Rice kicks off historic Libya visit

LISBON (Agencies)
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice travels to Libya on Friday for a landmark meeting with its leader Moamar Gaddafi to mark the end of the Arab nation's international isolation.
It will be the first time in 55 years that a U.S. secretary of state has visited Tripoli.
Eager to show Iran and North Korea that they could benefit from a rapprochement with the West, Rice will use the visit to send a clear message of U.S. approval for Libya's commitment to abandon its nuclear, biological and chemical weapons programs, diplomats said.
Rice's visit also marks the full renewal of relations with Libya, which were suspended in 1981, when the United States put Kadhafi's government on its list of state sponsors of terrorism.
"The secretary's visit to Libya signifies a new chapter in U.S.-Libya bilateral relations," said State Department spokesman Sean McCormack ahead of Rice's tour that started in Portugal on Thursday and will also take in Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco.
"It's also an important milestone in marking the success of this administration's nonproliferation policy," McCormack said.
Rice will hold talks with Libya's Foreign Minister Abdelrahman Mohammed Shalgam before joining an Iftar meal -- marking the end of the day's Ramadan fast -- with Gaddafi.
The last U.S. secretary of state to visit Libya was John Foster Dulles, who met with Libya's ruler, King Idris Senussi, in 1953.
Gaddafi announced in December 2003 that his country was renouncing weapons of mass destruction following secret talks with the United States and Britain."Libya is an example that, if countries make a different set of choices than they are making currently, they can have a different kind of relationship with the United States and the rest of the world that we will follow through on our commitments," McCormack said.
Gaddafi has hailed the end of his regime's long estrangement from the United States.
"The whole business of the conflict between Libya and the United States has been closed once and for all," Gaddafi said this week in a speech marking the 39th anniversary of his overthrow of the Western-backed monarchy.
"There will be no more wars, raids or acts of terrorism," said Gaddafi, whose support for militant groups in the 1980s prompted U.S. President Ronald Reagan to describe him as a "mad dog."
But Gaddafi also stressed that Libya was not desperate for U.S. friendship. "All we want is to be left alone," he said.
Rice's visit comes less than a month after the two governments reached an agreement on a plan to compensate U.S. victims of Libyan attacks and Libyan victims of U.S. reprisals.
The deal focused on the families of the 270 victims of the 1988 bombing of a U.S. airliner over Lockerbie, Scotland -- the deadliest attack blamed on Gaddafi's regime.
But it also covered victims of US air strikes on Tripoli and Benghazi on April 16, 1986, in which 41 people were killed, including an adopted daughter of Gaddafi.


