This thread really needs a newsfact injection.
The eastern side of Libya would effectively be an independent country right now, if they chose to be, instead of wanting the righteous closure of taking the whole shebang, Presidential Palace and all. The former head of the justice ministry, Mustafa Abdul Jalil, resigned in protest against Qaddafi's insane treatment of his people... two weeks ago, before the real show even got started. He's
declared himself head of an interim government, to no significant opposition, at least until something more stable and permanent can be arranged. He's leading his effective new government from Benghazi, and is insisting to the world that his brand spankin' new Libya can handle the old Libya's problems. He also has a military to do it with, the Libyan People's Army (always a foreboding name, but we can let it slide), a fairly ramshackle and patchwork military mostly staffed and commanded by defected officers who've sworn to take down the old government.
Libya's largest oil company, the state-owned (which is to say, Qaddafi-owned) Agoco is now
in rebel hands, and quite happy about it. They are ready and able to resume oil exports, the eastern region accounting for most of Libya's production, but their transactional bank accounts are still hardwired to Qaddafi's pockets, so they're holding off until a solution is found. On top of all the incidental problems that come from running an oil industry in the throes of a civil war, of course.
There's also, finally, a real (if obviously biased) reporting agency able to get news out of and around Libya, called
Radio Free Libya (natch). It's supposedly hosted from a news van parked at the very same, and kinda old, radio transmitter station that a much younger and slightly more sane Colonel Qaddafi used to announce his assumption of rule in 1969. On a clear day, the AM broadcasts can reach the capital.