Libya's foreign minister told an emergency council meeting Wednesday that lifting the embargo is necessary as the militant group establishes a presence in northern Africa and moves closer to Europe. Alarm soared after a video released over the weekend showed the beheading of 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians there.
"If we fail to have arms provided to us, this can only play into the hands of extremists," Mohammed al Dairi said. But the United States and Britain are openly worried about allowing more weapons into a country that has two separate governments, multiple militant groups and a high risk of weapons falling into unwanted hands.
"The problem is that there isn't a government in Libya that is effective and in control of its territory," British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said during a visit to Spain.
"There isn't a Libyan military which the international community can effectively support."
Libya first needs a government of national unity in place, along with a U.N. Presence in the country, he said.
"But simply pouring weapons into one faction or the other, which is essentially what has been proposed, is not to bring us to a resolution to the crisis in Libya, and is not going to make Europe safer, is going to make it more at risk," Hammond said.
In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the US position on keeping the arms embargo hasn't changed.
"It permits transfers necessary to support the Libyan government while allowing the Security Council to seek guard against the high risk that weapons may be diverted to non- state actors."
A spokesman for Libya's mission to the U.N. Said he could not comment Thursday night.
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