Many people who are on the side of the Libyan uprising worry that we can’t just sit back and let it be crushed by Gaddafi’s forces.
Tomahawk cruise missiles fired by British and US forces are raining down on Libya.
David Cameron says he wants to support the Libyan rebels. But he has sanctioned arms sales to Gaddafi’s regime. In September last year Cameron authorised sales worth £3.2 million to Gaddafi.
Western military intervention in Libya is being sold to us as "humanitarian intervention" to defend the revolution.
Some 4,000 photographs and video clips have been discovered in the possession of US soldiers, depicting the murder, torture and humiliation of Afghan citizens.
The battle for Libya has raised questions about how ordinary people can defeat heavily‑armed regimes.
Much of the media acts as if the revolution in Libya is over. This is far from the truth. Across the country soldiers have resisted Gaddafi’s orders.
Some 1,000 Peninsula Shield Force soldiers entered Bahrain from Saudi Arabia on Monday.
The revolution in Libya stands at a crossroads. The uprising has deepened and radicalised the revolts sweeping the Arab world—but it is in danger of being compromised by Western intervention.
The great wave of revolution across the Middle East and North Africa is growing.
The Saudi royal family has been struck by the fear that what once seemed unthinkable now looks possible.
More than 30,000 people circled the state Capitol building in Madison, Wisconsin, last Saturday in a continued show of outrage against governor Scott Walker.