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U.S. Condemns 'Appalling' Violence In Libya

Us Libya Reaction

MATTHEW LEE   02/22/11 10:30 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration on Tuesday condemned "appalling" violence in Libya, where security forces unleashed a bloody crackdown on protesters demanding the ouster of longtime leader Moammar Gadhafi.

"This violence is completely unacceptable," Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said. "We believe that the government of Libya bears responsibility for what is occurring and must take actions to end the violence."

But as it sought to safely extricate U.S. diplomats and other Americans from the spreading chaos, Washington stopped short of criticizing Gadhafi personally or demanding that he step down. U.S. officials who spoke to the matter publicly on Tuesday, including Clinton, would not mention Gadhafi by name.

Unease over the safety of U.S. citizens intensified after attempts to get some out on Monday and Tuesday were unsuccessful amid concern about Gadhafi's unpredictable behavior, and late Tuesday the State Department announced that American citizens would be evacuated from Libya by ferry to the Mediterranean island of Malta.

In a notice sent to U.S. citizens in Libya, the department said Americans wishing to leave the country should be at the As-shahab port in Tripoli with their passports starting at 9 a.m. local time Wednesday for a departure no later than 3 p.m. local time.

The mercurial Gadhafi – once termed the "mad dog of the Middle East" by President Ronald Reagan – has long flummoxed U.S. officials. He is notoriously unpredictable and has been known to fly into rages at real or perceived slights.

The Obama administration did not outline any specific steps to coerce or punish the Libyan regime, with which the U.S. has built a wary partnership after years of branding Gadhafi a terrorist sponsor. After decades of hostility, the U.S. and Libya normalized ties during President George W. Bush's presidency after Gadhafi renounced terrorism and weapons of mass destruction but relations have been far from fully cordial.

U.S. officials said Washington would join other nations to address Libyan behavior at the U.N. Security Council. They renewed calls for Gadhafi's government to talk with opponents, and cast the political unrest there as part of a regional uprising against political and economic stagnation that must be addressed by the Arab governments of the Middle East and North Africa.

Gadhafi delivered a defiant speech on national television in which he vowed he will not step aside. He said he would die a martyr's death fighting those rebelling against his 42-year-old rule. The address was filled with references to his standing up to the United States and other world powers and threats to execute protesters.

In addition to the tone, the speech unnerved U.S. officials because it was delivered in front of the rubble of the Tripoli compound that the U.S. bombed in 1986, killing Gadhafi's young daughter. As he spoke state-run television repeatedly showed a courtyard statue of a clenched fist crushing a U.S. fighter jet.

With the potential for Gadhafi to foment anti-American or anti-western sentiment and Libya teetering on the brink of what some fear will explode into a full-blown civil war, administration officials repeatedly invoked their primary concern of ensuring the safety of U.S. citizens there.

"As always, the safety and well-being of Americans has to be our highest priority. We are in touch with many Libyan officials directly and indirectly and with other governments in the region to try to influence what is going on inside Libya," Clinton told reporters at the State Department.

Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said U.S. officials had been assured by Libyan authorities that embassy workers and families will be able to leave safely. He said the United States expected those pledges to be honored.

"They've pledged to support us in our evacuation, and we hope that cooperation will be forthcoming," he said.

Crowley said the department was trying to get 35 nonessential staff and family members of personnel at the U.S. Embassy in Libya out of the country. The State Department ordered them to leave on Monday but they have not yet been able to depart, he said without elaborating on the reason.

The department also believes there are several thousand dual U.S.-Libyan nationals and about 600 private U.S. citizens in Libya. Crowley said the U.S. was working with other countries and airlines to increase the capacity of commercial flights and was also prepared to charter planes if necessary. But he noted that would require Libyan consent.

In January, the U.S. ambassador to Libya, Gene Cretz, was recalled to Washington for consultations amid concerns that his detailed accounting of Gadhafi's eccentricities in secret diplomatic cables published by the website WikiLeaks would compromise his ability to work with the Libyan government. More than a month later, Cretz has yet to return to Libya.

In 2010, Crowley was forced to apologize for a joking remark he made about Gadhafi's rambling speech to the U.N. General Assembly a year earlier. Libya had threatened diplomatic retaliation unless he apologized.

Asked about Gadhafi's fiery speech on Tuesday, Crowley demurred.

"We want to see the bloodshed stopped," he said. "We want to see the government engage its citizens, rather than attack its citizens."

"This is ultimately and fundamentally an issue between the Libyan government, its leader and the Libyan people," Crowley said. "They, like others, are standing up and demanding a greater say in the events of their country. We have grave concerns about the Libyan response to these protesters."

Earlier, White House spokesman Jay Carney called on Gadhafi's regime to respect the universal rights of its citizens and allow peaceful protests to take place. Echoing earlier White House statements about anti-government protests in Egypt, he said the future of Libya needs to be decided by the Libyan people.

Meanwhile, top lawmakers said the U.S. should consider imposing new sanctions on the regime and called for foreign energy companies to immediately shut down operations in the oil-rich North African nation.

Sen. John Kerry, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, called the violent crackdown "cowardly" and "beyond despicable." He urged U.S. and international oil companies to immediately suspend their Libyan operations until attacks on civilians stop.

The Massachusetts Democrat also called on the Obama administration to consider re-imposing sanctions against Libya that were lifted by President George W. Bush after Gadhafi renounced terrorism and abandoned development of chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.

Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., called for the administration to support a no-fly zone over Libya to prevent air attacks.

Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., chairwoman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, also called for the imposition of new sanctions, including asset freezes and travel bans on senior Libyan officials.

"The Libyan regime's widespread attacks on the Libyan people are deplorable, and all responsible for these attacks must be held to account," she said in a statement.

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WASHINGTON — The Obama administration on Tuesday condemned "appalling" violence in Libya, where security forces unleashed a bloody crackdown on protesters demanding the ouster of longtime leader...
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration on Tuesday condemned "appalling" violence in Libya, where security forces unleashed a bloody crackdown on protesters demanding the ouster of longtime leader...
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02:36 PM on 03/07/2011
Kerry: "One could crater the airports and the runways and leave them incapable of using them for a period of time. I don't think this is going to be a long-term kind of thing, frankly. That's just my judgment. ... It's not a very big air force. We're not talking about, you know, this gargantuan kind of force that we face."

OHH!!! So now Mr. Purplehearts who called our troops in Iraq a bunch of rapists and murderers not only wants to set up a no-fly-zone around Libya to put our troops at risk, he wants start BOMBING THEM!

Justification for keeping this bloviating airhead in the Senate ended decades ago...
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Pod-gers
Jeremy Lin = Game Change
11:10 PM on 02/23/2011
This evening Press TV reports that 130 people injured when Israeli aircraft, jets, shot folks down in Gaza.

Ironically, they also claim that in Libya, 130 military have been executed for refusing to shoot Libyan protesters.

I am so glad to see we are talking about outrage over violence abagainst non violent protesters. just wait till the palistineans rise up!

Oh, my, the STENCH of the double standard!

Moderator, no wonder this thread isn't on the front page.
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DoUGetItYet
Objectivity has no Ideology
03:57 PM on 02/23/2011
But N.A.T.O. forces dropping bombs on civilians & CHILDREN this past week in Afghanistan ilicited no response in kind.

How utterly hypocritical...
03:24 PM on 02/23/2011
They are kidding right?, Condemnation of appalling violence from a government that has inflicted far more violence than any of these tinpot dictators. I guess as long as it is Americans doing the killing its just fine. Effing hypocrites
02:01 PM on 02/23/2011
Is Obama still President? Haven't heard from the leader of the free world on the uprisings of freedom.

Maybe he's been playing a lot of basketball and has been busy.
04:55 PM on 02/23/2011
What exactly do you want him to do?
04:56 PM on 02/23/2011
He could come out of hiding, for starters.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hagagaga
My comments are funnier than yours.
08:31 AM on 02/23/2011
What the USA should do with regards to the Libya situation is...well, you know what the words "shores of Tripoli" are from, right?
03:25 PM on 02/23/2011
The US should do nothing, its none of its business and America really needs to learn how to stop meddling in other nations affairs
05:04 PM on 02/23/2011
not exactly nothing - but neither should the foreign secretary assume total responsibility for what is clearly also a European, African and Arab League issue.
05:15 AM on 02/23/2011
It's amazing that obama can interject himself into our allies and sovreign states problems, but can't bear to speak out against our sworn enemies iran and lybia when they repress their people. why is that? is it religious scruples?
03:28 PM on 02/23/2011
Lybians and Iranians may be your "sworn enemies", they are not mine
05:15 PM on 02/23/2011
insidious and pernicious
04:04 AM on 02/23/2011
US condemns "appalling" violence in Gaza.
05:17 AM on 02/23/2011
yes I believe all Americans condemn the oppression of the palestinian people by the thugocracies hamas and fatah.
11:28 AM on 02/23/2011
Fatah is financed in part by the US government and has been accused of imprisonment and torture of Palestinians legitimately resisting the illegal occupation of their lands. However, the US has insisted on dealing only with the ineffective and corrupt Abbas and Fatah, to the detriment of the legitimate rights of Palestinians.

The leaked Palestinian Papers have proven that Abbas should not be representing Palestine. The PA is simply another arm of the oppressive Israeli military regime in the territory. Israeli public figure and politician Natan Sharansky recently wrote in the WSJ that during the 2006 election, guaranteed by international observers as clean and fair, Christian villages like Taiba voted for Hamas because Hamas represented efficient and effective government. Hamas also received support from secular Palestinians.
Orthodox Rabbi Henry Siegman, former executive head of the United Jewish Congress for over 15 years, considers Hamas to be legitimate and pragmatic enough for both Israel and the US to negotiate with it. It is also of note that Israel first encouraged and funded Hamas as a counterweight to Fatah.
03:27 PM on 02/23/2011
But are just fine with the oppression by Israelis. Lets see how you would take to being treated the way Palestinians are dealt with by Israel.
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
03:44 AM on 02/23/2011
I don't even want to see this man pretend to be against violence. The next time he makes a speech supporting the wars in Central Asia, the Middle East and Latin America, they should throw his purple hearts back over the White House fence at him.
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01:01 AM on 02/23/2011
Sorry - but we no longer have the moral authority to condemn "appalling violence" - ANYWHERE.

We don't.

We commit "appalling violence" ourselves. Regularly.

Make that continuously.

That's one of the costs of serial wars of choice - you can't credibly claim the moral high ground...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
03:47 AM on 02/23/2011
Kerry has apparently signed onto the Administration's new Doctrine of Irony, the one that Hillary recently initiated at her press conference while Ray McGovern was getting dragged out and beaten.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
terry63
12:40 AM on 02/23/2011
Compressed Natural Gas is starting to look real good.
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01:04 AM on 02/23/2011
Frakking is waging war on the earth...
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
03:50 AM on 02/23/2011
And Gaddafi has lots of that. You'd think somebody would take those beans and sauerkraut away from him.
10:45 PM on 02/22/2011
That is a c.reepy picture of Kerry.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
terry63
12:38 AM on 02/23/2011
He's a Creepy guy.
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
03:48 AM on 02/23/2011
Finally we agree.
01:08 AM on 02/23/2011
Always wondered what he would look like without the hairpiece.
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TheIndependenceParty
Cranky yankee and a rehabilitated ex-Republican
10:14 PM on 02/22/2011
Our President and the Congress should have jointly issued a condemnation of Ghadaffi, for his wholesale assault upon the Libyan People.

Whispering that we disagree with this tinhorn lunatic makes our nation look as impotent ans a declawed kitten.

Whatever political issues occupy us here in the USA, we are bringing shame to any notion we support democracy, if we do not declare this dictator a war criminal in assailing his own people.
fredgladys
Your Micro-bio is empty, I know, stop nagging.
08:17 PM on 02/22/2011
Latest reports from Libya, Gadhafi has sent squads out to kill those who oppose him.
Is Libya going to be another Ruwanda where the international community knew what was happening and did nothing. Once the massacres were done there was a lot of hand wringing but that won't help the people who are being jailed or killed now.
05:13 PM on 02/23/2011
public opinion needs to bring pressure to bear on the UN security council to finally come up with a robust mandate - I think your government is the least to blame for the security council`s failure to agree on that. Also, I`m sure evacuating nationals first is a legitimate concern. Swashbuckling is not synonymous with responsible foreign policy.
05:14 PM on 02/23/2011
got carried away a little - I share your sentiment about Ruwanda
08:08 PM on 02/22/2011
I used to think that barak was the only village id10t in the Dem party, now we have Kerry saying to stop the oil. John how are you going to run that yacht that you had made overseas and that is docked in another state so you don't have to pay taxes?/
The good news is that barak came out forceful today as he shrugged his shoulders as to US direction