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WAR REPORT
Libya crisis strains NATO-Russia relations
by Staff Writers
Sochi, Russia (UPI) Jul 5, 2011

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Disagreements between NATO and Russia over the alliance's stepped-up use of airstrikes against Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi have come to the fore.

Russia has condemned NATO's strikes, which it says are exploiting the ambiguous wording of the U.N. Security Council Resolution 1970 authorizing the alliance to protect civilians.

This has resulted in disproportionate use of force by NATO aimed at toppling the Gadhafi regime, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said Monday.

Medvedev made the comments after a meeting with NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen in the Russian Black Sea resort city of Sochi -- part of the NATO Russia Council conference.

NATO maintains the strikes were necessary to disrupt attempts by pro-Gadhafi forces to increase attacks on civilians.

"NATO continues to increase the pressure on the Gadhafi regime and to protect civilians, wherever they are under threat of attack," Canadian Air Force Lt. Gen. Charles Bouchard, commander of the alliance's Operation Unified Protector, said Friday.

Since June 27, Bouchard said, NATO's "round-the-clock operations have resulted in the destruction of more than 50 military targets" in a region stretching from the Nafusa Mountains near the Libyan-Tunisian border to the city of Misurata."

Rasmussen again defended the alliance's actions at the NATO Russia Council meeting, Deutsche Welle reported.

"We have been mandated to take all necessary means to protect civilians against attacks and so far we have been very successful in protecting civilians. We have prevented a massacre on the Libyan people," Rasmussen said.

He and Medvedev met in Sochi with South African President Jacob Zuma, who told them of the African Union plans for a Libyan resolution.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told the German broadcaster the AU plan focuses on starting peace talks.

"We will support everything that fosters the swiftest halt to the military phase of the conflict and the shift to political channels," he said.

Lavrov, meeting with the French ambassador in Moscow last week, made it clear Moscow was displeased with NATO's stepped-up bombing campaign in Libya as anti-Gadhafi forces prepared to make a push toward Tripoli, accusing the West of circumventing the limits of the U.N. resolution.

He also criticized France for reports it had been supplying weapons to the Libyan rebels, saying, "This, if confirmed, is a serious breach of the U.N. Security Council Resolution 1970."

But, Russia and NATO are on the same page when it comes to Libya's future as a place where Gadhafi no longer ruled, Medvedev said Monday in Sochi.

"We all want Libya to be a modern, sovereign state," the president told reporters at the conference.

The Libya question has become an irritant in Russia-NATO relations at a time when the alliance is trying to persuade Moscow to join in a new anti-missile defense shield the United States says its meant to counter terror threats from Iran.

Rasmussen told reporters Sunday that although a deal on Russian participation in a missile shield seems remote, NATO says it would be a "great boon" to both sides.

But Medvedev said Monday his country still needs to be convinced a NATO-operated missile shield wouldn't be aimed at Moscow and instead prefers any European defenses to be jointly run by the two sides.

The Russian president, warning "our security cannot be divided," said again the Kremlin would opposed any anti-missile system that did not include "mutual confidence, transparency (and) predictability," Deutsche Welle reported.




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Senate delays Libya 'war powers' vote
Washington (UPI) Jul 5, 2011 - Vocal Republicans pointed out Tuesday they were missing their holiday week to address the debt crisis and not the fighting in Libya.

In response, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., bowing to GOP pressure to make the week about budget issues, withdrew a cloture motion that would have brought a War Powers resolution to the floor.

The resolution, sponsored by U.S. Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., and backed by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., authorizes U.S. President Barack Obama to use limited military force for a up to a year as part of NATO-led operations in Libya.

"Let us be clear," Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., said. "We are deliberately trying to overthrow the government of Libya with military force."

Originally, the resolution stated that it doesn't "support deploying, establishing or maintaining the presence of units and members of the United States armed forces on the ground in Libya unless the purpose of the presence is limited to the immediate personal defense of United States government officials."

Lugar and Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., added an amendment in committee specifically prohibiting the introduction of ground troops or contractors to the Libyan theater.

Tuesday's vote on the Kerry resolution was to be the first taken up during what is traditionally a Senate holiday. Reid canceled the Senate's Fourth of July break to focus on the budget and the debt limit.

Republican senators took their turn talking to an empty chamber Tuesday about the need to focus on the debt ceiling and the budget rather than what Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., called "something that's totally irrelevant."

"We are here over the debt ceiling," Corker said. "If the resolution that we're debating … were to pass it would not change the situation in Libya one iota."

The vote, he said, would accomplish nothing "other than senators feeling good about doing something."

Reid agreed that the focus should be on the debt problem, saying: "Notwithstanding the broad support for the Libya resolution, the most important thing to focus on this week is the budget. Meetings are in process now and will continue on the debt limit and the larger debt matter throughout the Capitol."

Corker and Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., indicated that they and other Republican senators would vote against the motion to proceed in protest of what they saw as a distraction and a lack of progress on saw as the number one issue facing the country.

Sens. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., and Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, also spoke about the need to focus on the debt ceiling and the budget.

"We need to focus on that and that alone this week," Hutchison said. "Let's have that debate this week."

The vote to move the Libya resolution to the floor has been postponed indefinitely.





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WAR REPORT
NATO sees 'leading UN role' in future Libya
Saint Petersburg (AFP) July 5, 2011
NATO would like to see the United Nations assume the leading role in Libya's transition to democracy once Moamer Kadhafi leaves power, alliance chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Tuesday. His comments came the same day a Moscow daily quoted a senior Russian official as saying that the Libyan leader was now willing to cede power in exchange for specific security guarantees. Rasmussen said o ... read more


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