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No-fly zone plan will be presented March 15: Clinton

by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) March 10, 2011
A plan aimed at establishing a no-fly zone over Libya will be presented March 15 to NATO, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Thursday.

"We are continuing to plan for the full range of possible options including a no-fly zone," Clinton told a press conference, declining however to indicate who would present the plan on Tuesday.

US civilian and military officials have been debating with their allied counterparts the idea of a creating zone in which NATO warplanes would ground Colonel Moamer Kadhafi's air power to prevent him from attacking his own people.

"I know how concerned people are, I share that concern," Clinton said.

"But we have a lot of experience in this kind of circumstance, from Iraq, the Balkans and elsewhere, and we know how challenging it is to do any of the things that a lot of people are calling for."

She was referring to no-fly zones imposed over Serbia and Iraq in the 1990s.

The top US diplomat has stressed that any decision to impose a no-fly zone over Libya should be taken by the United Nations and not the United States.

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization appeared divided meanwhile on the usefulness of such a measure as well as the idea -- attributed to French President Nicolas Sarkozy -- to launch air strikes in Libya.

The organization decided to reinforce its naval presence in an area near Libya, and evaluate the humanitarian aid the United Nations could request.

The transatlantic alliance has already increased its airborne radar surveillance of the central sector of the Mediterranean.

earlier related report
West heads divided into pivotal Libya crisis talks
Brussels (AFP) March 11, 2011 - Western powers head into pivotal Libya crisis talks Friday divided over a British-French push for formal recognition of Moamer Kadhafi's opponents and a Paris plea for limited airstrikes.

Capping 48 hours of talks on Libya involving NATO defence ministers and European Union foreign ministers, heads of state and government of the 27-nation bloc head to Brussels for an emergency summit aimed at delivering a joint response on events in the oil-rich country.

"Colonel Kadhafi must relinquish power immediately," the EU leaders will say at the talks, according to a draft of summit conclusions obtained by AFP.

They will also opt for "continued planning with NATO Allies" to prepare for all contingencies, including a no-fly zone, the document says.

Britain and France have a draft resolution in hand to put to the United Nations Security Council for an air exclusion zone over the oil-rich country. But the council remains split on the issue and even allies Germany and Italy have sounded words of warning.

"We do not want to get sucked into a war in North Africa," German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said Thursday.

"We want to have freedom. We want to support peace," he said. But decisions had to be taken wisely and with care, he added.

At the two-day NATO defence ministers' talks that began Thursday, the alliance agreed to send more ships towards Libya's coast. But it delayed any decision on imposing a no-fly zone, saying a clear UN approval for military action was needed first.

"There is no rush to move forward without the UN," the EU's foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton told a group of reporters as the bloc tightened the screws on Kadhafi with a batch of new sanctions targeting key Tripoli firms.

On military as well as on political options towards Libya and the Arab world at large, Europe needed to move in concert with the region, notably the Arab League which meets in Cairo this weekend.

"We have to work closely with the region in our approach," said Ashton who will be flying to Cairo on Sunday to debrief Arab League leader Amr Mussa.

"The Arab world has to lead."

The EU's top diplomat had no criticism of France's surprise decision to recognise Libya's opposition as the country's rightful representative. Recognition of governments was "a question for member states", she said.

But President Nicolas Sarkozy's sudden move, along with his call for aerial action, cast a pall over talks between the bloc's foreign ministers Thursday.

"Recognition should be a European, not a national, decision," said Italy's Foreign Minister Franco Frattini.

Berlin too objected, with Chancellor Angela Merkel not only taken aback at France's recognition of Libya's opposition but also warning against "use of military means".

"Merkel is surprised that France has recognised the national council," said a statement issued by the German lower house of parliament. She had also underlined the "scepticism of the German government over the use of military means in Libya," it added.

France and Britain nevertheless piled more pressure on their partners in a joint letter to EU president Herman Van Rompuy later, urging the union to consider the country's rebel national council a valid political interlocutor.

"We support the efforts of the Libyan Interim Transitional National Council to prepare for a representative and accountable government," Cameron and Sarkozy said.

"We should send the clear political signal that we consider the Council to be valid political interlocutors."

In areas where consensus is more likely, European leaders will also address a looming humanitarian crisis and sign up to a policy U-turn towards the southern Mediterranean that signals the end of an era of dubious diplomacy.

Slammed for propping up despots and turning a blind eye to rights abuses, Europe's leaders have pledged a "top to toe" revamp of aid and trade deals with countries on its southern flank.

"Europe bowed before these dictators, it paid no heed to repression," said Alain Deletroz, an analyst at the International Crisis Group.

"Europe is bidding to open a new chapter carrying a heavy burden from the past."



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WAR REPORT
Outside View: 30 seconds over Tripoli
Washington (UPI) Mar 9, 2011
"A mind is a terrible thing to lose," U.S. Vice President Dan Quayle once Malapropped in a mistaken reference to the NAACP's slogan that a mind is a terrible thing to waste. But Quayle's remark applies to the U.S. debate about whether to impose a "no-fly zone" over Libya and perhaps dislodge Moammar Qaddafi from his throne. Does no one recall even recent history? In the pre-daw ... read more







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