Monday, March 21, 2011

Colonel Gaddafi's son 'killed in kamikaze pilot attack on Tripoli barracks'

# Claims sixth son Khamis, leader of crack loyalist unit, died of burn wounds
# Gaddafi's whereabouts remain unknown after attack on his compound after his promises of a 'long war'
# Rebels say Gaddafi's men have been using civilians as human shields
# RAF Tornado turned back when it was realised residents were in danger
# William Hague refuses to say if Gaddafi was a target of aerial bombardments
# US Defence Secretary Robert Gates says getting rid of Gaddafi is 'unwise'
# UN Secretary-General clarifies support for air attacks but not ground troops
# Cameron tells Commons air strikes stopped assault on Benghazi






Two pilots of a B-2 bomber flew for 25 hours on the 12,000 mile round trip to bomb Gaddafi targets
One of three Air Force Global Strike Command B-2 Spirit bombers returning to base at Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri


Bombs on their way to Libya earlier today as an RAF Tornado GR4 takes off from RAF Marham in Norfolk




Colonel Gaddafi suffered a massive personal setback today when one of his sons was allegedly killed in a suicide air mission on his barracks.

Khamis, 27, who runs the feared Khamis Brigade that has been prominent in its role of attacking rebel-held areas, is said to have died on Saturday night.

A Libyan air force pilot crashed his jet into the Bab al-Aziziya compound in Tripoli in a kamikaze attack, Algerian TV reported following an unsubstantiated claim by an anti-Gaddafi media organisation.

Khamis is alleged to have died of burns in hospital. The regime denied the reports.

It was claimed he died in the same compound hit by RAF cruise missiles hit by coalition forces last night.

Loyalists have been photographed with shrapnel from the missile that struck the building and throughout the day there has been no information on Gaddafi's whereabouts.

Libyan state TV has claimed that 48 people were killed in the weekend attacks, causing friction between the west and the Arab world but the Ministry of Defence said it wasn't aware of civilian casualties.

But it exposed fractures between the U.S. and British positions, with U.S. Defence Secretary Robert Gates saying getting rid of Gaddafi would be unwise while the UK refuses to rule out any course of action.

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