The anti-American sentiment among radical Islamists in Libya is running at a fevor pitch, as the kidnapping and killing of Americans is advocated by the grave robbing Salafists, who will certainly attack and desecrate the clearly marked graves of the Americans buried at Old Protestant Cemetery in Tripoli, especially the remains of the American naval heroes of the USS Intrepid.
Now an emergency mission must be undertaken by an expert forensic archaeology team to excavate and repatriate the remains of these Americans before they are destroyed.
News Item from Tripoli:
Libyan militants have called for the kidnapping of American
citizens in Tripoli and for attacks on gas pipelines, ships and planes to
avenge the capture of a senior al Qaeda figure by U.S. special forces in Libya
last week, Reuters reported.
Nazih al-Ragye, better known by the cover name Abu Anas al-Liby,
is a suspect in the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania
that killed 224 civilians.
He was snatched on the streets of Tripoli on Saturday and is
being held aboard a Navy ship in the Mediterranean Sea, U.S. officials said.
Messages posted by Libyan jihadists on the Internet and
monitored by the SITE service included a Facebook page called "Benghazi is
Protected by its People".
It told Libyans to close off entrances and exits to the capital
and kidnap citizens of the United States and its allies in order to use them to
bargain for the release of imprisoned militants. It also urged them to damage
pipelines exporting gas to Europe, and target ships and planes.
"Libya today is still a place of disbelief that is ruled by
something other than the Shariah of Allah; thus, there is no security for
disbelievers there," the message said.
In another message posted on forums and social media, a group
called "the Revolutionaries of Benghazi - al-Bayda, Derna" condemned
the al Qaeda leader's capture.
It accused Libya's leaders of having prior knowledge of the
operation, although Prime Minister Ali Zeidan said at the weekend that the
government had asked the United States to explain the raid.
The group vowed to fight "everyone who betrayed his country
and involved himself in this conspiracy. We say that this shameful act will
cost the Libyan government a lot and it will be as you will see and not as you
hear."
Since Muammar Gaddafi's fall, Islamist militants, including
groups linked to al Qaeda, have used Libya to smuggle out weapons and as a base
for fighters.
North Africa is home to Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and
other Islamist affiliates who either cooperate with the network or sympathize
with its ideology.
Liby is wanted by the FBI, which gives his age as 49 and had
offered a $5 million reward for help in capturing him.
He was indicted in 2000 along with 20 other al Qaeda suspects
including Osama bin Laden and current global leader of the militant network,
Ayman al-Zawahri.
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