Anti-government protests turned into an all-out civil war after Libyan security forces began firing on demonstrators in February 2011.
NO. The US is relatively disinterested in Libya's current civil war and will likely ignore the region. Besides the US intervention in Libya in 2011 has soured many Americans on the idea of intervening in Libya another time.
Gadaffi's supporters (the government) and the rebels.
There is a war in Libya because many of the citizens want Godaffi to give up his political power, and to establish a new form of government that they believe to be more fair to its people.
Only that there was a human-rights element in the later part of the American Civil War, which ended with the abolition of slavery in the USA. The Libyan Civil War was a United Nations backed campaign to oust a dictator guilty of transgressing human rights.
Has libya ever been in war.
These countries could include Syria, Libya, Iraq, Mali, Korea. This depends on your exact definition of civil war, including the scope and number of participants.
We actually had a great example of one quite recently. It was the rebellion that took place in Libya to overthrow Muammar Gaddafi. It could be said that what stared as a rebellion was an all out civil war and revolution. Many revolutions are civil wars because they are internally focused rather than being against an external controlling force.
Tobruk is a city in Libya. It was significant in the North African campaign of the second World War and also in the 2011 Libyan civil war.
Libya.
there were no planes at all used in the civil war :)
This question is rather difficult to answer since, as of 2016, Libya is in the midst of a civil war. However, the last stable government in Libya was the government led by the Caudillo Qadhafi. That was certainly an UNLIMITED GOVERNMENT; there was no rule of law when applied to Qadhafi or those he deigned to support.