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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

French, British leaders show support for Libya

French President Nicholas Sarkozy, left, Libya’s transitional leader Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, center, and British Prime Minister David Cameron gesture during their visit to Benghazi, Libya, on Thursday. (Associated Press)
Patrick J. Mcdonnell Los Angeles Times

TRIPOLI, Libya – British Prime Minister David Cameron and French President Nicolas Sarkozy paid a historic visit Thursday to the Libyan capital, praising the nation’s revolution, urging fugitive former leader Moammar Gadhafi to surrender and sending a not-so-subtle message to Syria that room for autocratic rule was shrinking in the region.

Both nations played a leading role in the withering NATO air campaign that was essential in toppling Gadhafi’s rule after more than four decades in power. The two leaders were the first foreign heads of state to visit Libya since Gadhafi was ousted from the capital last month and went on the run.

“This does go beyond Libya; this is a moment when the Arab Spring can become an Arab summer,” Cameron told a news conference with Sarkozy and leaders of Libya’s transitional government.

U.S. air power and intelligence-gathering capabilities were also key in the ongoing air operations over Libya, but the Obama administration has opted to let European nations take the lead role in the alliance campaign.

Both European leaders said Gadhafi, who has urged his followers to fight a guerrilla war, should surrender. “Let us be clear: This is not finished, this is not done, this is not over,” Cameron said.

The NATO-led air mission over Libya will continue, they vowed, tying the aerial attacks to the fact that Gadhafi remains at large.

“Gadhafi has money, he has gold, he can buy mercenaries and he is still a threat, and therefore our mission is not finished,” Sarkozy said.

The French president emphasized that there was “no hidden agenda” in the European air campaign, countering criticism that participating nations may be seeking oil deals and other contracts in the new Libya. “This was a just cause,” Sarkozy said.

The head of Libya’s transitional government, Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, said that nations that assisted Libya in its struggle against Gadhafi could expect “priority within a framework of transparency.”

There has been speculation that some nations that were slow to endorse the anti-Gadhafi uprising, notably China and Russia, might lose out in future business deals with Libya.