http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/nato-struggles-resolve-dispute-over-liby

 

NATO Struggles to Resolve Dispute Over Libya Fight 

Thursday, April 14, 2011 
By Geir Moulson and Matthew Lee, Associated Press 

Berlin (AP) - NATO nations struggled Thursday to overcome deep differences
over the military campaign in Libya, with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton calling for unity in the face of French and British calls for
other countries to help more with attacks on Moammar Gadhafi's ground
forces.

Alliance members agreed that Gadhafi must leave power but insisted the
military mission remain focused on its declared goals of enforcing an arms
embargo, protecting civilians and forcing the withdrawal of Gadhafi forces
from cities they have entered.

The limitations of NATO's aims have been tested by the Libyan rebels'
inability to make progress against Gadhafi's stronger and better organized
forces, who have camouflaging themselves and hiding in populated areas to
avoid Western airstrikes now in their third week.

As a result, Britain and France have been calling for more strikes by their
NATO allies, particularly the US, with its sophisticated surveillance and
weapons systems. The U.S. says it sees no need to change what has become a
supporting role in the campaign, and many other NATO nations have rules
preventing them from striking Gadhafi's forces except in self-defense.

NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said the alliance's foreign
ministers had endorsed a statement calling for Gadhafi to leave power, and
remain committed to completing the mission there despite the recent
divisions.

Rasmussen said NATO needed more aircraft to attack Gadhafi's forces in
populated areas.

"To avoid civilian casualties we need very sophisticated equipment, so we
need a few more precision fighter ground-attack aircraft for air-to-ground
missions," he said. "I don't have specific pledges or promises from this
meeting, but I heard indications that gave me hope."

Clinton did not say whether the U.S. would send more ground attack craft,
but she appealed to the other NATO foreign ministers for unity over the
Libyan campaign.

"As our mission continues, maintaining our resolve and unity only grows more
important," Clinton said. "Gadhafi is testing our determination."

NATO's 28 members are "sharing the same goal, which is to see the end of the
Gadhafi regime in Libya," Clinton said. "We must also intensify our
political, diplomatic and economic mission to pressure and isolate Gadhafi
and bring about his departure."

She said, however, that regime change was outside NATO's military mandate.

France, which pushed NATO to launch the Libyan campaign, is now pushing
other countries at the meeting to work "on more robust, more efficient, more
rapid actions," French Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero said in
Paris.

The Pentagon noted that Americans have flown 35 percent of all air missions
over the last 10 days. Fogh Rasmussen said the alliance is keeping up "a
high operational tempo," he added.

One proposal from Italy -- Libya's former colonial ruler -- calls for the
western powers to provide defensive weapons to rebels. Clinton didn't
comment on that plan but said the world must "deepen our engagement with and
increase our support for" the Libyan opposition.

"In reality, we have the same objective -- this objective is to allow the
Libyan people to enjoy democratic freedom," said France's foreign minister,
Alain Juppe, adding "there will not be a military solution to the problem,
there can only be a political solution."

"There is no future in Libya with Gadhafi," Juppe added.

Juppe was guarded when asked whether France believes Libyan rebels should be
supplied with arms.

"France is not in this frame of mind," he replied.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said Berlin agrees with France and
others that "Libya can only have a good future if this dictator goes."

Thursday's NATO meeting also was to address efforts to hand over security
responsibility in Afghanistan to local forces

 



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