U.S. ratchets up pressure on Gaddafi

By Karen DeYoung and Colum Lynch

Washington Post Staff Writers
Saturday, February 26, 2011; 12:00 AM

Moments after a charter aircraft departed Libya with all remaining U.S. diplomats there Friday, the Obama administration shuttered the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli and moved to freeze assets in this country belonging to leader Moammar Gaddafi, his family and his government.

In an executive order issued Friday night, President Obama accused Gaddafi and his government of taking “extreme measures against the people of Libya, including by using weapons of war, mercenaries and wanton violence against unarmed civilians.” The order blocking the transfer or withdrawal of any funds applies to all Libyan government entities, Gaddafi and all of his estimated eight children, specifically naming three sons and a daughter.

White House officials said Obama also canceled all military contacts with Libya and ordered a reallocation of U.S. intelligence assets to focus on civilian deaths there and to track Libyan troop deployments and tank movements.

The administration had cited the risk to American lives for what had appeared to be its restrained reaction to growing evidence of atrocities in Libya over the past week, even as evidence of government atrocities grew. But with virtually all Americans and other foreigners now gone, it moved quickly to ramp up the pressure on Gaddafi.

In a statement issued with the executive order, Obama said the Gaddafi government “must be held accountable” for its “continued violation of human rights, brutalization of its people and outrageous threats.” The U.S. actions, it said, targeted Gaddafi “while protecting the assets that belong to the Libyan people.”

The administration’s efforts were joined by those of the international community. On a day of frenetic diplomatic activity, the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva condemned Gaddafi’s bloody crackdown on demonstrators and ordered a war crimes investigation.

At U.N. headquarters in New York, European powers circulated a draft resolution, to be considered at an emergency Security Council meeting Saturday, that would impose international economic sanctions on Libya and specifically target Gaddafi, his sons and his close aides with a travel ban and asset freeze.

The draft also calls for the imposition of a comprehensive arms embargo and invites the International Criminal Court to carry out an investigation into “crimes against humanity” in Libya.

Thus far, Gaddafi has shown no inclination to bow to foreign pressure. He has vowed to remain in power and said he is ready to “die a martyr.”

Senior U.N. diplomats said there were no proposals as yet to authorize international military action or impose a no-fly zone over Libya. NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, meeting Friday with European Union defense ministers in Bucharest, Romania, said a no-fly zone would require U.N. authorization.

In a chilling briefing to the Security Council, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon cited reports that forces loyal to Gaddafi were shooting civilians as they left their homes and inside hospitals in Tripoli, and said that more than 1,000 people had been killed.

Libya’s U.N. ambassador, Abdurrahman Mohamed Shalgam, broke down in tears after he urged intervention to stop the bloodshed. Shalgam said that Gaddafi, his former friend and mentor, had given the Libyan people a grim choice: “Either I rule you or I kill you.” He received hugs from some diplomats.

Earlier in the day, his counterpart in Geneva also broke ranks with Gaddafi, calling for a minute of silence “in honor of the revolution of 17 February,” the day the demonstrations began, as other members of the Human Rights Council stood at attention.

“Colonel Gaddafi has lost the confidence of his people,” White House press secretary Jay Carney told reporters. “His legitimacy has been reduced to zero in the eyes of his people.”

But Carney said the sanctions were not intended to help push Gaddafi from power, reiterating that the Libyan people must be the ones to decide whether he should go. That has remained the U.S. public posture on the rolling “people power” revolutions that began last month in the Arab world, driving long-term leaders and U.S. allies from power in Tunisia and Egypt and sending thousands into the streets in Yemen, Bahrain and elsewhere.

Nowhere, however, have the demonstrations been met with the vicious response unleashed by Gaddafi in Libya, as opposition forces have taken over the eastern part of the country and moved toward Tripoli.

While other governments began evacuating their diplomats and citizens on ships and charter flights last week, U.S. efforts were repeatedly delayed. A ferry chartered to carry U.S. citizens and diplomats to Malta arrived on Wednesday but waited for what officials said were 18-foot waves in the Mediterranean to subside before departing Friday morning with hundreds aboard.

Carney took to the White House podium just after a final group of U.S. diplomats and civilians left for Istanbul on a charter flight from Matiga military airfield outside Tripoli on Friday afternoon.

Carney rebutted questions implying that the United States has been slow to respond to the Libya crisis, saying that “there has never been a time when this much has been done this quickly.”

But Obama’s focus, he said, has been on “our obligation to the security of American citizens and also getting the policy right. And I can assure you that has been the guide – those have been the guiding principles as we’ve proceeded over the course of the last week.”

Even before the announced sanctions, Carney said that U.S. financial institutions had been told to scrutinize “private banking accounts held by or on behalf of senior foreign political figures, and to monitor transactions that could potentially represent misappropriated or diverted state assets, proceeds of bribery or other illegal payments, or other public corruption proceeds.”

According to State Department cables leaked by the anti-secrecy Web site WikiLeaks, U.S. banks manage as much as a half-billion dollars in Libyan assets. The country’s main investment fund for oil profits, held largely overseas, is estimated in the tens of billions of dollars.

Long-standing U.S. sanctions against Libya had been eased in recent years as Gaddafi agreed to end his weapons of mass destruction programs and began to cooperate in international counterterrorism efforts.

At the State Department, officials told reporters that the administration had “suspended” operations at the U.S. Embassy on Friday but had not severed diplomatic relations with Libya.

“Our embassy is not closed,” said Janet Sanderson, deputy assistant secretary for Near East affairs. “We still continue to reach out to Libyans where appropriate, directly and through third parties.” While Sanderson did not rule out the possibility that “pockets” of Americans might still be in Libya, she said many private U.S. citizens had left on company charters or had received rides on ships and aircraft charted by other governments.

Of the 338 passengers aboard the ferry that departed Friday morning, 183 were U.S. citizens, including 39 embassy officials, said Patrick Kennedy, undersecretary of state for management. There were 19 U.S. officials aboard the U.S. charter aircraft, about a dozen private U.S. citzens and nine foreign nationals.

deyoungk@washpost.com lynchc@washpost.com

Lynch reported from the United Nations. Staff writer Scott Wilson contributed to this report.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/02/25/AR2011022506704.html?hpid=topnews&hpid=topnews&sid=ST2011022502192

Source: The Washington Post

Short URL: https://english.farajat.net/?p=3678

Posted by on Feb 27 2011 Filed under News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

Leave a Reply

Photo Gallery

Log in |2011 farajat.net