WASHINGTON — The U.S. on Sunday claimed initial success two days into
an assault on Libya that included some of the heaviest firepower in the
American arsenal — long-range bombers designed for the Cold War — but
American officials said Sunday it was too early to define the
international military campaign's endgame.
The top U.S. military officer suggested that Libyan strongman Moammar
Gadhafi might stay in power in spite of the military assault aimed at
protecting civilians, calling into question the larger objective of an
end to Gadhafi's erratic 42-year rule. Other top U.S. officials have
suggested that a weakened and isolated Gadhafi could be ripe for a coup.
A second wave of attacks, mainly from American fighters and bombers,
targeted Libyan ground forces and air defenses, following an opening
barrage Saturday of sea-launched Tomahawk cruise missiles.
At the Pentagon, Navy Vice Adm. William E. Gortney, staff director
for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a news conference that the
back-to-back assaults Saturday and Sunday had inflicted heavy damage.
They largely silenced Gadhafi's air defenses, blunted his army's drive
on the rebel stronghold of Benghazi and confused his forces.
"We judge these strikes to have been very effective in significantly
degrading the regime's air defense capability," Gortney said. "We
believe his forces are under significant stress and suffering from both
isolation and a good deal of confusion."
Gortney's assessment

This photo provided by the French Army shows a French Air
Force Rafale jet fighter taking off for a mission over Libya
at the military base of Saint Dizier, eastern France,
Sunday, March 20, 2011.Top officials from the United States,
Europe and the Arab world have launched immediate military
action to protect civilians as Libyan leader Moammar
Gadhafi's forces attacked the heart of the country's rebel
uprising. (Sebastien_Dupont)
suggested that further strikes on the scale of Saturday's heavy assault
with sea-launched Tomahawk cruise missiles may not be needed, although
he did not rule out further attacks.
Gortney said Gadhafi himself is not a target, but he could not
guarantee the strongman's safety.
The systems targeted most closely were Libya's SA-5 surface-to-air
missiles, Russian-made weaponry that could pose a threat to allied
aircraft many miles off the Libyan coastline. Libya has a range of other
air defense weaponry, including portable surface-to-air missiles that
are more difficult to eliminate by bombing.
Sunday's attacks, carried out by a range of U.S. aircraft — including
Air Force B-2 stealth bombers as well as Marine Harrier jets flying from
an amphibious assault ship in the Mediterranean — demonstrated the
predominance of U.S. firepower in the international coalition. By
striking Libyan ground forces, coalition forces also showed that they
are going beyond the most frequently discussed goal of establishing a
no-fly zone over the country.
U.S. missiles and warplanes were clearly in the lead Saturday and
Sunday, but U.S. officials say the plan remains for the U.S. to step
back once the threat from the Libyan military is reduced.
President Barack Obama, traveling in Brazil, held a conference call
Sunday with top national security officials, including Secretary of
State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Army
Gen. Carter Ham, the U.S. general running the air campaign on what U.S.
officials have suggested is a temporary basis until another allied power
can take over.
Gates had planned to fly to Russia on Saturday but delayed his
departure for a day so he could be in Washington to monitor the
operation's launch.
Vice President Joe Biden discussed the military action by phone
Sunday with the prime minister of Algeria and the emir of Kuwait, the
White House said.
Obama referred to Libya but did not discuss the unfolding operation
during remarks in Brazil.
"We've seen the people of Libya take a courageous stand against a
regime determined to brutalize its own citizens," Obama said.
"No one can say for certain how this change will end, but I do know
that change is not something that we should fear. When young people
insist that the currents of history are on the move, the burdens of the
past can be washed away."
Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was pressed
repeatedly during a round of Sunday television interviews to explain the
mission's objectives. He said the main goal is to protect civilians from
further violence by pro-Gadhafi forces, while enabling the flow of
humanitarian relief supplies. He said the first step — imposing a no-fly
zone — had been achieved, with little worry of Gadhafi shooting down
allied patrols. But it was unclear how long the military effort would go
on, or on what scale.
"I think circumstances will drive where this goes in the future," the
admiral said on ABC's "This Week." ''I wouldn't speculate in terms of
length at this particular point in time." He said early results were
highly encouraging, with no known U.S. or allied losses and no reported
civilian casualties.
"We're very focused on the limited objectives that the president has
given us and actually the international coalition has given us, in terms
of providing the no-fly zone so that he cannot attack his own people, to
avoid any kind of humanitarian massacre, if you will, and to provide for
the humanitarian corridors, humanitarian support of the Libyan people,"
Mullen added.
Asked whether it was possible that the military goals might be met
without Gadhafi being ousted, Mullen replied, "That's certainly
potentially one outcome." He described the Libyan strongman as more
isolated than ever, adding that Gadhafi is "going to have to make some
choices about his own future" at some point.
The prospect of Gadhafi remaining in control of at least a portion of
the country raises questions about how far the Obama administration and
its European and other partners are willing to go with military force.
Clinton said Saturday that although ousting Gadhafi is not an explicit
goal of the campaign, his departure might be hastened as the conflict
continues. Gadhafi has ruled Libya for more than 40 years.
Clinton said enforcement of the U.N. Security Council resolution that
called on Gadhafi to cease firing on his own people will "make a new
environment" in which people close to Gadhafi might turn against him.
"The opposition is largely led by those who defected from the Gadhafi
regime or who formerly served it, and it is certainly to be wished for
that there will be even more such defections, that people will put the
future of Libya and the interests of the Libyan people above their
service to Col. Gadhafi," she said.
If the ultimate outcome of the military campaign is cloudy, so is the
command arrangement. The Pentagon said Saturday that it is led by Ham,
who as head of U.S. African Command is responsible for U.S. military
operations in Libya and much of the rest of the continent. Officials
have not said much about the plan to hand off responsibility for the
military operation — dubbed Odyssey Dawn — to some other unspecified
country or coalition.
Libya's claims of civilians among the dead from the strikes appeared
to make Arab countries nervous, after the Arab League took the
unprecedented step of calling for a no-fly zone. On Sunday, Arab League
chief Amr Moussa criticized the missile strikes, saying they went beyond
what the Arab body had supported.
"What happened differs from the no-fly zone objectives," Moussa told
reporters in Cairo. "What we want is civilians' protection, not shelling
more civilians."
One of the more vocal skeptics in Congress, Sen. Richard Lugar, said
he worries that the U.S. may have entered a conflict with unclear goals.
"We really have not discovered who it is in Libya that we are trying
to support," the Indiana Republican said on CBS' "Face the Nation."
''Obviously the people that are against Gadhafi, but who? In eastern
Libya, for example, a huge number of people went off to help the Iraqis
against the United States in a war that still is winding down."
Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., chairman of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, said Sunday that the U.S. intends to take a back seat soon.
"After the air is cleared of any threat there is going to be a
handoff to our allies and this mission will then be carried on by
French, by British and by Arab countries, and that's very important,"
Levin said.
NATO is seen as possibly taking the command responsibility, but thus
far it has not agreed.