2011年4月22日金曜日

Warning of Libya crisis 'stalemate'

The conflict in Libya is heading towards a "stalemate" despite more than a month of allied air strikes against Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's forces, the most senior American military officer has admitted.
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Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US military's joint chiefs of staff, said Gaddafi's ground forces had been degraded by 30% to 40%.

But he stoked fears of a protracted military engagement for British and other Nato forces by warning of a deadlock.

"It's certainly moving towards a stalemate," he told American troops during a visit to Iraq's capital, Baghdad. "At the same time we've attrited (worn down) somewhere between 30% and 40% of his main ground forces, his ground force capabilities. Those will continue to go away over time."

He added that the allies would "put the squeeze" on the Libyan dictator "until he's gone". "Gaddafi's gotta go," he said.

Admiral Mullen spoke after UK Prime Minister David Cameron insisted there was no prospect of British forces becoming part of an "occupying army" in Libya.

Amid concerns that the deployment of UK military personnel as advisers to the rebels was a sign of so-called mission creep, Mr Cameron said: "We're not allowed, rightly, to have an invading army, or an occupying army."

He added: "That's not what we want, that's not what the Libyans want, that's not what the world wants."

Meanwhile, the US has deployed unmanned Predator drones for the first time as forces loyal to Gaddafi continue to besiege Misrata in the west. Hundreds of people have been killed as government forces have attacked the city of 300,000 people, with Nato's air campaign largely unable to strike at the attackers because of their proximity to civilians.
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The deployment of the drones is expected to help. But US Senator John McCain, on a visit to the rebel stronghold of Benghazi in eastern Libya, said the air campaign needed to be "urgently" stepped up. He said the allies needed to provide rebels with training and weapons to "get this thing over with".

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