Insurgents bogged down in their bid to oust Moamer Kadhafi hailed Friday a US decision to deploy armed drones over Libya, as Senator John McCain held talks with the rebel leadership in Benghazi.
“We are so pleased,” media liaison official for the rebels’ Transitional National Council (TNC), Mustafa Gheriani, told AFP in Benghazi, the rebels’ eastern stronghold. “We hope that this can bring some relief to the people in Misrata,” he added, referring to the rebel-held city in western Libya which has been pounded by strongman Kadhafi’s forces for more than six weeks, leaving hundreds dead.
US President Barack Obama authorised deployment of missile-carrying drone warplanes over Libya “because of the humanitarian situation,” US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said on Thursday. Libyan rebels, who on Thursday overran a post on the Tunisian border to mark their first advance in weeks against Kadhafi’s forces, have complained that civilians are being killed in places like Misrata.
“Our houses are being hit by bombs and rockets,” said 45-year-old Ibrahim Issa Abu Hajjar, who fled Misrata with hundreds of civilians aboard a Turkish ferry that docked in Benghazi, the rebels’ eastern stronghold. “We want the allies to stop Kadhafi’s forces from taking the city.” Unmanned drones will give NATO commanders precision capabilities to strike targets that are “nestling up against crowded areas,” said US General James Cartwright, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
“Now you have the intermixing of the lines, so it’s very difficult to pick friend from foe,” Cartwright said. “A vehicle like the Predator (drone) that can get down lower and get IDs helps us.” Their first deployment was slated for Thursday but it was called off because of bad weather.
Libya’s deputy foreign minister Khaled Kaim slammed the deployment of drones. “They will kill more civilians,” Kaim told BBC radio. “This is very sad… they are claiming they are supporting democracy, (but) supporting democracy, I think, is helping people to sit together and talk together and have a serious dialogue for the future.
“It’s for the Libyans” to decide their future “not by air strikes and sending money to the rebels,” he said. Senator McCain, a former Republican presidential candidate who has lobbied for greater US involvement in a UN-mandated NATO air campaign aimed at preventing Kadhafi’s forces attacking civilians, arrived in Benghazi early Friday, an AFP reporter said.
He was mobbed when he paid a visit to the rebels’ headquarters in the centre of the city by a crowd of about 50 people, who chanted, “Libya free, Kadhafi go away — thank you America, thank you Obama.”