UK pressure to widen Libya bombing targets

NATO must widen the target of air strikes in Libya to increase the pressure on the Gaddafi regime or risk allowing the dictator to cling to power, the head of the UK’s armed forces has said.

Chief of the Defence Staff General Sir David Richards called on the alliance to “up the ante” by allowing the bombing to include infrastructure targets.

“The military campaign to date has been a significant success for Nato and our Arab allies,” he said in an interview with The Sunday Telegraph.

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“But we need to do more. If we do not up the ante now there is a risk that the conflict could result in Gaddafi clinging to power.

“At present, Nato is not attacking infrastructure targets in Libya. But if we want to increase the pressure on Gaddafi’s regime then we need to give serious consideration to increasing the range of targets we can hit.”

While Gaddafi was not being targeted, he said, should the dictator be killed in a strike on a command and control centre that would be “within the rules”.

And he insisted that there had so far been “hardly any civilian casualties as a result of the extreme care Nato has taken in the selection of bombing targets”.

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He spoke as a Nato official said it was aware of reports of civilian deaths in a strike on the coastal town of Brega but insisted that warplanes had targeted a “clearly identified” military command and control site.

The Libyan government claims as many as 11 men were killed and said they were clerics who had met to pray for peace. Others claimed the victims had been sent by the regime to show the town was in their hands.

Many civilians are regularly packed into the heavily-fortified Gaddafi family compound in Tripoli, a Nato target. in what the regime claims is a voluntary effort to defend the leader.

It has tried to counter reports that Gaddafi has been injured by playing a defiant audio recording on state TV in which he taunted Nato that he was “in a place where you can’t get to and kill me”.

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Defence Secretary Dr Liam Fox said the targeting extension had already been implemented.

Asked if Gen Richards was wrong therefore to call for it, he told BBC1’s Politics Show: “I think the point he was making is that a number of Nato countries have been less happy about some of the targeting and about some of the assets being destroyed.”

The UK’s parameters were “slightly more widely drawn” than those of some allies in the campaign in allowing strikes on command and control facilities, he said.

Anti-war campaigners are planning a protest outside Parliament today, where MPs are to debate Middle East developments.

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Lindsey German, national convenor of Stop the War Coalition, said: “It is outrageous that a military officer like General Richards can make such overtly political statements. How long is it before he is calling for ground troops to invade Libya?”

Meanwhile, Libyan rebels said yesterday they had taken full control of the western port city of Misrata.

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