OB Kenobi
10-16-2004, 05:50 AM
Gaddafi asks US to leave Iraq
Daily Times, Pakistan
TRIPOLI: The United States should pull its troops out of Iraq as soon as possible, Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi said on Friday after a meeting with German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder.
“It would be the best thing for Iraq and America to withdraw from Iraq,” Gaddafi told reporters in the Libyan capital. When asked if that withdrawal should be done quickly, Gaddafi said: “It should be.”
Gaddafi said that relations between Libya and the United States were nevertheless improving. “We have a good relationship with America. The relations are progressing.” He said Libya would continue to cooperate in the international fight against terrorism.
Services to peace: Libyan leader Moamer Gaddafi called on the West to thank him for making the world a safer place and said his country supported the war against terror as German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder visited on Friday. Schroeder’s trip to Libya was the first ever by a post-war German chancellor and the latest by a Western leader since the former pariah state returned to the international fold last year.
Gaddafi said that “regardless what other nations were doing”, Libya supported the international war on terror. Germany and other western states owed him their gratitude “for his services to international peace”, he said. Schroeder said Libya was “on the right track”.
“This country has changed politically and we can only welcome that,” he said. Agreeing to pay millions of dollars compensation for attacks has been a key element of Libya’s efforts to be welcomed back into the international community, which was clinched late last year after announcing it was abandoning attempts to develop nuclear, biological and chemical weapons.
Gaddafi and Schroeder had agreed in a first meeting late on Thursday on the importance of developing relations between their countries following a deal last month for Libya to pay compensation to 168 mainly German survivors of a 1986 attack on a Berlin nightclub.
Tripoli has also paid damages to the relatives of people killed in the bombing of a Pan Am jet over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988, and it reached agreements in January over a French airliner blown up a year later. Schroeder said after his second meeting with Gaddafi he had told the Libyan leader that Germany was prepared to help his nation improve relations with the European Union, providing Libya continued to change. “We welcome Libya’s very constructive attempt at a policy of openness,” Schroeder said.
The chancellor revealed few details about whether he had discussed issues such as human rights with the Libyan leader, saying only “that no sensitive issues were omitted” from their talks.
Daily Times, Pakistan
TRIPOLI: The United States should pull its troops out of Iraq as soon as possible, Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi said on Friday after a meeting with German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder.
“It would be the best thing for Iraq and America to withdraw from Iraq,” Gaddafi told reporters in the Libyan capital. When asked if that withdrawal should be done quickly, Gaddafi said: “It should be.”
Gaddafi said that relations between Libya and the United States were nevertheless improving. “We have a good relationship with America. The relations are progressing.” He said Libya would continue to cooperate in the international fight against terrorism.
Services to peace: Libyan leader Moamer Gaddafi called on the West to thank him for making the world a safer place and said his country supported the war against terror as German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder visited on Friday. Schroeder’s trip to Libya was the first ever by a post-war German chancellor and the latest by a Western leader since the former pariah state returned to the international fold last year.
Gaddafi said that “regardless what other nations were doing”, Libya supported the international war on terror. Germany and other western states owed him their gratitude “for his services to international peace”, he said. Schroeder said Libya was “on the right track”.
“This country has changed politically and we can only welcome that,” he said. Agreeing to pay millions of dollars compensation for attacks has been a key element of Libya’s efforts to be welcomed back into the international community, which was clinched late last year after announcing it was abandoning attempts to develop nuclear, biological and chemical weapons.
Gaddafi and Schroeder had agreed in a first meeting late on Thursday on the importance of developing relations between their countries following a deal last month for Libya to pay compensation to 168 mainly German survivors of a 1986 attack on a Berlin nightclub.
Tripoli has also paid damages to the relatives of people killed in the bombing of a Pan Am jet over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988, and it reached agreements in January over a French airliner blown up a year later. Schroeder said after his second meeting with Gaddafi he had told the Libyan leader that Germany was prepared to help his nation improve relations with the European Union, providing Libya continued to change. “We welcome Libya’s very constructive attempt at a policy of openness,” Schroeder said.
The chancellor revealed few details about whether he had discussed issues such as human rights with the Libyan leader, saying only “that no sensitive issues were omitted” from their talks.