AJDABIYA, Libya      (AP) -- Rebel fighters claimed NATO airstrikes blasted their forces  Thursday in another apparent mistake that sharply escalated anger about  coordination with the military alliance in efforts to cripple Libyan  forces. At least two rebels were killed and more than a dozen injured, a  doctor said.
The attack - near the front  lines outside the eastern oil port of Brega - would be the second  accidental NATO strike against rebel forces in less than a week and  brought cries of outrage from fighters struggling against Moammar  Gadhafi's larger and more experienced military.
"Down,  down with NATO," shouted one fighter as dozens of rebel vehicles raced  eastward from the front toward the rebel-held city of Ajbadiya.
In  Brussels, a NATO official said the alliance will look into the latest  rebel claims but he had no immediate information. The officials spoke on  condition of anonymity under standing regulations.
NATO  last week took control over the international airstrikes that began  March 19 as a U.S.-led mission. The airstrikes thwarted Gadhafi's  efforts to crush the rebellion in the North African nation he has ruled  for more than four decades, but the rebels remain outnumbered and  outgunned and have had difficulty pushing into government-held territory  even with air support.
A rebel commander,  Ayman Abdul-Karim, said he saw airstrikes hit tanks and a rebel convoy,  which included a passenger bus carrying fighters toward Brega. He and  other rebels described dozens killed or wounded, but a precise casualty  toll was not immediately known.
A doctor at  Ajbadiya Hospital, Hakim al-Abeidi, said at least two people were killed  and 16 injured, some with serious burns. Other rebel leaders said other  casualties were left in the field in the chaos to flee the area.
On  Saturday, a NATO airstrike killed 13 rebel fighters in eastern Libya.  An opposition spokesman described it as an "unfortunate accident" in the  shifting battles and pledged support for the international air campaign  to weaken Gadhafi's military power.
But rebel  discontent with NATO appears to be growing. Opposition commanders have  complained in recent days that the airstrikes were coming too slowly and  lacking the precision to give the rebels a clear edge. NATO officials  say that the pro-Gadhafi troops have blended into civilian areas in  efforts to frustrate the alliances bombing runs.
The  rebel commander Adbul-Karim said the tops of rebel vehicles were marked  with yellow under advice by NATO to identify the opposition forces. The  attack occurred about 18 miles (30 kilometers) from Brega, where rebel  forces have struggled to break through government lines.
In  the Libyan capital, Tripoli, government officials have blamed Britain  for attacks on the country's largest oil field, countering rebel claims  that Gadhafi forces were behind the attacks that have shut down  production.
Libya's deputy foreign minister  Khaled Kaim said late Wednesday that British airstrikes damaged the  Sarir oil field, killing three guards and other oil workers. He didn't  say why he specified Britain, which is part of a NATO effort.
Two explosions were heard Thursday in Tripoli, but the cause of the blasts was not immediately known.
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