国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

  .contact us |.about us
News > International News ... ...
Search:
    Advertisement
Libya wants diplomatic ties with US
( 2003-12-22 11:19) (Agencies)

Libya hopes to reopen relations with the West and gain lucrative oil contracts blocked by U.S. sanctions as well as reap other economic benefits by abolishing weapons of mass destruction.

Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi takes a question during a press conference in Triopli, Libya Monday, Feb. 5, 2001. Gadhafi, meeting in the dead of night in his capital with officers from the Central Intelligence Agency and British intelligence, appeared eager to do away with his weapons programs, U.S. officials said Saturday, Dec. 20, 2003.  [AP]
Under the surprise disarmament agreement by Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, Tripoli will open its nuclear activities to spot inspections by the U.N. watchdog agency, a diplomat said Sunday. Libya believes that decision, made Saturday as a Libyan delegation met with International Atomic Energy Agency director general Mohamed ElBaradei, will return the country to the good graces of the international community.

"We are turning our swords into ploughshares, and this step should be appreciated and followed by all other countries," Libyan Prime Minister Shukri Ghanem told the British Broadcasting Corp. — a clear reference to the United States, the one country that maintains sweeping sanctions.

The United States imposed sanctions in 1986, accusing Libya of supporting terrorist groups. Ten years later, America passed the Iran and Libya Sanctions Act that threatened to penalize the U.S. partners of European companies that did significant business in Libya and Iran.

When the U.N. Security Council voted to abolish its sanctions on Libya in September, the deputy U.S. ambassador to the world body, James Cunningham, said U.S. sanctions on Libya would remain "in full force."

Cunningham accused Gadhafi of actively developing biological and chemical weapons, upgrading its nuclear infrastructure, and seeking ballistic missiles to deliver weapons of mass destruction.

With Friday's decision, Libya believes it has wiped the slate clean.

"What Gadhafi is striving for is reacceptance into the community of nations," said Henry Schuler, a Libyan specialist who has met Gadhafi and spent eight years in the North African country as an American diplomat and an oil company executive.

So far, Gadhafi seems to be winning friends, even in places where he might not want them.

Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Jonathan Peled said Sunday that the move on weapons of mass destruction could lead to his country's establishing relations with Libya.

"There is no conflict or animosity with the Libyan people. We are definitely willing to have relations with any nation or country in the world that is willing to recognize Israel as a sovereign or free country," Peled said.

However, Libya's state-run press made clear that Israel would have to follow suit with its weaponry.

The Al-Jamahiriya newspaper said Libya's decision had reversed the "race" to produce weapons of mass destruction in the Middle East and placed "exceptional pressure on Israel" to come clean on its nuclear weapons, which the Jewish state has neither admitted nor denied possessing.

In Cairo, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak said Libya's move will have an "echo in the world — including Israel, which should remove its weapons of mass destruction."

Saad Djabbar, a North African expert at Cambridge University, said what Libya seeks is normalization with the United States and the removal of all sanctions.

American oil companies own joint-venture concessions in the Libyan oil fields, but sanctions have blocked them from developing those fields. Oil experts say their Libyan state partners are now operating the fields, but at levels far below their potential.

"With U.S. investment, Libya can become a world class oil producer," oil industry consultant Peter Gignoux told The Associated Press. The American companies "hold the best concessions and they have got very good technology."

Djabbar said Libya knows that once American companies have re-established themselves, "they would enhance the pro-Libyan lobby in Washington."

He believes the move on weapons of mass destruction will allow Libyan scientists to return to American universities and acquire the technical know-how Libya needs.

However, Schuler, the former diplomat, believes Gadhafi decided to abolish weapons of mass destruction for political and diplomatic reasons. "It's to enhance Gadhafi's historic reputation and to pave the way for Seif Gadhafi or one of the other sons to take over," he said.

As long as Libya is cut off from the United States and on the State Department's list of terrorist-sponsoring nations, "Gadhafi bears the terrorist stigma of the past and the prospects of him passing the mantle of leadership to his son are diminished."

Gignoux also said regime stability was key.

"The threat of regime change has been removed now," he said. "Gadhafi has gotten off the hook."

Yet while Schuler said Libya could develop the American oil fields by itself — exploiting its joint ownership and advanced technology from other Western states — Gignoux argued there was no substitute to American investment.

"American oil field technology is really stunning, it's second-to-none," he said. In the absence of American investment, "the Italians have been operating in Libya, but the results have been limited."

 
Close  
   
  Today's Top News   Top International News
   
+US report wrong as religious rights safe
( 2003-12-22)
+China's rise on world stage no cause for worry in US
( 2003-12-22)
+Ministry to tighten land allocation
( 2003-12-22)
+Ministries push for direct links
( 2003-12-22)
+Boeing in talks to sell new jetliners
( 2003-12-22)
+Libya wants diplomatic ties with US
( 2003-12-22)
+Rockets strike Kabul as delegates meet
( 2003-12-22)
+Time names US soldier as 'Person of the Year'
( 2003-12-22)
+Child killed in Honduras giveaway riot
( 2003-12-22)
+Philippines mudslides toll now 83
( 2003-12-22)
   
  Go to Another Section  
     
 
 
     
  Article Tools  
     
 
 
     
  Related Articles  
     
 

+Libya to allow snap UN arms inspections
2003-12-22

+U.S.: Libya eager to dismantle weapons
2003-12-21

+Bush: Libya agrees to dismantle WMD program
2003-12-20

+Libyan families of US bomb victims protest
2003-09-25

+Paris veto averted; UN set to end Libya sanctions
2003-09-12

+End of Libya UN sanctions near with draft French deal
2003-09-02

+Libya, UTA families to sign deal soon
2003-09-01

+Libya increases payout for French airliner bombing
2003-09-01

 
     
   
        .contact us |.about us
  Copyright By chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved  

      
      
      
      
      
      乌海市|
      广元市|
      社旗县|
      石阡县|
      工布江达县|
      韶关市|
      綦江县|
      云南省|
      贺州市|
      丽水市|
      海兴县|
      武胜县|
      砀山县|
      隆德县|
      桑植县|
      阿荣旗|
      贺州市|
      林口县|
      定结县|
      金门县|
      塔城市|
      永春县|
      布尔津县|
      西昌市|
      抚远县|
      宜良县|
      本溪市|
      金阳县|
      阳原县|
      桃源县|
      泾源县|
      明溪县|
      苍溪县|
      鹿泉市|
      黎川县|
      贵阳市|
      彰化县|
      拜泉县|
      洪湖市|
      灵台县|
      定兴县|