‘No plans’ to send British troops to Libya: Government

Britain’s Defense Secretary Michael Fallon waves as he arrives at the Scottish Conservatives Conference at Murrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh, Scotland, Britain, March 4, 2016. Fallon’s ministry has said there are no plans to extend bombing or send troops to Libya.

Britain’s Defense Secretary Michael Fallon waves as he arrives at the Scottish Conservatives Conference at Murrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh, Scotland, Britain, March 4, 2016. Fallon’s ministry has said there are no plans to extend bombing or send troops to Libya.


Britain has no plans to extend bombing or send troops to Libya, the defense ministry said in a statement Tuesday, after a committee of lawmakers said the nation could deploy a force of 1,000.

The House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee had said that Britain could be part of a 6,000-strong international force in Libya, which has been riven with unrest since the fall of longtime dictator Muammer Qaddafi in 2011.

Defense Secretary Michael Fallon was expected to agree Britain’s contribution to the force at a conference in Europe this week, the committee added.

But a government spokeswoman said that the Foreign Affairs Committee was “wrong on a number of counts.”

“There are no plans to extend airstrikes to Libya nor are there plans to send British troops to provide security on the ground in Libya,” the spokeswoman said.

“It is therefore also wrong to suggest the Defense Secretary will agree any UK contribution this week.”

Western countries have agreed that action is needed to dislodge ISIS from Libya but world powers say they want a national unity government to request help before formally intervening.

On Saturday, Libya’s UN-backed unity government said it was taking office despite lacking parliamentary approval, with its US and European allies urging it to move to Tripoli and begin governing.

The allies also warned they would impose sanctions on anyone who acted to “undermine” Libya’s political process.


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