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He said the foreign ministers agree that efforts at the U.N. Security Council are needed to pressure Gadhafi's regime, and that Arab countries should be on board. The pressure, Juppe added, could include "reinforcing sanctions, decreeing a maritime embargo and foreseeing a no-fly zone
-- even if that's not a panacea." Also at the meeting, which has been planned for months, the ministers were focusing on Libya, Japan's post-earthquake crisis, and other pressing world issues. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who on Monday met with her counterparts and French President Nicolas Sarkozy, was en route to Egypt for talks and was not attending the ministers' gathering Tuesday. Also Monday, Clinton held the Obama administration's first high-level talks with the Libyan opposition. The U.S. remains undecided about how much support to lend to a group it still knows little about.
[Associated
Press;
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