Stalemate in Libya, Syria, Yemen?
Libya: The rebels continue their back-and-forth battle
with Muammar Gaddafi's forces. Rebels made a major westward push early
in the week, advancing
close to Gaddafi's hometown of Sirte, only to be pushed back by the Libyan leader's better equipped army. Gaddafi's forces quickly retook
Bin Jawad and
Ras Lanuf.
Gaddafi did face a diplomatic setback on Wednesday, when his foreign minister and close confidante Moussa Koussa
defected to the United Kingdom.
There were reports that the United States is considering a plan to send
weapons to the rebels, and that CIA agents have arrived in Libya to
coordinate with them.
Syria: President Bashar al-Assad finally broke his silence on Wednesday, when he
delivered a much-anticipated speech
to parliament on the unrest which has swept Syria for the past week.
Assad blamed protests on "foreign conspirators," who he accused of
trying to "divide Syria, weaken Syria." But Assad did not offer any new
reforms in his speech, promising only to enact timetables for the other
reforms (like ending the emergency law) announced a week earlier.
Yemen: Negotiations between president Ali Abdullah
Saleh and the opposition seem to have largely stalled. In a meeting with
leaders of the Islah party, Saleh reportedly offered to
transfer power to a caretaker government - but he would remain in office until a new president was elected. The offer was promptly rejected. Earlier in the week, an
explosion at an ammunition factory in Abyan province killed more than 100 people.