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Showing posts with label command. Show all posts
Showing posts with label command. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 March 2011

US to hand over Libyan operation command to France or UK

Washington, Mar 21: US Defence Secretary Robert Gates today said that his country expects to hand over the leadership of the military operations against Libyan regime to a coalition likely to be headed by either the French, the British or NATO in a matter of days.

"I think that there are a couple of possibilities: one is British and French leadership, another is the use of the NATO machinery and I think we just have to work out the command and control that is most accommodating to all of the members of the coalition," Gates told reporters travelling with him to Russia.

Claiming a "strong and successful" start of the operation ''Operation Odyssey Dawn'' in Libya, he said several Arab countries are planning to joint the military coalition.

He conceded that Arab nations are reluctant to work under the command and control structure of NATO forces, so this would be kept in mind while deciding the leadership of the coalition.

"I think that there is a sensitivity on the part of the Arab League to being seen to be operating under a NATO umbrella, and so the question is if there is a way we can work out NATO's command and control machinery without it being a NATO mission and without a NATO flag and so on," Gates said.

Reiterating that there would be no US boots on the ground in Libya, Gates said but it is pretty clear that the US agreed to use its unique capabilities and the breadth of those capabilities at the frontend of this process, and then it expects "in a matter of days" to be able to turn over the primary responsibility to others.

"We will continue to support the coalition. We'll be a member of the coalition. We will have a military role in the coalition, but we will not have the preeminent role," he said.

US President Barack Obama, he said, felt strongly about limiting the scale of US military involvement in this operation.

"He's more aware than almost anybody of the stress on our military. But these naval and air assets that we can bring to bear have clearly played an important role here at the frontend and we will continue to play a role, but we will be one of a number of partners beginning, I hope, in a few days," he said.

Gates said all countries probably would like to see Libya remain a unified state. Having states in the region begin to break up because of internal differences is a formula for real instability in the future, he observed.

"So I think trying to keep these states as unified states as they have been for some period of time is important.

I don''t think we ought to do anything to encourage partition or division of these countries. I think that would be a real formula for enduring instability," he argued.

US-led Western forces have unleashed over 100 Tomahawk cruise missiles on military targets in Tripoli and along the Mediterranean coast in last two days.

PTI


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Coalition air strikes hits Gaddafi's command centre in Tripoli

Tripoli/Washington, Mar 21: Coalition air-strikes bombed Libya's air defence systems for a second night in which a missile flattened a building housing Muammar Gaddafi's command centre very close to his private residence in Tripoli, even as the US insisted he is not on the target list.

The missile launched during operations by the US and European forces to patrol the no-fly zone destroyed what one coalition official described today as Gaddafi's "command and control capability" inside the Libyan leader's compound at Bab el-Aziziya in south of capital Tripoli.

It was unclear where Gaddafi(68) was at the time of the strike on his air defences as part of a renewed allied assault on Libya involving British submarines and RAF Tornado jets.

US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said the US expects to turn control of the Libya military mission over to a coalition probably headed either by the French and British or by NATO "in a matter of days."

The three-storey administrative building which was flattened is about 50 metres from Gaddafi's iconic tent where the Libyan strongman generally meets guests in Tripoli. It was hit by a missile, Libyan government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim told reporters who were taken to the site by bus.

"This was a barbaric bombing which could have hit hundreds of civilians gathered at the residence of Muammar Gaddafi about 400 metres away from the building which was hit," Ibrahim said.

Smoke was seen rising from within the heavily fortified compound which houses Gaddafi's private quarters as well as military barracks and other installations. A Libyan official displayed to reporters a piece of shrapnel, apparently from the missile, at the ruined building.

Pentagon spokesman Vice-Admiral William Gortney at a news briefing at Washington said, "We are not going after Gaddafi. At this particular point I can guarantee he is not on the target list."

Gortney also said it had no evidence of civilian casualties in airstrikes by coalition forces over Libya.

"There is no indication of any civilian casualties," he insisted in comments that came after Tripoli's official media said the airstrikes were targeting civilian objectives and that that there were "civilians casualties as a result of this aggression."

In contrast to US position, British Defence Secretary Liam Fox suggested that Gaddafi was a legitimate target, so long as steps were taken to avoid harm to civilians around him.

Asked about Fox's remarks, Gates said it would be "unwise" to have coalition forces try to kill Gaddafi in military strikes in Libya and that the allied operation should stick to the parameters as authorized by UN Security Council.

"I think that it's important that we operate within the mandate of the UN Security Council resolution," he said.

There were also signs of unease in the Arab world over the scale and nature of the attacks.

"What has happened in Libya differs from the goal of imposing a no-fly zone, " the Arab League's secretary general Amr Mussa said.

"What we want is the protection of civilians and not bombing other civilians," Mussa said.

Asked about criticism about the air strikes from the Mussa, Gates said he was reassured by renewed support for the operation by the bloc.

Gates said governments were discussing how best to organize the military command of the operation, with Arab states reluctant to have a NATO flag over the intervention.

Gates, who was speaking on a US military plane en route to Russia, said the intervention was backed by "a very diverse coalition" and warned that expanding its goals could complicate the consensus around the UN resolution.

"If we start adding additional objectives then I think we create a problem in that respect," he said. "I also think it's unwise to set as specific goals things that you may or may not be able to achieve."

Initially, the goal was to shut down Gaddafi's air force to safeguard civilians, he said.

"The key is to first of all, establish the no-fly zone, to prevent him from using his military forces to slaughter his own people," he said.

Gates also said that the US expects to turn control of the Libya military mission over to a coalition probably headed either by the French and British or by NATO "in a matter of days."

In his first public remarks since the start of the bombings, Gates said President Barack Obama felt very strongly about limiting America's role in the operation, adding that the president is "more aware than almost anybody of the stress on the military."

"We agreed to use our unique capabilities and the breadth of those capabilities at the front of this process, and then we expected in a matter of days to be able to turn over the primary responsibility to others," Gates said. "We will continue to support the coalition, we will be a member of the coalition, we will have a military role in the coalition, but we will not have the preeminent role."

Gates' comments came as American ships and aircraft continued to pound Libya, taking out key radar, communications and surface-to-air missile sites along its Mediterranean coast. Even as his military was under siege, Gaddafi has vowed to endure through a long war against what he called colonial crusader aggression by the international coalition.

PTI


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Tuesday, 29 March 2011

Coalition bombards Gaddafi's command centre near his home

Tripoli/Cairo, Mar 21: Western forces intensified strikes on Libyan defence targets flattening a command centre close to Muammar Gaddafi's private residence, as more nations joined the campaign in Libya and the Arab League declared its commitment to the UN-mandated action after initially voicing concerns over the bombardment.

US President Barack Obama said today that he favours the Libyan leader's ouster from power but added that the UN-authorised effort's was limited to establishing a no-fly zone over Libya and protecting civilians.

Obama said the United States would transfer leadership of the military operation to other, unnamed participants within a matter of days, not weeks, but he declined to provide a more precise timetable. Obama, however, said that it was US policy that Gaddafi needs to go.

British Prime Minister David Cameron also said that there is no decent future for Libya with Gaddafi but the coalition had no legal authority for bringing out a regime change.

The western powers denied that civilians had been killed in their operations which got underway after the UN Security Council (UNSC) gave its nod for imposing a ''no fly'' zone over Libya.

A rebel spokesman, meanwhile, said at least 40 people had died today in fire from Gaddafi's forces in Misrata.

A coalition official said Gaddafi''s "command and control capability" inside the Libyan leader's compound at Bab el-Aziziya in south of capital Tripoli had been demolished.

It was unclear where Gaddafi was at the time of the strike on his air defences as part of a renewed allied assault on Libya involving British submarines and RAF Tornado jets.

US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said the US expects to turn control of the Libya military mission over to a coalition probably headed either by the French and British or by NATO "in a matter of days".

The Arab League which had earlier voiced concern over civilian casualties in the bombardment, later got back behind the campaign.

Arab League Secretary General Amr Mussa declared his commitment to the UN-mandated action after a meeting with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and talks with Cameron.

"What has happened in Libya differs from the goal of imposing a no-fly zone," Amr Mussa had earlier said.

"What we want is the protection of civilians and not bombing other civilians," Mussa said.

The three-storey administrative building which was flattened is about 50 metres from Gaddafi's iconic tent where the Libyan strongman generally meets guests in Tripoli. It was hit by a missile, Libyan government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim told reporters who were taken to the site by bus.

PTI


View the original article here

 
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