hembo
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1.17am GMT: Here is a summary of developments:
A third successive night of air strikes against targets in Libya is underway with heavy anti-aircraft fire in Tripoli indicating that the city is under attack again.
A correspondent for Al Jazeera said she saw flames in the distance rising over what she was told was a naval base. The channel also reported that coalition forces struck radar installations at two air defence bases belonging to Muammar Gaddafi's forces in eastern Libya.
As fighting continued on the ground between rebels and the regime, residents in two besieged rebel-held cities in western Libya, Misrata and Zintan, said they had been attacked by Gaddafi's forces.
The legality of targeting Gaddafi appears to be causing differences of opinion in Britain and the US, including a breach within Britain's political and military leadership as David Cameron argued Gaddafi may be a legitimate target.
During a House of Commons debate, Cameron eventually won cross-party support from sceptical MPs for his actions, but there was widespread disquiet in the Commons about mission creep, and whether the intervention would end in an unstable partition of Libya.
The US has showed signs of exasperation with its European partners amid confusion over who will take control of the Libyan operation from America.
Facing questions at home about the US military getting bogged down in a third Muslim country, President Barack Obama said Washington would cede control of the Libyan operation in days, either to a Nato-led command or some Nato-style operation headed by France or Britain.
Governments in the Middle East have remained reluctant to give wholehearted support to air strikes.
Vladimir Putin has also compared the UN resolution authorising military action in Libya to "medieval calls for crusades". The Russian prime minister said: "The resolution is defective and flawed" ... "It allows everything."
The UN Security Council meanwhile turned down a Libyan request for a special meeting to discuss Western air strikes following the council's imposition of a no-fly zone.
A third successive night of air strikes against targets in Libya is underway with heavy anti-aircraft fire in Tripoli indicating that the city is under attack again.
A correspondent for Al Jazeera said she saw flames in the distance rising over what she was told was a naval base. The channel also reported that coalition forces struck radar installations at two air defence bases belonging to Muammar Gaddafi's forces in eastern Libya.
As fighting continued on the ground between rebels and the regime, residents in two besieged rebel-held cities in western Libya, Misrata and Zintan, said they had been attacked by Gaddafi's forces.
The legality of targeting Gaddafi appears to be causing differences of opinion in Britain and the US, including a breach within Britain's political and military leadership as David Cameron argued Gaddafi may be a legitimate target.
During a House of Commons debate, Cameron eventually won cross-party support from sceptical MPs for his actions, but there was widespread disquiet in the Commons about mission creep, and whether the intervention would end in an unstable partition of Libya.
The US has showed signs of exasperation with its European partners amid confusion over who will take control of the Libyan operation from America.
Facing questions at home about the US military getting bogged down in a third Muslim country, President Barack Obama said Washington would cede control of the Libyan operation in days, either to a Nato-led command or some Nato-style operation headed by France or Britain.
Governments in the Middle East have remained reluctant to give wholehearted support to air strikes.
Vladimir Putin has also compared the UN resolution authorising military action in Libya to "medieval calls for crusades". The Russian prime minister said: "The resolution is defective and flawed" ... "It allows everything."
The UN Security Council meanwhile turned down a Libyan request for a special meeting to discuss Western air strikes following the council's imposition of a no-fly zone.