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Libya: EU calls crisis summit next week

US Congress wary of arming Libya opposition
Washington (AFP) March 1, 2011 - Top US senators expressed doubts Tuesday about calls to arm Libya's opposition and said they needed more details about the goals and dangers of any no-fly zone over the strife-torn country. Asked about delivering weapons to forces arrayed against embattled leader Moamer Kadhafi, Senate Intelligence Committee chairwoman Dianne Feinstein told reporters: "I'm not sure that's smart, to be candid." "We then accept the liability for whatever they do with whatever weapons we give," said the Democratic lawmaker, who called for a "concerted plan" with US allies to put Libya on notice that Washington was closely watching. "A showing of power, even if it's a flyover of jets, shows that we care, and I think we need to show that we care," stressed the senator, who said she could back a no-fly zone but needed to know more about "the technical aspects of it."

Senate Armed Services Committee chairman Carl Levin, a Democrat, said he would request a detailed briefing on US military options, including a no-fly zone or arming Kadhafi's opposition. "I'd have to see exactly what specific people are we arming and with what, and under what circumstances," he told reporters. "All of our options should be on the table, and they are, as far as I know -- I mean all the reasonable options, no one's talking about nuclear weapons, obviously," said Levin. "So all reasonable options should be on the table. I don't think anyone's talking about land troops going in, but there are some military options that should be considered," he said. Pressed on the question of imposing a no-fly zone to prevent Kadhafi from using his nation's air power to crush his opposition, Levin said "we ought to consider it" but stressed he needed more information from the Pentagon.

"I would have to know what is the target, what's the mission, and what's the risk," he said. "That requires an assessment of what is their mission: Are they attacking the sites which are attacking civilians? Or attacking troops that are attacking civilians? Are they deterring something? Are they rescuing something? What are the risks to the pilots that are flying those no-fly zones?" he said. "I'd need to see all of that, and I haven't seen enough of that." Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman John Kerry, a Democrat, played down calls for unilateral US action. "I think that with UN and NATO, there has to be a concerted decision, not just one country," he said.
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) March 1, 2011
The European Union on Tuesday called a crisis summit of its 27 leaders next week to seek a joint response in facing the turmoil both in Libya and in Arab states on Europe's southern flank.

"In light of developments in the EU's southern neighbourhood, and especially in Libya, I convened an extraordinary European Council (or summit) on 11/03," EU president Herman Van Rompuy said Tuesday on his Twitter webpage.

In town as momentum builds for a military response to Moamer Kadhafi will be defence ministers from the 28-member NATO alliance.

The emergency summit was requested by British Prime Minister David Cameron and French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who in a joint statement dubbed Kadhafi's brutality "totally unacceptable" and urged fresh options "for increasing pressure on the regime."

The EU this week imposed the toughest international sanctions yet on Kadhafi's crumbling regime, ordering an asset freeze and visa ban against the embattled despot and 25 of his allies accused of brutalising civilians.

It also adopted an embargo on the sale of both arms and equipment that could be used for repression.

Diplomats told AFP the bloc was also eyeing an asset freeze on Libyan firms linked to Kadhafi's regime. Countries such as Britain, France, Germany and Italy, where many companies include Libyan stakeholders, are favourable.

"The Italians notably fear Libyans may sell off their stakes for a bargain to gain access to fresh funds", said a diplomat who requested anonymity.

Cameron also raised "the importance of transforming the EU's approach to the region", a reference to a shabby era of upholding despots on Europe's southern flank which has come under sharp attack in past weeks from rights groups, Euro-MPs, analysts and even governments.

"The EU must change its policies, instead of backing the status quo it must support a community of democratic states," said Alvaro de Vaconcelas of the European Union Institute for Policy Studies.

If EU leaders appear ready to review decades of "failed" policies towards their Mediterranean neighbours, they stand divided on a potential human tsunami stemming from the chaos, an issue expected to feature prominently at the talks.

European states bordering the Mediterranean, notably Italy, are highly concerned by the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Libya and the associated risk of an exodus of refugees and migrants.

The numbers massing at Libya's borders with Egypt and Tunisia to escape Kadhafi's wrath were ballooning out of control Tuesday, the UN refugee agency said as warnings mounted of imminent food shortages.

Up to 75,000 people had fled to Tunisia since February 20, with the situation reaching "crisis-point" as tens of thousands await transport inland.

With up to 1.5 million would-be African migrants believed harboured in Libya, Italy, at the frontline of migration flows, has warned of a human tidal of "biblical proportions".

Yet at tough talks in Brussels last week, Rome failed to win support from northern Europe -- notably Austria, Germany and Sweden -- should floods of refugees and migrants wash up on its shores.

In a televised address to France on Sunday, Sarkozy said that "on the other side of the Mediterranean, an immense upheaval is underway".

"By setting democracy and freedom against all forms of dictatorship, these revolutions open a new era," he said. "We should have one goal: to help these people who have chosen to be free."

But he also warned Europe could face an "uncontrollable" wave of refugees fleeing North Africa if unrest continues.

"We do not know what the consequences of these events will be for migratory flows," he said.







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Libya no-fly zone would require bombing raids: US
Washington (AFP) March 1, 2011
Enforcing a no-fly zone over Libya would first require bombing the north African nation's air defense systems, top US commander General James Mattis warned Tuesday. The general told a Senate hearing there should be "no illusions" about what would be required if the United States and its allies decided to ban Moamer Khadafi's warplanes from the skies. "My military opinion is, sir, it wou ... read more







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