| Gaddafi invites Bush, Rice to visit Libya(Reuters)
 Updated: 2005-08-21 10:10
 
 TRIPOLI - Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, keen to improve ties with the 
West, has invited President Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to 
visit his country, a visiting U.S. senator said on Saturday, Reuters reported. 
 
 
 U.S. Senate Foreign Relations 
Committee Chairman Richard Lugar, ending a two-day trip to Libya, told a news 
conference he had held talks with Gaddafi on normalizing relations after decades 
of estrangement, following Tripoli's decision to abandon weapons of mass 
destruction.
 |  |  
 | Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi is seen in this file photo from July 
 4, 2005. [Reuters] |  Lugar, an Indiana Republican, flew to Libya on Friday after representing Bush 
in Morocco and Algeria for the release of 404 prisoners of war who were held by 
Western Sahara's exiled Polisario Front independence movement. 
 Lugar's trip was the highest-profile U.S. visit to Libya since relations 
began to thaw. 
 The United States and other Western countries have been rebuilding ties with 
Tripoli after Libya accepted responsibility for the 1988 Pan Am bombing over 
Lockerbie, Scotland, and said it would give up weapons of mass destruction. 
 Top Western officials who have visited Libya include Canadian Prime Minister 
Paul Martin, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, German Chancellor Gerhard 
Schroeder, French President Jacques Chirac and Italian Prime Minister Silvio 
Berlusconi. 
 "I noted the dramatic improvement in U.S.-Libyan relations and stressed the 
U.S. commitment to a continually improving relationship as cooperation between 
our countries grows," Lugar said, adding that the two countries had important 
shared interests, including in combating terrorism. 
 
 
 
  
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