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WAR REPORT
NATO 'pretty close' to ending Libya mission: Rasmussen
by Staff Writers
Bucharest (AFP) Oct 10, 2011


NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen on Monday said the Alliance was close to terminating its miltiary operation in Libya, repeating that Moamer Kadhafi was "not a target".

"We are pretty close to the very end of this operation", Rasmussen, who is in Bucharest to attend NATO's parliamentary assembly session, told journalists.

"We will continue our operation as long as necessary to make sure there are no threats against civilians but we stand ready to terminate the operation as soon as the situation allows," he added.

Rasmussen said that despite advances by the new regime forces in fugitive strongman Kadhafi's hometown of Sirte, the Alliance "had no knowledge of the colonel's whereabouts".

"But he is not a target of our operation," he stressed.

US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta last week said there were four "guidelines" for deciding when to halt the Libyan campaign.

The first condition was the outcome of the battle for Sirte. The others were whether Kadhafi forces could still attack civilians; whether Kadhafi himself could command fighters and whether the new leaders could secure the country.

The National Transitional Council (NTC) has been waiting for Sirte's full capture to declare the liberation of the whole of Libya, clearing the way to draw up a timetable for elections.

Rasmussen had earlier told NATO lawmakers that the Allies' operation "Unified Protector" had been a success, despite the global financial crisis.

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WAR REPORT
Fighting rages in 'final assault' on Kadhafi hometown
Sirte, Libya (AFP) Oct 7, 2011
Sirte was rocked by deadly fighting on Friday in what Libya's new regime forces said was a final assault on Moamer Kadhafi's besieged hometown, with orders to take it despite stiff resistance. Sustained mortar, machinegun and sniper fire was preventing National Transitional Council (NTC) forces from overrunning the Ouagadougou conference centre, a major bastion of pro-Kadhafi forces in the w ... read more


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