TRIPOLI (Reuters) – Libyan and U.S. officials met face-to-face, but while Tripoli said it was seeking talks with
no preconditions, Washington said it delivered a clear message: Muammar Gaddafi must go.
The secret meeting occurred at the weekend as Libyan government forces fought rebels for control of the oil port of Brega, which the insurgents said on Monday they now had surrounded in what would be a major boost to their campaign. Tripoli denied this.
The meeting was held “to deliver a clear and firm message that the only way to move forward is for Gaddafi to step down,” a State Department official said.
“This was not a negotiation. It was the delivery of a message.” He said no more meetings were planned.
Libya said it welcomed discussions but only without preconditions.
“Any dialogue with the French, Americans, British is welcome,” government spokesman Ibrahim Moussa told journalists in Tripoli. “We will discuss everything, but do not condition your peace talks. Let Libyans decide their future.”
He said the meeting was in Tunisia on Saturday. The U.S. official said it followed repeated contacts from the Libyan leader’s emissaries.
France has also held similar talks with Libyan officials in the Tunisian resort of Djerba, but the French had gone further and insisted that Gaddafi must not only step down but go into exile too, the BBC reported.
Libya’s foreign minister is to meet his Russian opposite number in Moscow on Wednesday, Itar-Tass news agency said. The meeting, requested by the Libyans, would be first known visit by a Libyan government official to Moscow since the war began.
Russia has called for Gaddafi to go, but has criticized Western states for recognizing the rebel leadership as Libya’s legitimate government, saying they were taking sides. Moscow emphasizes it is in contact with both rebels and government.
After a long period of stalemate in the desert along the eastern front, the rebels said they had routed most of Gaddafi’s troops in Brega to the west, which has an oil refinery and terminal, and encircled the town.
More than 40 people on both sides were reported killed in the fighting since late last week for a city which for months marked the eastern limit of Gaddafi’s control.
Rebel spokesman Shamsiddin Abdulmolah said its streets were strewn with landmines, making it hard to secure full control.
“The main body (of Gaddafi’s forces) retreated to Ras Lanuf,” which lies to the west, he said by telephone from the eastern rebel stronghold of Benghazi.
The government denied the claim.
“Our brave soldiers are in Brega in their thousands and control it completely,” spokesman Ibrahim said.
He said the government had lost 30 soldiers over five days of fighting, but rebels had lost many times more.
Abdulmolah said 12 rebels were killed and some 300 wounded on Saturday and Sunday. Most rebel forces were now past Brega and heading west.
NATO STRAINS
Brega has changed hands several times in the back-and-forth fighting along Libya’s Mediterranean coast since the rebellion began in February.
Libyan TV, in a bid to counter the rebel claims, showed what it said was footage taken on Monday of ordinary life in Brega, with students taking an exam and workers at a natural gas plant.
Gaddafi is refusing to step down despite the rebellion, NATO air strikes and defections of members of his inner circle.
On Saturday — as his envoys met U.S. officials — he called rebels traitors and said he had no plans to leave the country.
The slow progress of the rebel campaign has caused strains in NATO, with some member states pressing for a negotiated solution to end a conflict many thought would last a few weeks.
NATO said it struck a military antenna radar system on Monday at Tripoli’s main airport, but Libyan officials said it had purely civilian use.
On another front, in the Western Mountains region southwest of Tripoli, pro-Gaddafi forces exchanged artillery fire on Sunday with rebels in the village of Al-Qawalish, a rebel fighter manning a checkpoint there told Reuters.
A rebel spokesman in the regional town of Zintan said rebels had repelled a bid by Gaddafi troops to enter the town.
U.S. urges Gaddafi to go as rebels claim oil town
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