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Libya stalemate would draw in Al-Qaeda: McCain

Libyan rebels welcome 'intensified' NATO strikes
Benghazi, Libya (AFP) April 24, 2011 - The rebels' Transitional National Council on Sunday praised what it called "intensified" NATO air strikes and said they served to protect Libya's civilian population.

"We do believe that NATO has entered another phase where the protection of the civilian population has increased," said Abdel Hafiz Ghoga, spokesman of the Benghazi-based TNC.

"Air strikes have intensified," he said.

The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation earlier on Sunday said it would press on with air strikes on Libya and urged civilians to shun areas around regime military installations and arsenals.

"NATO will continue to do everything in its power to prevent harm to the civilian population," said Rear Admiral Russ Harding, deputy commander of Operation Unified Protector in Libya.

Harding said a NATO drone had destroyed an SA-8 surface-to-air missile in Tripoli late Saturday, stressing that the strike had been delayed until "a number of civilians playing football near the missile" had left the area.

"This Predator strike is a perfect example of the complex and fluid situation that NATO air forces are facing every day as part of Operation Unified Protector," he said.

"These strikes will continue and we ask civilians in the affected regions to distance themselves from (Moamer Kadhafi) regime forces, installations and equipment whenever possible so we can strike with greater success and with the minimum risk to civilians," said Harding.

The United States on Saturday afternoon carried out its first Predator drone strike in Libya, with NATO saying it destroyed a multiple rocket launcher near the rebel-held city of Misrata besieged by regime troops.

Rebels, battling to oust veteran leader Kadhafi after four decades in power, have bogged down despite a NATO-led operation launched last month to provide them with air cover and target pro-regime forces on the ground.

They welcomed the decision to send in the drones, which have been widely used in Pakistan and Afghanistan, despite controversy over the deaths of civilians.

The NATO military alliance says the unmanned drones and their precision will give the coalition forces more options, especially in urban warfare.

by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) April 24, 2011
Senator John McCain urged the United States on Sunday to step up its involvement in NATO air strikes on Libya, warning that a stalemate would likely draw Al-Qaeda into the conflict.

Speaking from Cairo fresh from a visit to the Libyan stronghold of Benghazi, McCain welcomed President Barack Obama's authorization of Predator drones but urged him to recommit crucial American fighter planes as well.

"The longer we delay, the more likely it is there's a stalemate," he told NBC's "Meet the Press". "And if you're worried about Al-Qaeda entering into this fight, nothing would bring Al-Qaeda in more rapidly and more dangerously than a stalemate."

At the start of the popular uprising threatening his four-decade rule, Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi accused the rebels of being stooges of Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden.

This theory was discredited by the West, but top NATO commander and US Admiral James Stavridis did say last month he had seen "flickers in the intelligence of potential Al-Qaeda" and Hezbollah, Lebanon's Shiite Muslim militia, amongst the rebels.

The raising of the specter of Al-Qaeda by McCain comes as Obama faces increasing pressure to do something to prevent the conflict in Libya from drifting into an aimless stalemate.

There has been little further sign of the regime crumbling since the defection almost four weeks ago of then Libyan foreign minister Mussa Kussa, one of Kadhafi's closest confidants.

McCain opposes putting American troops on the ground but said he doubts the rebels can succeed in toppling Kadhafi unless the United States redeploys its ground-attack aircraft that have unique close-air support capabilities.

"By taking US leadership out of it and US air assets out of it, we've really reduced our ability to prevail on the battlefield. We need the AC-130s and A-10s back in. We need the American air assets back in, in a heavier way," the senator told CNN's "State of the Union."

Senator Lindsey Graham -- who like McCain is a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee -- told CNN's Sunday program that his advice to NATO and the White House is "to cut the head of the snake off, go to Tripoli, start bombing Kadhafi's inner circle."

But McCain warned that such a strategy is "a little harder than you think it is" and carries the risk of civilian casualties in Tripoli. Instead, he called for arming and training the rebels.

In his interview with NBC, McCain went as far as to question whether NATO, aided by a clutch of Arab Gulf allies, had either the capacity or the political will to see the mission through.

"It's pretty obvious to me that the US has got to play a greater role on the air power side," he said. "Our NATO allies neither have the assets, nor frankly the will -- there's only six countries of the 28 in NATO that are actively engaged in this situation."

Washington coordinated operations in the first days of the allied intervention after the UN Security Council approved "all necessary means" to prevent Kadhafi from launching an all-out assault on Benghazi.

It transferred command to the NATO alliance earlier this month, leaving the Pentagon primarily providing refueling and surveillance aircraft.

Obama on Thursday authorized the use of unmanned Predator drone aircraft -- which can pinpoint and strike specific targets from lower altitudes -- and the US carried out its first drone strikes in Libya on Saturday.

The US president promised his war-weary nation when he joined the military action that American involvement would be limited and suggested sanctions and diplomatic pressure might eventually force the regime to crack.

He told Americans in a nationally televised March 28 address that a "massacre" had been averted and bluntly warned that although Kadhafi must go, making regime change the military mission risked splintering the coalition and leading to another Iraq.

On Friday during his visit to Benghazi, McCain urged the international community to arm and recognize the rebel Transitional National Council (TNC) as the "legitimate voice" of the Libyan people.

France, Gambia, Italy and Qatar are the only countries so far to have recognized the TNC, Libya's parallel government in the east.

McCain, the losing Republican presidential candidate in 2008, also called for strikes on the Libyan regime's television network.

"It would be very helpful if we took out Kadhafi's television," he said. "When the Libyan people see Kadhafi on television, it scares them."



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