leave in the next two days, will include the landing platform Albion, the type-42 destroyer Liverpool and four support ships, the Times said.
Britain is also under pressure to double the number of Royal Air Force planes available to attack the Libyan army after Saturday's withdrawal of U.S. combat aircraft, the newspaper reported, without citing anyone.
The Times' report came nearly two weeks after a Texas-based global intelligence company said that British commandos are already operational in the North African country. In an article on Libya war, George Friedman, founder of STRATFOR, said British SAS operators were already in Libya. According to Friedman,
suspicion is growing that other countries' special operations forces and intelligence services were also operating there.
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