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"The discussion of arms is certainly on the table," he said. "We are not talking about offensive arms ... Every country will decide. It is a political decision." On Tuesday, French Defense Minister Gerard Longuet complained that France and Britain were carrying "the brunt of the burden." He said the reduced U.S. effort
-- American forces are now in support, not combat, roles in the airstrike campaign
-- have made it impossible "to loosen the noose around Misrata," which has become a symbol of the resistance against Gadhafi. "Let's be realistic. The fact that the U.S. has left the sort of the kinetic part of the air operation has had a sizable impact. That is fairly obvious," said Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt. In Paris, British Prime Minister David Cameron and French President Nicolas Sarkozy planned talks later Wednesday about the military operation in Libya. Libyan opposition spokesman Ali al-Issawi said that Gadhafi's soldiers have killed about 10,000 people throughout the country and injured 30,000 others, with 7,000 of the injured facing life-threatening wounds. He said an additional 20,000 people were missing and suspected of being in Gadhafi's prisons. There was no way to independently verify his claims. Qatar, meanwhile, is helping with a vital fuel link for the rebels. Qatar said it oversaw last week's sale of more than $100 million in crude oil from rebel-held areas, and has delivered four shipments of fuel to Benghazi, including diesel, propane and gasoline. Talks on Libya shift to Cairo on Thursday at the Arab League headquarters. The U.N. secretary-general is expected to join others, including Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa, African Union commission chairman Jean Ping and the European Union's foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton. The meeting seeks to discuss a Turkish peace initiative.
[Associated
Press;
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