Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Kerry pushes Senate for Syria action. -Inaction to cause "irreparable damage" to ban on chemical weapons, US secretary of state says as chamber delays vote.


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John Kerry has reiterated his case for armed intervention in Syria, arguing that inaction would make the situation worse.
The US secretary of state spoke before the US Senate's Armed Services Committee on Tuesday, a day after the chamber decided to delay a vote on use of force, originally scheduled for Wednesday.
He told the committee that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad had responded to calls for diplomacy with violence, and that it was the Syrian regime, not the US government, that had chosen the current situation.


Kerry also argued that not resolving to strike would result in "irreparable damage" to the prohibition on chemical weapons that has "protected American troops for centuries".
He also said that lack of military intervention would "send a message to Iran of American weakness."
"This is one of the most important decisions anyone in Congress will make during their service," Kerry said at the beginning of his address.
But he repeated President Barack Obama's desire for a diplomatic resolution. "President Obama's first priority throughout this process has been and is diplomacy," he said.

Shifting positions
Kerry's remarks come the day after Obama said he would consider a Russian diplomatic offer for Syria to give up its chemical weapons and that military strikes would "absolutely" be put on hold if that were to happen.
Obama made the statements late on Monday as the US Senate decided to delay its vote on military action - capping a day of shifting positions from within the administration and on Capitol Hill.
Since Russia's proposal that Syria hand over its chemical weapons to international control in order to avert airstrikes, the US has been seen as trying to walk a line between not ruling out a diplomatic solution to the conflict, while also leaving military intervention on the table.
US administration has said it would take a "hard look" at the proposal, but indicated that Syria would have to follow through with its acceptance of the proposal with concrete action.

The current debate began with Secretery of State John Kerry saying, in response to a reporter's question, that there would be no need for military action if Syrian President Bashar al-Assad handed over his chemical weapons - an answer that was then presented by Russian foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, as a workable plan.
The US administration at first stated that Kerry's response was only rhetorical, but within hours the president said in interviews with six US networks that a diplomatic solution should be sought.

Obama said on CNN that the Russian plan was "a potentially positive development", while on NBC he said it could be a "significant breakthrough".
He was also adamant that the offer would not have surfaced if "a credible threat of a military strike from the United States" had not been made.
He told PBS: "I have instructed John Kerry to talk directly to the Russians and run this to ground and if we can exhaust these diplomatic efforts and come up with a formula that gives the international community a verifiable enforceable mechanism to deal with these chemical weapons in Syria, then I'm all for it."

Obama also conceded that he may lose his campaign in Congress for authorisation.
"I wouldn't say I'm confident," he said.

Iran's Foreign Ministry on Tuesday said it supported the idea while Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, said he too welcomed it.
 aljazeera.com
10/9/13
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1 comment:

  1. Αμερικανική βοήθεια περιμένουν οι αντάρτες στη Συρία...

    Τις παραδόσεις όπλων που είχαν υποσχεθεί οι Ηνωμένες Πολιτείες εξακολουθεί να αναμένει ο Ελεύθερος Συριακός Στρατός, όπως δηλώνει ο ηγέτης της ομάδας των ανταρτών.

    Ο στρατηγός Σαλίμ Ιντρίς δήλωσε μέσω αμερικανικού ραδιοφωνικού σταθμού ότι οι μαχητές έχουν λάβει μέχρι στιγμής ανθρωπιστική βοήθεια, συμπεριλαμβανομένων τροφίμων και ιατρικών εφοδίων, καθώς και στρατιωτικό εξοπλισμό, όπως αλεξίσφαιρα γιλέκα, κιάλια νυχτερινής όρασης, εξοπλισμό επικοινωνιών και υπολογιστές, αλλά «όχι άμεση στρατιωτική υποστήριξη».

    «Ακόμα περιμένουμε την παράδοση όπλων και πυρομαχικών. Και είπαμε στους φίλους μας στις ΗΠΑ ότι ευελπιστούμε στην υποστήριξή τους», δήλωσε ο Ίντρις σε δημόσιο ραδιοφωνικό σταθμό και συμπλήρωσε ότι οι επιτακτικές ανάγκες των μαχητών είναι αντιαρματικές ρουκέτες και αντιαεροπορικοί πύραυλοι.

    Όπως δήλωσε ο Ίντρις, οι ΗΠΑ ανακοίνωσαν ότι η αποστολή αντιαεροπορικών πυραύλων είναι πολύ δύσκολο να επιτευχθεί, ωστόσο υποσχέθηκαν ότι θα δώσουν μια πιο πλήρης απάντηση αφού ολοκληρωθούν οι σχετικές διαβουλεύσεις με την Ουάσινγκτον, αναφέρει το Reuters.

    Την ίδια ώρα, πολλοί βουλευτές των ΗΠΑ έχουν εκφράσει τις ανησυχίες τους ότι τα όπλα θα μπορούσαν να πέσουν στα χέρια μαχητών της Τζιχάντ.
    http://www.efsyn.gr/?p=111233
    13/9/13

    ReplyDelete

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