World cautious, divided on response to Libya

LONDON,  (Reuters) – Foreign powers mulling sanctions  to restrain Libya’s bloody crackdown on unrest have little  appetite for outright military intervention, while diplomatic  differences may even block a basic U.N. rights council probe.

The U.N. Security Council criticised Libyan leader Muammar  Gaddafi on Tuesday for using force against peaceful  demonstrators and calling on those responsible to be held to  account. On Wednesday the European Union agreed to take further measures against Libya including sanctions.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy called on European powers  to suspend economic relations with Libya, while British Prime  Minister David Cameron called for a new U.N. resolution.

Both countries had previously been major arms suppliers to  Libya, rights experts say.
But with estimates as high as 1,000 dead and violence  continuing, rights groups are unimpressed. They say Gaddafi’s  recent speeches made it clear he intended to kill as many of his  own people as necessary to stay in power.

U.N. RESPONSE CRITICISED

Muammar Gaddafi

“All the Security Council have done is issue a press  statement,” said James Lynch, Middle East and North Africa  spokesman at Amnesty International.
“At the very least we need an arms embargo. If you look at  Gaddafi’s speech yesterday, he was effectively talking openly  about killing as many people as he needs to stay in power. That  is an outrage and there needs to be some sanction against it.”

With communications patchy, exact details on events in Libya  are hard to get. Rights groups say the Security Council should  order the immediate sending of an investigative team on behalf  of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights.

But divisions within the 47-state U.N. Human Rights Council,  where African and Asian nations are declining to support a draft  resolution, could further stymie any investigation.

Human Rights Watch Middle East director Sarah Leah Whitson  said world powers should also look at targeted financial  sanctions against key members of Gaddafi’s elite and consider a  referral to the International Criminal Court.

She said it was important that its rulers understand that  “Chapter 7” U.N.-mandated military action was not impossible.
“It’s important that Gaddafi gets the message that that is  in the ballpark,” she said.

Rights experts also want action to block any arrival of  mercenaries from elsewhere in Africa. Head of the UN working  group on mercenaries Jose Luis Gomez del Prado said his office  had received multiple reports of their use in Libya and although  it was not 100 percent confirmed, he believed it was likely.

But he said he doubted any of the possible countries of  origin — Chad, Liberia, Democratic Republic of Congo among  others — would take any action to stop it without a binding UN  Security Council resolution declaring an embargo.

NO MILITARY DEPLOYMENT

Some experts have raised the prospect of a “no-fly zone”  over Libya enforced by foreign fighter jets in the style of that  used in Yugoslavia in the 1990s and against Saddam Hussein. That  would at least stop Libyan aircraft targeting their own  citizens. But it would not address most of the violence.

Western powers, in particular the United States and Italy,  have enough aircraft in the region to be able to enforce any  no-fly zone. But with memories of the Iraq war fresh, some worry  any Western-led military action could make a bad situation  worse. Virtually no one expects any deployment of peacekeepers  or other ground troops beyond anything necessary to extract  Western nationals.

“I’d be very surprised to see coordinated, proactive western  security strategy in the near-term (on Libya),” said Ian  Bremmer, president of political risk consultancy Eurasia Group.

The chance of the G20 coming together on Libya was minimal,  Bremmer said. Earlier in the year, he coined the phrase “G-zero”  to describe an increasingly rudderless world dominated by  growing rivalry between powers particularly the U.S. and China.

“The Middle East implications of the G-zero are that other  local actors become considerably more important,” he said,  describing it as almost the opposite of the situation during the  Cold War when major powers called the shots.

Neighbouring powers Egypt and Tunisia both have their own  powerful armies and air forces, but both have seen their own  revolutions and are still dealing with sporadic unrest.

OIL OUTLOOK UNCERTAIN

If Gaddafi were able to cling on in power, it is far from  clear whether sanctions might include limits on oil exports —  or even whether the industry would be under his control.

It is not impossible that production and exports could  continue from the east, where tribes have rebelled. But it is  far from clear who if anyone now controls those oil-rich areas.

A host of oil companies, including France’s Total <TOTF.PA>,  Italy’s ENI <ENI.MI>, Spain’s Repsol <REP.MC>, Norway’s Statoil  <STL.OL> and BP <BP.L>, have expanded in Libya in recent years  as it appeared to be moving closer to the West.

One industry expert suggested offshore platforms might be  able to continue production regardless, perhaps with payments  made into a U.N.-mandated trust fund and held for the future.

Most energy firms are seen as aiming to play a long game,  hunkering down, evacuating key staff and hoping some kind of  order is restored ideally under a new government.

Some suspect the United States and others want to secure the  evacuation of their nationals before taking a much tougher line.
“It was unquestionably necessary to assure the safety of  Americans before taking the kind of very strong rhetorical  position that I expect you are going to hear in the coming  days,” said former U.S. ambassador to the United Arab Emirates  David Mack.