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Also British jest have started bombing Libyan army vehicles outside a town - called Ajibaja or similar - under the pretext of defending the civilian population from them.
It so happens that this town is held by the Libyan army, and the rebels are the attacking force, coming from Benghazi, so the pretext used to bomb the Libyan army vehicles there is absurd.
This has nought to do with the UN mandate. The French jets have been doing this from day 1.
Today, many Libyan civilians are joining Col. Gedaffi's army, and are receiving weapons, in the West of the country, from Sirte to Tripoli. A civil war with the rebels intent on claiming that they will take all Libya, and many Libyans enrolling to fight the rebels, will not make our Country's involvement any easier.
Again, my sole concern has been and is that Britain is not militarily involved in another war that does not concern us. Peace mediation would have been a noble cause to represent, but not war.
The civil war in Libya, especially if the rebels receive weapons from the USA, and if western warplanes and submarines continue with bombardments, will get no better for the Libyans either!
I had hoped that these two considerations, together with the fact that PM Cameron has long ago overstepped the UN mandate, would be an alarm signal for our armed forces to get out of there now!
A Com.Res poll last Sunday showed that over half the people interviewed in Britain were against our Country's military participation in Libya, but now, that percentage is likely to have increased enormously.
The vote in Parliament on military involvement in Libya is way out of range with the public opinion: there is no comparison.
The lagality of British armed involvement in respect to the UN mandate is inexistent, and this too should be cause for alarm signals. There is a real possibility that the whole situation could spin out of control. It is utmost important that Britain does not send in any soldiers to Libya.
If PM Cameron tried that, I would suggest that there will be a change in our Constitution, by way of a referendum, in democratic fashion. I cannot see all the armed forces of our Country going along with a slaughter war in which our soldiers are sacrificed, and would reckon that there would be an outcry in the armed forces.
The fact is, that all the three parties in Parliament have compromised themselves on thi issue of military participation in Libya, so the public opinion is very important.
If things get worse in Libya, with a head-on civil war, I think that any idea of sending in our soldiers will result in a mass request for a referendum for Britain to become neutral.