Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Clinton in Tripoli; Gaddafi forces counter-attack (Reuters)

TRIPOLI/SIRTE, Libya (Reuters) ? U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived in Libya on Tuesday to meet the new leaders Washington helped into power, but die-hard forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi launched a surprise counter-attack in his hometown of Sirte.

The visit by Clinton, the most senior U.S. official to come Tripoli since Gaddafi's 42 year rule was ended, was marked by tight security, reflecting worries that the new rulers have yet to establish full control over the country.

U.S. officials said Clinton's visit was aimed at cementing a partnership with the new government and helping it steer toward democracy. Clinton would encourage the National Transitional Council to fulfill pledges to move swiftly toward elections.

"The important thing is to be able to show the Libyan people that there is momentum," a senior administration official traveling with Clinton said.

"We're pushing the (NTC) to be able to show the Libyan people that they're serious in their commitments to transition, that they're serious in their commitments to rule of law, that they're serious about getting to those elections."

Washington is also offering Libya practical help to contain the thousands of weapons flooding the country in the wake of the war to oust Gaddafi. Security experts say these could fall into the hands of al Qaeda.

The United States took part in the NATO bombing campaign that helped the NTC take power, although its aircraft largely played a secondary role to Britain and France.

SIRTE SETBACK

Nearly two months since capturing Tripoli, the NTC has failed to defeat remaining Gaddafi loyalists, raising questions about its ability to exert its authority over the entire country and postponing the launch of its promised democracy program.

Clinton arrived as the interim government was facing a military reverse in Sirte, a city on the Mediterranean coast where a few days ago it was poised to declare victory over pro-Gaddafi forces.

Sirte is now the last major Libyan town where pro-Gaddafi forces are holding out, after the other bastion of resistance, Bani Walid, fell to the country's new rulers on Monday.

Gaddafi loyalists who had been cornered in a an area of Sirte of about two square kilometers (a square mile) appeared to have broken out of their encirclement, Reuters reporters in the city said. A group of NTC fighters was forced to pull back about 2 km after they came under heavy fire.

The force was trying to regroup near the Ouagadougou conference center -- the complex where Gaddafi used to host foreign heads of state -- but were pinned down.

A volley of 22 mm rounds from Gaddafi loyalists thudded into the group, hitting four vehicles and seriously wounding one NTC fighter. He was loaded into an ambulance and driven away.

On the southern outskirts of the city, in an area that in previous days had been safe from gunfire, mortars were landing and air-burst rounds were exploding overhead.

PREMATURE CELEBRATIONS

The scene was in marked contrast to events earlier this week, when Gaddafi loyalists offered little resistance as NTC forces pummeled them with tank fire and mortars.

Libya's new rulers were so confident of their imminent victory in the town that NTC chairman Mustafa Abdel Jalil visited Sirte last week and was greeted by fighters firing triumphantly into the air.

Finishing off the pro-Gaddafi forces, even though they are now reduced to a rump of die-hard fighters, has proved difficult. NTC troops say loyalists use the cover of darkness to sneak out of their encirclement and then open fire.

But the NTC effort -- spearheaded by mostly amateur fighters in a hotch-potch of volunteer units -- has been hampered by a lack of coordination.

Units from Benghazi in eastern Libya and Misrata to the west have lost men because they have fired at each other by mistake instead of at the Gaddafi loyalists.

Libya's new authorities took power nearly two months ago when an armed rebellion, with support from NATO missiles and warplanes, broke Gaddafi's grip on the capital, Tripoli, and ended his autocratic rule.

Gaddafi is wanted by the International Criminal Court on charges of ordering the killing of civilians. He is in hiding, possibly deep in Libya's Sahara desert.

The capture of Sirte is vital to the NTC, because it will mark the establishment of at least nominal control over all Libya's territory. The NTC has also said the fall of Sirte will be the signal for the process to begin of creating a fully-fledged government and building democratic institutions.

That process though is fraught with risks for Libya because it will involve finding a way to divide up power between rival groups, many of them armed, who are impatient for a stake in the new Libya.

(Additional reporting by Rania El Gamal in Sirte, Libya; Writing by Christian Lowe)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111018/wl_nm/us_libya

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