No plans to bolster US forces in Mideast: Panetta

TOKYO (AFP) - The US military has no major plans to bolster its forces in the Middle East despite a week of violent protests targeting diplomatic outposts, Defence Secretary Leon Panetta said Sunday.With a substantial force already deployed in the region coupled with two US Marine counter-terrorism teams sent to Libya and Yemen, the military has the ability to respond as necessary to protect American diplomats, Panetta told reporters before arriving in Tokyo on an Asian tour.“We do have a major presence in the region,” he said. “Having said that we’ve enhanced that with FAST (Fleet Anti-Terrorism Security Team) teams and others so that if they are requested, they can respond more quickly.”But the Pentagon chief said at the moment there was not a need for dispatching additional forces to the region beyond what was requested by the State Department to safeguard diplomatic outposts.“I don’t anticipate a situation right now where we would have to do something on our own,” he said. “Our approach right now is not do anything unless requested by the State Department.”Two 50-strong US Marine counter-terrorism units were sent to Libya and Yemen after Tuesday’s assault in Benghazi to safeguard embassies there.Panetta praised the Libyan government’s efforts to strengthen security at US missions and search for those behind the deadly attack on Tuesday against the American consulate in Benghazi. “I think they are making a strong effort to try to respond to this crisis and deal with the issues involved.”The assault, in which security teams were overwhelmed by heavily-armed gunmen, killed the US ambassador Chris Stevens and three of his staff, in the worst attack on an American diplomatic mission since the 1970s.Asked if Al-Qaeda militants were to blame for the assault in Benghazi, Panetta said: “That remains to be determined. That’s part of what the investigation will determine.”But he said that Al-Qaeda’s branches in North Africa remained a serious threat and the United States would keep up relentless pressure on the extremists.“We have to continue to go after Al-Qaeda wherever they are and whatever affiliates they have that are engaged in terrorism,” said Panetta, who served as director of the Central Intelligence Agency before taking over at the Defence Department.As protests spread over an inflammatory American-made film from Tunisia to Indonesia, US plans to send a Marine unit to protect the embassy in Sudan had to be dropped after the Sudanese government rejected the US request, the official SUNA news agency reported.Meanwhile, a top US official said Sunday that President Barack Obama has been “incredibly calm, incredibly steady, and incredibly measured” in his handling of the anti-US protests in the Muslim world.The robust defence of the president from US ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice follows criticism from Republican opponents that Obama’s leadership is weak.“What we’ve seen is that the president has been incredibly calm, incredibly steady, and incredibly measured in his approach to this set of developments,” Rice told ABC’s “This Week” program.“His interventions, his leadership, has ensured that in Egypt, in Yemen, in Tunisia, in Libya, and many other parts of the world, that leaders have come out and made very plain that there’s no excuse for this violence.” Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney urged a tough line Saturday on Egypt amid deadly anti-US violence in the region, as his election running mate Paul Ryan called for greater “moral clarity” in Obama’s foreign policy.Romney toned down his rhetoric Thursday after several negative headlines and complaints from within his own party that he had made an ill-timed mischaracterization of Obama’s handling of rapidly escalating events.But on Friday Romney’s pick for vice president, Ryan, led a withering attack on Obama’s foreign policy, accusing it of diminishing America’s global standing and of emboldening extremists.

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