Robert Gates: No Libya Civilian Deaths; Russia: Cease-Fire: NDTV, NewsX, PBS, CNN, ITN Video
U.S. Secretary of Defence Robert Gates affirms that the intensity of the military campaign in Libya will ease soon, as allied forces imposed a no-fly zone on Muammar Gadhafi’s regime, empowering rebels to strengthen their eastern Benghazi stronghold, while Libyan rebels in Benghazi have created a new national oil company to replace the corporation controlled by Gadhafi:
At a press conference in Moscow, Gates affirmed:
The fighting “should recede in the next few days.” Rebel fighters advanced on the key gateway city of Ajdabiya, which is currently held by Gadhafi loyalist troops, according to Associated Press.
Tensions between the U.S. and Russia over coalition air strikes in Libya are high, with Moscow calling for an immediate cease-fire to protect civilians, while Washington affirms that the claims of Libyan casualties were Gadhafi lies.
Meanwhile, Gadhafi’s army units continued to shell the western, rebel-held city of Misrata for a second day, residents confirm.
The massive conflict to oust Gadhafi and his cowardly, blood thirsty thugs, began in February in Benghazi, is the most deadly in a series of uprisings that have spread across the Middle East this year and ousted the leaders of both Egypt and Tunisia.
What the coalition, led by France, the U.S., and Britain will do next is a mystery, as Gadhafi remains in power and a no-fly zone called for by the United Nations Security Council is now in place. By way of comparison, the U.S. imposed a no-fly zone over Iraq for twelve years before Saddam Hussein was ousted.
Jan Techau, director of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Brussels and former NATO defense analyst, said:
“I’m not convinced we have much of a strategy or goals,”
“Our own set-up and lack of a real plan is more worrying than a backlash in the Arab world, which so far isn’t happening.”
Contemporaneously, oil traded near its highest price in over a week as the airstrikes threatened to extend a supply disruption, while Libyan rebels in Benghazi have formed a new national oil company to replace the corporation controlled by Gadhafi. Libya supplies 2% of the world’s oil, as poil reserves in Libya are the largest in Africa and the ninth largest on the planet, with 41.5 billion barrels (6.60×10^9 m3) as of 2007. Libya’s assets were frozen by the United Nations Security Council.
More:
Jerusalem Post – Atlanta Journal Constitution
BBC News – Fox News – Washington Post – msnbc.com – Wikipedia: 2011 Libyan uprising
