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WAR REPORT
NATO's Libya mission closer to end: Rasmussen
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Sept 5, 2011

Qaeda offshoot acquires Libyan air missiles: EU
Brussels (AFP) Sept 5, 2011 - Al-Qaeda's north African branch has acquired a stockpile of weapons in Libya, including surface-to-air missiles that are threatening air travel, the EU's counter-terrorism coordinator said Monday.

Due to the turmoil in Libya, members of Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) have "gained access to weapons, either small arms or machine-guns, or certain surface-to-air missiles which are extremely dangerous because they pose a risk to flights over the territory," said Gilles de Kerchove.

At a news conference marking the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks in the United States, de Kerchove said that while the threat of strikes by mainstream Al-Qaeda followers had decreased, AQIM was taking root both on the Arab peninsula and in Africa, posing a mounting threat.

"It is a group that is Africanising and seeking to extend its area of influence," he said.

Like other Al-Qaeda affiliates in Pakistan and elsewhere, AQIM had gained support among locals by using ransom money and possibly drug-related income to fund social services unavailable from cash-strapped African governments.

It had extended its area of action from northern Niger, Mali and Mauritania to northern Nigeria and as far south as Senegal, he said.

To put a brake on any further extension of its influence, European Union nations needed to help African countries such as Chad and Niger to reintegrate the hundreds of thousands of migrant workers who have fled home from Libya in the past months. Mali alone faced the return of 210,000 people, he said.

Plans were underway also to aid information-gathering and counter-terror centres in Algeria and Mauritania, and to back Malian efforts to redeploy seven to 10 military bases in its remote barren north as well as provide basic services for the population there.

NATO's mission in Libya has moved significantly closer to success and will end soon, the military alliance's secretary general said on Monday.

"Our operation to protect civilians has moved significantly closer to success, but we are not there yet," Rasmussen told a news conference, reiterating that air strikes will continue as long as civilians are under threat.

He said the Libya mission, in its sixth month, had provided NATO vital lessons as it showed the Western alliance's strengths but also its heavy reliance on US military power.

While he said he could not give a precise date for the mission's end, Rasmussen said: "I believe it will come soon."

It will be up to NATO's decision-making body, the North Atlantic Council, to determine when Operation Unified Protector can end, based on the assessment of military commanders, he said.

"What will play a crucial role is the capability of the (rebel) National Transitional Council to actually ensure effective protection of the civilian population," Rasmussen said.

The rebels, who have taken control of Tripoli and most of Libya, are readying for battle in Kadhafi's last strongholds of Bani Walid and Sirte.

The deposed Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi's capture would not be a "decisive factor," the NATO chief added.

"Let me stress that individuals, including Kadhafi, are not a target of our operation," he said.

NATO aircraft have carried out more than 8,000 flying sorties to identify or strike targets since March under a UN mandate to protect civilians.

While the Kadhafi regime has accused NATO of killing more than 1,000 civilians, the alliance rejected such claims, save for one incident in Tripoli in June, when NATO admitted that a missile misfired in a bombing which the Libyan government said killed five people.

The war in Libya provided several lessons that the alliance will take stock of at its next summit in Chicago in May 2012, Rasmussen said.

The conflict stood out as the first NATO operation in which European and Canadian allies, not the United States, were in the lead, Rasmussen said.

"But this mission could not have been done without capabilities which only the United States can offer," he said.

The United States, France and Britain led an international coalition to launch the first salvos against Kadhafi's regime on March 19, but the US military retreted into a support role when NATO took over 12 days later.

Although the United States operated out of the limelight, the US military provided key assets including drones, intelligence and refuelling aircraft, Rasmussen said.

His comments echoed complaints by former US defence secretary Robert Gates, who warned in June that NATO faced a "dismal" future after years of shrinking defence budgets and over-reliance on the United States.

"Let me put it bluntly. Those capabilities are vital for all of us, more allies should be willing to obtain them," Rasmussen said. "That is a real challenge and we will have to find the solutions at the next NATO summit."

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Top Kadhafi security chief in Niger: sources
Niamey (AFP) Sept 5, 2011 - Members of fugitive Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi's entourage, including his internal security chief Mansour Daw, have crossed the border into Niger, sources told AFP Monday.

A Nigerien government source said that the fugitive ex-Libyan leader was not in the group of 11 Libyans.

"Moamer Kadhafi was not part of the delegation that arrived in Niger, which consisted of three Nigeriens: Agaly Alambo and two of his brothers and 11 Libyans, among them Mansour Daw," the government source said.

"The 11 Libyans will be housed in Niamey and we have taken measures to this effect," added a security source.

The Libyans arrived in the northern Niger city of Agadez escorted by Alambo, a historical leader in Niger's Tuareg rebellion with close ties to Kadhafi.

"In any case, these people who came with Agaly (Alambo) are neither Kadhafi's sons nor his close relatives," a Tuareg source told AFP on condition of anonymity, adding that all had since reached the capital Niamey.

Alambo, head of the Niger Movement for Justice, the country's main Tuareg rebel group since 2007, had been living in Libya since Kadhafi brokered an end to his fight against Niamey in 2009.

When Western powers backed Libya's own rebel movement earlier this year, Alambo recruited hundreds of former rebels from Niger to fight alongside Kadhafi, whom many Tuaregs across the region see as their champion.

Last week, a Tuareg source said that people close to Kadhafi had arrived in Agadez in April with suitcases full of money to recruit "hundreds" of young people.

The source said about 1,500 Tuareg ex-rebels had fought for Kadhafi.

But since the fall of Tripoli to fighters loyal to Libya's National Transitional Council, hundreds of Tuareg fighters have returned to Niger, while about 500 withdrew to Sirte, Kadhafi's hometown.

Niger last month formally recognised the NTC as its neighbour's only legal authority and urged the new leaders to safeguard the security of foreigners living in Libya.

Thousands of Tuaregs had taken refuge in Libya following the rebellions which have hit Mali and Niger over the past two decades.

Niger's President Mahamadou Issoufou, elected in March, was considered an ally of Kadhafi and the two last met in Tripoli in February.





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WAR REPORT
Kadhafi bastion waits after talks fail
Shishan, Libya (AFP) Sept 5, 2011
Anti-Kadhafi fighters were playing a waiting game Monday after an official said negotiations for the surrender of the town of Bani Walid had failed and would not resume. China meanwhile denied a Canadian press report that it had offered huge stockpiles of arms to the ousted strongman during the final months of his regime and held secret talks on shipping them through Algeria and South Africa ... read more


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