Initial assault on the city At 7:30am local time on 19 March, Gaddafi's forces began artillery shelling the city. At around 9:00am local time they entered the city from west and south with tanks. Rebel armoured units engaged the initial loyalist armoured column at around 10:00am. Twelve T-72 tanks spearheaded the main thrust into the city, and by 10:30am, it seemed that Benghazi was in danger of falling to Pro Gaddafi forces. A rebel tank, aging and rusted, opened fire on the lead pro Gaddafi tank, damaging it and forced its occupants to abandon the vehicle. The tanks behind the lead vehicle all began a withdrawal from the area, under rebel fire, and retreated apparently to the city limits. By 2:30pm local time the opposition fighters had repelled the first wave of loyalist forces out of the city. During the daytime battles, a rebel
MiG-23 crashed to the ground in the outskirts of Benghazi. The pilot, Colonel Mohammed Mbarak al-Okaili, The cause of the crash was unclear, but may have been a catastrophic engine failure or friendly fire from rebel air-defences that had mistaken it for a loyalist plane. This prompted rebels to use loudspeakers, mainly from mosques, urging not to attack the planes.
France intervenes, loyalists retreat At around 4:00pm local time, French fighter jets entered Libyan airspace and flew over Benghazi, conducting
aerial reconnaissance missions and preparing to intervene. Then, at 4:45pm,
coalition intervention began as a French fighter jet fired on and destroyed several loyalist armored vehicles. On the morning of the next day, air attacks were conducted against a loyalist tank column from 4:00am for two hours. It was confirmed by a
Reuters reporter that at least seven tanks and two armored personnel carriers were destroyed in the French air strikes.
Admiral Mullen of the United States announced on 20 March, that the international coalition had stopped the regime's progression on Benghazi. == References ==