Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Syria
Wednesday, August 28, 2013 by DXTR corporation
Biden: 'No doubt' Syria unleashed chemical attack, must pay a price
By Michael Pearson. Frederik Pleitgen and Hamdi Alkhshali, CNN
August 27, 2013 -- Updated 2353 GMT (0753 HKT)
Kerry: Chemical use a 'moral obscenity'
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: U.S. president, British prime minister talk about the situation in Syria
- NEW: Syria's info minister challenges U.S. to present proof, or risk losing public opinion
- "The Syrian regime are the only ones who have the weapons," VP Biden says
- U.S. and British militaries, at least, preparing plans for possible strike in Syria
"Those who use chemical
weapons against defenseless men, women and children should and must be
held accountable," Biden said in a speech to the American Legion.
The vice president's
remarks echo those made by other U.S. officials in recent days, as well
as many of the nation's foremost allies.
French President Francois
Hollande said his administration was "ready to punish those who made
the decision to gas these innocent people," adding that "everything
leads us to believe" that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces are
responsible.
Syrian civil war in photos
Sniper fire doesn't stop U.N. in Syria
U.S. considers military action in Syria
The case against Syria
British Prime Minister
David Cameron -- who talked Tuesday with U.S. President Barack Obama --
called lawmakers back from their summer vacations to consider a response
to Syria, as the UK military prepares contingency plans.
And U.S. Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel told the BBC on Tuesday that U.S. forces are
"ready to go" if ordered to strike Syria by President Barack Obama.
"The options are there. The United States Department of Defense is ready to carry out those options," Hagel said.
Western leaders were
reacting to a growing consensus that the Syrian regime was responsible
for an August 21 attack that killed more than 1,300 people, most of them
dying from exposure to toxic gases, according to rebel officials. The
opposition -- which has said it's been targeted by chemical weapons
attacks in the past as well -- backed up its latest allegations with
gruesome video of rows of dead bodies, including women and children,
with no visible wounds.
Syrian officials, though, have steadfastly denied using chemical weapons in this or other cases.
Foreign Minister Walid
Moallem said Tuesday that his government would never use such munitions
against its own people, daring those who disagree to present evidence
publicly.
He said rebel forces
were to blame for security concerns near the suspected chemical sites,
arguing that Western leaders are using the claims as an excuse to go
after al-Assad's regime.
"We all hear the drums
of war," Moallem said. "They want to attack Syria. I believe to use
chemical weapons as a pretext is not a right."
And if foreign powers do
strike the Middle Eastern nation, its foreign minister said the
government and its forces will fight back.
"Syria is not easy to swallow," said Moallem. "We have the materials to defend ourselves. We will surprise others."
U.N. inspectors in Syria, but what will they find?
The United Nations has
sent inspectors to Syria to try to get to the bottom of the wildly
conflicting accounts of chemical warfare.
The opposition says
chemical payloads were among the ordnance fired into the rebel
stronghold of Ghouta. The government, via state TV reports, claims that
its forces came into contact with toxic gas Saturday in Jobar, on the
edge of Damascus -- blaming this on "terrorists," the term it commonly
uses for rebel fighters.
CNN could not independently confirm either account, including videos purported to show the aftermath of each.
Syria warns U.S. against attack
Syria's wounded treated in Israel
Horrific video we must show you
On Monday, U.N.
inspectors visited the town of Moadamiyet al-Sham, despite a close call
with snipers that left one of their vehicles damaged and an explosion
nearby.
The inspectors had been
expected Tuesday to head to Ghouta, but that trip was pushed back a day
"in order to improve preparedness and safety for the team."
Moallem blamed rebel
forces for failing to guarantee the U.N. group's safety and denying that
its forces have delayed inspections by continually shelling Ghouta.
Video posted Tuesday to YouTube purported to show the area being shelled, though CNN could not verify this video's authenticity.
Yet Biden reiterated the claim that Syrian forces were shelling the suspected chemical attack site. And
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said it may be too late
for a valid inspection of what happened -- saying "too much time has
passed" and accusing al-Assad's government of using the U.N.
investigation "as a stalling tactic or a charade to hide behind."
The United States,
meanwhile, is conducting its own investigation: An intelligence report
detailing evidence of the alleged attack could be released as early as
Tuesday, a U.S. official told CNN. The report will include forensic
evidence and intercepted communications among Syrian military
commanders, according to the official.
The vice president said
that beyond whatever inspectors do or do not find, common sense and the
recent past point to one culprit.
"The Syrian regime are
the only ones who have the weapons, have used chemical weapons multiple
times in the past, have the means of delivering those weapons, have been
determined to wipe out exactly the places that were attacked by
chemical weapons," he said Tuesday.
Russia leads international charge against strikes
The calls for a military response were not without opposition.
Russia is leading the
charge internationally, with Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov having said
there is no proof yet Syria's government is behind last week's chemical
attack. His office compares the Western allegations against Syria to
claims Iraq was hoarding weapons of mass destruction before the U.S.
invasion in 2003 -- allegations that fell apart once American troops
began searching for them.
And Tuesday, Russia's
foreign ministry accused Washington of trying to "create artificial
groundless excuses for military intervention."
Moscow bemoaned the U.S.
postponement of a meeting that was scheduled for Wednesday in The
Hague, where top diplomats from both countries had planned to discuss
the war in Syria.
And Russia criticized
the United States for, in its view, trying to bypass the U.N. Security
Council to take action on the reported chemical attack.
Should anything be moved through the U.N. council, Russia -- which has a permanent seat on it -- could block it.
Still, that's what
former British Foreign Secretary David Owen urged world leaders to do
before unleashing missiles or warplanes on Syrian targets.
Omran al-Zoubi, Syria's
information minister, on Tuesday challenged the United States to
"present this proof to the rest of the world" -- claiming that they are
asking for trouble if they do not.
"If they don't have
proof or evidence, then how are they going to stand up to the American
public opinion and to the world public opinion and explain why they are
attacking Syria?" al-Zoubi told CNN from Damascus.
Some worldwide have
expressed concern that intervening in Syria may provoke broader conflict
in the Middle East or ensnare Western powers in another bloody conflict
after years of warfare in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Cameron said that he
understands those concerns, vowing that any action would have to be
"proportionate, ... legal (and) would have to be specifically about
deterring the use of chemical weapons."
Still, he said it's
critically important that action be taken to show the international
taboo against chemical weapons will not be tolerated.
"This is not about wars
in the Middle East; this is not even about the Syrian conflict," he
said. "It's about use of chemical weapons and making sure, as a world,
we deter their use and we deter the appalling scenes we've all seen on
our television screens.
Source:CNN News International
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