Nafusa Mountains campaign
It has been suggested that Battle of Wazzin be merged into this article. (Discuss) Proposed since April 2011. |
2011 Nafusa Mountains Campaign | |||||||
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Part of 2011 Libyan civil war | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Unknown general (first commander) †[3] Gen. Hajj Usama (second commander)[4] | Unknown | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
few hundred fighters (Tunisian border)[5][6] 500 fighters (Yafran)[7] 2,000 armed fighters[8] |
1,000 soldiers[9] 40 pick-ups (Nalut-Zintan) 40-50 tanks, 8 mobile MRLs (at Zintan)[10][11] | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
299-307 killed[12] Unknown number of captured |
386 killed*[13] 115[14]-199[15] captured* several tanks destroyed* at least 8 tanks or armored vehicles captured[16] | ||||||
*Based largely on unconfirmed rebel claims |
The 2011 Nafusa Mountains Campaign are a series of ongoing battles in the 2011 Libyan civil war, fought between loyalist pro-Gaddafi forces and rebel anti-Gaddafi forces in the Nafusa Mountains of western Libya. The mountain range is of strategic importance due to its close proximity to the capital of Tripoli. Along with the city of Misrata, the Nafusa Mountains is one of the major rebel strongholds in Tripolitania.
Background
The Nafusa mountains are heavily populated by ethnic Berbers, a group which has suffered intense persecution under Gaddafi's rule.[17] Gaddafi imposed bans on the teaching of the Berber language and on the use of traditional Berber names. In a 2008 diplomatic cable leaked by WikiLeaks, Gaddafi warned Berber leaders "You can call yourselves whatever you want inside your homes – Berbers, Children of Satan, whatever – but you are only Libyans when you leave your homes."[18]
One of the first cities to stage protests against Gaddafi's rule in February 2011, was the town of Az Zintan. Az Zintan was home to several former Libyan military officers who participated in the failed 1993 Libyan coup attempt; the city is thought to have high anti-Gaddafi sentiment.[19]
Very soon, the protests spread to the whole country and by the end of February most of the towns in the Nafusa Mountains were under opposition control.[20]
Campaign
Retaking of Gharyan, rebels surrounded
- 1–20 March
On 1 March, loyalist forces started offensive operations south of Tripoli with the aim of retaking territory lost in previous days to the rebels. Their first target was the city of Gharyan.
Gharyan was seen as a strategic town, because it was the largest in the Nafusa Mountains, a direct gateway to the Al Jabal al Gharbi District from Tripoli and was part of the defence ring loyalist forces were establishing around the capital.
During the night between the 1 and 2 March, loyalist forces came into the town, under the cover of darkness. On the morning of 2 March, the rebels realised that the town was overrun by government troops. Soldiers had a list of opposition members and started to round up all of the rebels in Gharyan. Gharyan had been retaken by the government,[21][22][23] on the same day as the nearby city of Sabratha, located west of Tripoli.[24]
As news of the retaking of Gharyan spread, the rebels found out that Gaddafi's forces were preparing an assault to retake Zintan, the first town in western Libya to throw off his rule. Around 40 trucks and armoured vehicles fitted with anti-aircraft guns were spotted 30 km away heading to the city.[25][26] Young people in Zintan took the fight to pro-Gaddafi forces, launching a series of "preventative attacks" on army barracks, checkpoints and other installations to gather weapons and equipment. At sunset, the city had been attacked three times and all repelled.[27]
On 6 March, loyalist forces attempted another attack on Zintan which resulted in the deaths of 5-6 rebels and later rebels claimed that some 20 loyalist soldiers were killed.[28] Government troops did not manage to enter the town. However, they had surrounded it and positioned mobile Grad rocket-launchers on the outskirts.[29] By this point, government forces had also surrounded the towns of Yafran and Nalut.
On 18 March, rebel forces from Nalut attacked a government checkpoint on the outskirts of the town. Four government soldiers and one rebel were killed in the fighting and 18 loyalist soldiers were captured.[30][31]
Zintan offensive stopped
- 21–31 March
On 21 March, the pro-Gaddafi forces launched an offensive against the city. By 22 March, loyalist troops were pushed back from the eastern outskirts of the town, but were still holding a foothold in the northern outskirts.[25][32][33] As of 24 March, heavy shelling of Zintan by artillery and tank fire was ongoing. The rebels claimed they captured or destroyed several tanks, seized trucks loaded with 1,200 Grad missiles and fuel tanks, and captured five Gaddafi troops.[34] During the offensive against Zintan, 16-21 people were killed in the town,[35][36] eight of them rebels.[37]
At the same time as the attack on Zintan started, there was fighting at Yafran in which nine people were killed.[38]
Shelling of towns, intermittent skirmishes
- 1–16 April
On 1 April, after a week of a lull in fighting, loyalist troops were on the move again. Government firing of Grad rockets was hitting the western side of Zintan. Government troops had surrounded the town of Kikla, 60 kilometers east of Zintan, and were attacking another nearby town of Aquilla.[39]
On 3 April, Yafran was shelled by loyalist artillery killing two people.[40]
On 4 April, government troops captured the town of Kikla and started a rocket bombardment of Nalut.[41]
On 5 April, Al Jazeera English reported that the rebels in Nalut and Az Zintan infiltrated Yafran and helped their allies there to fight against government forces. They were able to push back Gaddafi's forces from Yafran.[42]
On 8 April, Al Jazeera English reported that NATO airstrikes struck weapons depots belonging to pro-Gaddafi forces located 15 km southeast of Az Zintan. Residents heard 14 explosions and saw some of the buildings burning.[43]
On 9 April, refugees from al-Galaa told Reuters that Gaddafi's forces have been burning water wells with petroleum and killing sheep, and promised to "rape all girls".[44]
On 12 April, Al Jazeera reported that anti-Gaddafi forces were able to take Zintan's western gate. Along side this they were also able to stop loyalist forces from taking the road leading from Nalut to Tunis.[45]
On 14 April, Al Jazeera English reported that rebels had repelled loyalist forces in the al-Haraba district, west of Rihaibat, after some minor clashes. However, the towns in the area remained under siege.[46]
On 15 April, eight rebels were killed and 11 wounded in heavy fighting near Yafran in which they also captured several loyalist soldiers. The rebels also claimed that NATO air-strikes had hit loyalist armored units in the vicinity of both Yafran and Zintan.[47]
New loyalist offensive, rebel fight for supply line
- 17 April – 1 May
On 17 April, a heavy artillery bombardment of all rebel-held areas in the Al Jabal al Gharbi district started and continued into the next day. The loyalist attack left 110 people dead, including both civilians and rebels, according to residents.[48] Loyalist forces were reported by the rebels to be "within striking distance" of Jādū and Ar Rajban, but had been once again repelled from Zintan and Nalut.[49]
The shelling continued on 19 April, with four more people killed in Nalut.[50]
On 21 April, Al Jazeera reported that the opposition forces had seized the border crossing with Tunisia, Wazzin, forcing one hundred Gaddafi soldiers to retreat into Tunisia where they handed themselves in to Tunisian authorities.[51] The rebels also claimed to have killed 15 soldiers[52] and captured another 14 on the Libyan side of the border.[53] However, all of the 100 soldiers returned from Tunisia into Libya the next day.[54]
NATO reported that it conducted strikes against loyalist targets in the vicinity of Zintan on 22 April. Two tanks, two bunkers, and some buildings were claimed to have been hit.[55]
On 23 April, rebels started to bring in supplies, through the border crossing at Wazzin, to the towns under siege. However, the same day it was reported that Yafran had been taken by loyalist forces.[56]
On 24 April, a loyalist artillery barage hit the border crossing at Wazzin in an attempt to recapture the town.[57] Also, four people were killed and nine wounded when Grad rockets hit Zintan.[58] The next day, two rebels were killed and three wounded in further fighting near Nalut in which the rebels claimed to had killed 45 loyalist soldiers and captured 17, although no independent sources could confirm the opposition's claims.[59]
On 25 April, Voice of Russia reported that rebels were still resisting in Yafran in spite of the pro-Gaddafi forces advance into the town two days previously.[60]
On 27 April, rebels claimed that loyalists fired at least 20 Grad rockets into the city centre of Zintan. Five houses were destroyed in the bombardment, which also damaged a local hospital and left three people injured.[61][62] The Daily Telegraph reported that RAF warplanes under NATO command attacked loyalist vehicles in the region, striking a tank near Mizdah and destroying a self-propelled gun near Yafran.[63]
On 28 April, loyalist forces re-captured the Wazzin border crossing with Tunisia after a swift advance in which they pushed the rebels back over the border into Tunisia where the fighting continued on the edge of the Tunisian border town of Dehiba.[64] State TV stated that several rebels were killed and others captured in the attack on the border post.[65] Later during the day, the rebels attempted a counter-attack.[66] Initially, they claimed to had re-taken the post. However, Reuters denied it later by confirming that the loyalists were still in full control.[67] During the confusion when it was thought that the rebels had won scores of civilian vehicles attempted to re-enter Libya from Tunisia. But, they quickly turned back when they found Gaddafi's forces were still at the border crossing.[68] Heavy fighting continued into the night, with rebels apparently massing for a renewed attack against the better-armed loyalists[69] and during the evening the rebels once again claimed to had re-taken the crossing after they received reinforcements from Zintan. Still, this claim was also later found to be untrue.[70]
The next morning, loyalist troops advanced from the crossing post of Wazzin in pursuit of the rebels, who had retreated onto Tunisian soil after a night of fighting, over the border and engaged them in the center of the town of Dehiba. Soon after that clashes between Gaddafi and Tunisian troops were reported, but the Tunisian news agency TAP said Tunisian forces only fired in the air and did not clash directly with the Libyans.[71] The Tunisian military soon seized loyalist troops and led them back over the border. At the same time, the rebels claimed for a third time to had re-taken the border post which was apparently confirmed by an AFP news crew.[72] However, after nightfall, Gaddafi's forces resumed their bombardment of the crossing in an apparent attempt to return and the government said it had regained control over the Libyan side of the border.[73] Meanwhile, air strikes hit Gaddafi forces surrounding the town of Zintan.[74]
On 1 May, a caller on Al Jazeera said that the city of Zintan came under attack from Grad missiles the previous day, and pro-Gaddafi forces attempted to enter the town. During the bombardment, NATO planes could be heard overhead.[75] The next day, it was reported that rebels in the town of Yafran were under heavy siege and running out of vital supplies,[76] contradicting earlier reports by the rebels that the town was captured by loyalist forces. In addition, rebels had apparently retaken the border crossing at Wazzin, while they claimed that NATO air-strikes destroyed 10-12 loyalist vehicles east of Zintan.[77]
War of attrition, new loyalist advances
- 1 May - 30 May
On 3 May, forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi bombarded the rebel-held town of Zintan in the Western Mountains with over 40 Grad rockets late on Tuesday, a rebel spokesman said. "They were fired in two salvoes," the spokesman, named Abdulrahman, said by telephone. "The last salvo landed moments ago. We can hear NATO aircraft overhead now." A Libyan ambulance driver from Zintan who crossed into Tunisia on Tuesday told Reuters the town had come under intense shelling by pro-Gaddafi forces.[78] It was reported that 55 civilians were killed or wounded in the shelling.[79]
On 7 May, 11 rebels were killed and 50 wounded, some critically, during another advance by loyalist troops towards Zintan's eastern edge.[80][81]
On 11 May, it was reported that two rebels were killed and 15 wounded after coming under sniper fire in the village of Rya Ina, 9 miles east of Zintan. Loyalist snipers also fired on an ambulance transporting a wounded person, but no casualties were reported.[82] Six rebels were also killed in an attempt to block a road used by loyalists, which resulted in a exchange of fire with pro-Gaddafi villagers.[83]
On 18 May, rebels in the Nafusa Mountains issued a call for help to the National Transitional Council in the hopes of alleviating the constant loyalist siege on their towns.[84] The same day, Al Jazeera English, citing rebel fighters from in and near Yafran, reported that the town had been cut off from food and medical supplies as a result of loyalist attacks with rockets and Grad missiles. Pro-Gaddafi forces were intensifying their shelling of towns in the upper part of the mountain range in an attempt to dislodge rebels from the high ground.[85]
At dawn on 19 May, Gaddafi forces have unleashed their biggest attack yet against Zintan. The attack started when about 150 loyalist infantry troops began firing on three fronts near the town. They were supported by about 40 vehicles, including long-range “Grad” rocket launchers and 14.5 mm heavy machine guns with a range of 6 kilometers. The offensive continued well into the next day during which one rebel was killed and several wounded.[86] On 21 May, the rebel commander in Zintan, Haji Usama, stated that he believed the intense loyalist attack was launched in order to capture the nearby town of Rayayan, the eastern half of which declared its support for the rebels a month previously. Although, the western half of Rayayan was reported to had stayed loyalist, partially due to the fact that former Gaddafi intelligence head Nasar al-Mabout lives there.[87] Later, it was confirmed that, during the two days of heavy fighting, loyalist forces had managed to advance through the village of Al Rayayan and break through two rebel defence lines outside Zintan, despite NATO bombing runs on government troops and ammunition depots in the area.[88]
By 22 May, the town of al-Galaa, with a population of 16,000 people, was reported to be on the verge of being overrun by loyalist forces. Also, government troops had managed to captured the western part of Yafran, which includes the hospital, while rebels were still holding on to the eastern section of the city. Some 1,000 people were still in Yafran, half of them rebels.[89] Loyalists once again attempted to capture the Wazzin border crossing, according to rebels. One rebel and nine loyalists were killed before the pro-Gaddafi forces retreated back to positions in the vicinity of Rayayan.[90]
Meanwhile, allegiances amongst part of the Nafusa mountain population remained unclear, as the towns (generally held by forces loyal to Gaddaf) on the plains north of the mountain provide a lot of the food resources in this arid region. Military campaigning from the rebel forces on 22 and 23 of May to take definite control on the mountain towns of Tamzin and Ar-Rayyan (Al Rayayna) met with mixed success. Reportedly, many villagers and townspeople were hesitant to take sides in the conflict, in part due to fear of reprisals from Gaddafi forces.[91]
On 24 May, rebel commanders in Zintan stated that villages in Zintan's surroundings were in danger of falling very soon. By this point, loyalist forces were only 10 kilometers from Zintan.[92]
On 27 May, overnight the town of Zintan came under heavy rocket attack from Gaddafi forces, a foreign doctor told Reuters. “There must have been about a hundred (strikes). I wasn’t counting, but there were four or five rockets every half an hour or 15 minutes,” Anja Wolz of Doctors Without Borders said by telephone. He stated that no one was seriously hurt, but the next day the doctors evacuated from the city due to the shelling.[93]
On 28 May, the rebels stated that five civilians died in Yafran and al-Galaa due to the fighting and of heart attacks. They also claimed to have attacked loyalist forces at Kikla and captured 32 government soldiers in fighting that also killed three rebels.[94] Also, a rebel spokesman confirmed that Yafran had fallen under loyalist control.[95] Al-Galaa and a few small towns to the east of Yafran remained under tenuous rebel control.[96]
Rebel counterattack
- 1 June - present
On 1 June, rebels captured the towns of Shakshuk and Gasr Al-Hajj, located in the plains north of the mountains. Shakshuk is home to a critical power station that supplies electricity to many towns in the mountains, and rebels hoped to use it to bring electricity back to the mountains.[97][98] On 2 June, rebels reported that they had recaptured Yafran from loyalist forces as part of the same offensive supported by NATO airstrikes on loyalist positions near town.[99] Rebel fighters in Zintan reported that they had recaptured the town of Kikla and were surrounding al-Rayayna and Bir Ayyad which lies between Zintan and the besieged towns of Yefran and Al Galaa.[100][101]
On 4 June, rebels captured the crossroads town of Bir Ayyad, which opened the road to the besieged cities of Yafran and Al Galaa.[102]
On 6 June, Reuters journalists entered Yafran with rebel fighters, confirming earlier rebel reports that they had completely retaken the city.[103]
On 12 June, 10 rebels were killed[104] and 49 wounded[105] in artillery attacks on Zintan.[106] At the same time, rebels started their offensive on the village of Rayayna where they took control of half of the village.[107]
On 13 June, rebels captured the whole village of Al-Rayayna, where rebels claimed that 20 civilians had been killed. Rebels also attacked loyalist positions in nearby Zawiet al-Baqool, but the government troops still held firm. Talha Al-Jiwali, a rebel fighter, claimed that 100 loyalist soldiers died in both battles, while nine rebels were killed and 35 wounded at Al-Rayayna.[108]
On 14 June, rebels recaptured the town of Kikla after Gaddafi forces pulled out of the town and retreated at around 9 km of the city. [109] Gaddafi troops also shelled the rebels around the border of Tunisia, with some rockets landing again on Tunisia soil. [110]
By 15 June, rebels had taken control of the previously contested town of Zawiet al-Baqool, located 20 km from Az Zintan. Pro-Gaddafi positions on the outskirts of the town were deserted, and retreating loyalist troops had left behind clothes, shoes and ammunition. Rebels also claimed that after the capture of the town, they were moving on to the loyalist held towns of Lawania and Ghanymma.[111] On the same day, rebels took over Lawania.[112] Meanwhile, Reuters correspondents in Gharyan reported that the city, occupied by loyalist forces since the beginning of March, was experiencing some unrest as rebels pushed closer to it.[113]
On 17 June, rebels attacked the loyalist-held towns of Takut and Gzayha, located north of Nalut. These towns had served as the base of operations from which loyalist troops had been attacking the Wazzin border crossing and Nalut. NATO had also struck loyalist positions in Gzayha.[114]
On 18 June, heavy battles took place north of Nalut in the village of Takut, which was attacked by rebels day before. Eight rebels were reportedly killed and 13 wounded in the fighting while rebels claimed that they had killed 45 loyalists and destroyed six armoured vehicles.[115]
By 20 June, rebels stopped their offensive against Gzayha, after not being able to dislodge Gaddafi forces in the town during three days of fighting in which 15 opposition fighters were killed.[116][117] Also, rebels claimed to had shut off a pipeline in Rayayna that supplies the oil refinery in the loyalist-held city of Az Zawiyah with crude oil from the Awbari oilfield. The report was later confirmed by New York Times journalists.[118] The following day, Human Rights Watch confirmed that loyalists had planted over 150 anti-personnel landmines in at least one location in the mountains near the Tunisian border.[119]
Consequences
The conflict has had humanitarian impacts. Médecins Sans Frontières sent a team to help with wounded in Zintan.[120] As of 21 May Al Galaa was reported to be without water and electricity for seven weeks.[121] Also, more than 45,000 Libyan refugees were reported in the Tunisian region of Tataouine.[122]
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- ^ Rebels say 9 killed in attack on Libya's Zintan
- ^ Al Jazeera: Fierce fighting erupts in western Libya
- ^ Rebels report advances in Libya's western mountains
- ^ http://af.reuters.com/article/libyaNews/idAFLDE75D17F20110614
- ^ http://af.reuters.com/article/libyaNews/idAFLDE75D0P320110614
- ^ Libya rebels make advances on road to Tripoli
- ^ Libya rebels control two villages in west
- ^ WRAPUP 1-Libyan rebels take new villges in Western Mountains
- ^ Heavy fighting as Libyan rebels try to push out
- ^ Gun battles in Libya's Nalut kill 8-rebels
- ^ Libya says NATO airstrike kills 9 civilians
- ^ Libyan's western front joins the battle
- ^ Rebels Arm Tripoli Guerrillas and Cut Resources to Capital
- ^ Tuesday, June 21, 2011 - 17:51 - Libya
- ^ MSF expands operations in response to growing needs in Libya
- ^ MSF expands operations in response to growing needs in Libya
- ^ http://www.tap.info.tn/en/en/regions/2575-more-than-45000-libyan-refugees-in-tataouine.html