29 March 2011 Last updated at 10:09 GMT

Gaddafi troops force rebels back

Rebel fighters at the final checkpoint on the road from Bin Jawad towards 
Nawfaliyah, 29 March 2011 Rebel fighters said pro-Gaddafi forces had used heavy 
weaponry to check their advance on Sirte

Pro-government forces have pushed rebels back from the key Libyan town of 
Sirte, Muammar Gaddafi's birthplace.

The renewed fighting came as delegates from dozens of countries were gathering 
in London for a conference on the future of Libya.

US President Obama earlier defended the first military intervention of his 
presidency, insisting that US involvement would be limited.

But he also said overthrowing Col Gaddafi by force would be a mistake.

Anti-Gaddafi forces had made rapid progress westwards from their stronghold in 
Benghazi in recent days - greatly aided by international air strikes - seizing 
a number of coastal communities and important oil installations, including Ras 
Lanuf, Brega, Uqayla and Bin Jawad.

But on Tuesday rebel fighters said pro-Gaddafi forces had used heavy weaponry 
to check their advance, forcing them to retreat from the town of Nawfaliyah, 
125km (75 miles) from Sirte.

Click to play

President Barack Obama: ''Broadening our military mission to include regime 
change would be a mistake''

A Pentagon spokesman in Washington, Vice Admiral Bill Gortney, said that 
because the Libyan rebels were not well organised, any military gains they made 
would be tenuous.

He said the rebels were clearly benefiting from actions of the US, which has 
started using heavily-armed low-flying aircraft against government forces.

Meanwhile, ships from the US Sixth Fleet attacked three Libyan ships that had 
been firing indiscriminately at merchant ships in the port of Misrata, west of 
Sirte.

One of the vessels was destroyed and a second beached, while the third was 
abandoned, US Navy officials were quoted as saying by Reuters.

In eastern Libya, rebel radio has been urging more people in the west of the 
country to join the anti-Gaddafi uprising.
'Barbaric offensive'

Nato has denied that its air strikes are meant to provide cover for a rebel 
advance.

Mark Mardell Mark Mardell BBC North America editor

Critics on the left and right in the US are asking why their country is 
involved in Libya.

President Obama answered them in this major address, his first speech on Libya 
since action started some 10 days ago.

He said he had ordered military intervention to enforce the UN resolution 
because if the coalition had waited one more day, there could have been a 
massacre in Benghazi that would have stained the conscience of the world, 
eclipsed the dawning democratic impulses across the region and crippled the 
credibility of the UN.

He said he had refused to wait for images of slaughter and mass graves before 
taking action.

But the president also addressed the limits of action: he said there was no 
question that the world would be better off with Gaddafi out of power but to 
broaden military aims to regime change would splinter the coalition and mean US 
troops on the ground.

But while Nato insists it is impartial in the conflict, Russia has renewed its 
expressions of concern, saying intervention in an internal civil war is not 
sanctioned by UN Security Council Resolution 1973.

Ahead of Tuesday's conference, British Foreign Secretary William Hague said he 
wanted Col Gaddafi to leave power and face trial at the International Criminal 
Court.

Some 40 delegations - from the coalition, the UN, Nato, the African Union and 
Arab League, but not the Libyan government - will be represented in London. 
Rebel officials have been invited for talks on the meeting's sidelines, 
although not to the conference itself.

In a letter to those attending the conference, Col Gaddafi called for an end to 
the "barbaric offensive" on his country.
'Regime change' ruled out

In his first televised address on the Libyan intervention, Mr Obama said that 
having led the initial campaign - which had saved "countless lives" - the US 
would hand over to Nato allies on Wednesday.

"We have stopped Gaddafi's deadly advance," he said at the National Defense 
University in Washington DC.

But the lead in enforcing the no-fly zone and protecting civilians on the 
ground would now move to the Americans' allies, he added.

"We must always measure our interests against the need for action," the 
president continued. "But that cannot be an argument for never acting on behalf 
of what's right."

Earlier, in a video conference with French President Nicolas Sarkozy, German 
Chancellor Angela Merkel and UK Prime Minister David Cameron, Mr Obama had 
agreed that Col Gaddafi "had lost any legitimacy to rule and should leave 
power, and that the Libyan people should have the political space to determine 
their own future", the White House said.

Click to play

Khaled Kaim: "The solution is for all parties to be involved in peace-making"

An Italian proposal to end the crisis includes offering Col Gaddafi an escape 
route from Libya, ensuring a quick ceasefire and facilitating dialogue between 
rebels and tribal leaders.

Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said he had discussed the proposals with 
Germany and France.

Libyan Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled Kaim, meanwhile, has called on those 
attending Tuesday's conference in London to act as "peacemakers, not 
warmongers".



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