Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Clinton Arrives in Abu Dhabi for talks on post-Qaddafi Libya

Alarabiya.net English

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton greets Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan in Abu Dhabi in January 2011. (File photo)
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton greets Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan in Abu Dhabi in January 2011. (File photo)
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived in the United Arab Emirates on Wednesday for talks with European and Arab partners on planning for a democratic Libya without Muammar Qaddafi, aides said.

The talks in the UAE capital Abu Dhabi will be held on Thursday. They come after US President Barack Obama said NATO’s mission in Libya was forging “inexorable” advances that meant it was only a matter of time before Mr. Qaddafi’s departure.

The meeting will be the third International Contact Group event since the organization was launched in Qatar two months ago.

Libyan women sit near drawings of Libyan leader Qaddafi near a courthouse in Benghazi. (File photo)
Libyan women sit near drawings of Libyan leader Qaddafi near a courthouse in Benghazi. (File photo)
“With each meeting, international pressure is growing and momentum is building for change in Libya,” Secretary Clinton’s spokesperson, Victoria Nuland, told the accompanying press.

“Not only does the Contact Group allow us to sustain the (NATO-led military) coalition, it also allows us to reinvest all these countries in our common effort and to concert views on the next steps,” Ms. Nuland added.

Due to take part are two dozen countries, including key NATO allies Britain, France and Italy, as well as delegates from the United Nations, the Arab League, and the Organization of Islamic Conference.

The UAE also plans to invite Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Russia, US officials said.

As the military, political and economic pressure mount on Mr. Qaddafi to step down, the group will discuss “what a post-Qaddafi Libya ought to look like,” a senior US official told reporters on condition of anonymity.

Such a place should be a “unified state, (a) democratic state with a smooth transition,” the official said before Secretary Clinton arrived for the talks.

A second official said the rebel National Transitional Council (NTC) had set up shadow ministries in its base in eastern Libya and named a civilian to head military in preparation for assuming power when Mr. Qaddafi falls.

The international community has begun to talk among themselves and with the rebel administration about how to offer security and basic services to the people of Tripoli when the Libyan capital is freed, he said.

However, the official added that Washington cannot say whether the NTC “is ready to assume complete control,” and cautioned that there is no international consensus over when Mr. Qaddafi should leave power, where he should go, or even whether he should leave Libya.

“And we in the international community have stepped up our effort as well to be able to be in a position to provide them (the opposition) whatever kind of assistance they might need,” the second official said.

A third US administration official said the Contact Group -- which includes NATO allies leading the military action against Mr. Qaddafi as well as Arab partners and the United Nations -- would discuss the opposition’s stark need for funds.

The opposition has complained that little has happened since the group last met on May 5 in Rome when Clinton and her partners agreed on a new fund to aid Libya’s rebels and promised to tap frozen assets of Mr. Qaddafi’s regime.

“We understand the (NTC’s) frustration but again the international community isn’t going to let the (NTC) go under financially,” the official said on the condition of anonymity.

Libyan rebels head towards street battles with forces loyal to Qaddafi near Brega.
Libyan rebels head towards street battles with forces loyal to Qaddafi near Brega.
The group will on Thursday debate a “mechanism” through which aid “can flow in a transparent and accountable manner,” the official said.

The first official said the United States is optimistic “some support” will flow from the Contact Group meeting in Abu Dhabi but was non-committal about whether Congress was ready to free up assets frozen in the United States for the rebels.

The third official said “yes” when asked whether the United States would urge Arab countries to offer more funds to the Libyan opposition, which is based in the eastern port city of Benghazi.

US officials said meanwhile that a Liberian-flagged tanker was scheduled to arrive Wednesday at Barbers Point, Hawaii, with 1.2 million barrels of Libyan crude sold by the NTC, apparently the first such oil delivery by the opposition.

It was not immediately clear how much the NTC would earn from the sale. The price of the benchmark Brent crude oil on Wednesday hovered around $118 a barrel.

NATO has stepped up its operations this week, launching a ferocious series of nearly 30 daytime airstrikes on Tripoli to limit Mr. Qaddafi’s ability to fight the rebels and attack civilians.

But weeks of air strikes have so far failed to force Mr. Qaddafi out, but Mr. Obama nevertheless insisted in Washington that the Libyan leader was on borrowed time after four decades of iron-fisted rule.

He noted that Mr. Qaddafi’s troops had been forced to retreat in many areas in what appears to be an “inexorable trend of the regime forces being pushed back, being incapacitated.”

Mr. Qaddafi has responded by angrily denouncing the rebels and vowing not to surrender.

Ms. Nuland said that participants in Abu Dhabi would also discuss political unrest in Yemen, Syria and Bahrain as well as efforts to sustain support for the democratic transitions in Egypt and Tunisia.

(Sara Ghasemilee, a senior editor at Al Arabiya English can be reached at sara.ghasemilee@mbc net. Abeer Tayel, also a senior editor at Al Arabiya English, can be reached at: abeer.tayel@mbc.net)

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