Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

top
Free Syrian Army fighters exchange fire with regime forces in the Salaheddin neighbourhood/AFP

World

US, UK warn Syria on chemical weapons threat

Free Syrian Army fighters exchange fire with regime forces in the Salaheddin neighbourhood/AFP

DAMASCUS, Aug 23 – British Prime Minister David Cameron and US President Barack Obama warned they would be forced to consider a new course of action if Syria threatens to use chemical weapons on rebel fighters.

The two leaders agreed during a telephone call that “the use — or threat — of chemical weapons was completely unacceptable and would force them to revisit their approach so far,” Cameron’s Downing Street office said.

“Both said that they wanted to see a credible opposition and hoped that the opposition would use their upcoming meeting in Cairo to show real unity of purpose and coherence in working towards transition.”

The White House said Obama conveyed to Cameron his concern about the “increasingly dire” humanitarian situation in Syria, and called for more countries to contribute to humanitarian appeals from the United Nations.

“The two leaders exchanged views on ways the international community can assist those displaced by the conflict,” and “apply pressure” on President Bashar al-Assad’s regime, it added.

On the ground Syrian forces backed by helicopter gunships and tanks launched a deadly assault on parts of Damascus Wednesday, activists said, as the regime battles to stamp out rebel resistance in the capital.

At least 37 people were reported killed in Damascus alone, a day after a top minister hinted that the embattled regime was ready to discuss President Bashar al-Assad’s exit in any talks on ending the brutal 17-month conflict.

Fighter jets and artillery hit the commercial capital Aleppo and heavy shelling was reported in Daraa, the birthplace of the uprising, and the eastern town of Deir Ezzor while rebels claimed they seized parts of a town on the Iraq border, a watchdog said.

The army attacked several areas where anti-regime sentiment is strong in and around the southwest of Damascus, including with heavy shelling, helicopter fire and mass arrest sweeps, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

In the deadliest operation, the army raided the southwestern district of Kafr Sousa, killing at least 24 civilians, it said, while a pro-opposition journalist was also killed during a raid on his home in Damascus.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

The violence was some of the worst since regime forces reclaimed most of the capital a month ago, and dozens of bullet-riddled bodies were found in the Damascus suburb of Qaboon, according to the Observatory.

Meanwhile the opposition Syrian National Council urged the UN to investigate reports that dozens of people were killed during shelling and in summary executions in Maadamiyat al-Sham, a town west of Damascus.

The SNC described what happened as a “brutal crime” and urged the Arab League to hold an emergency meeting to discuss “war crimes” perpetrated by the regime in Syria.”

The state-run news agency SANA, meanwhile, quoted an official source as saying that troops clashed with an “armed terrorist group” in Daraya, a suburb just south of Damascus, and seized weapons and a bomb-making factory.

It also reported that the army “inflicted heavy losses on terrorists” in Aleppo.

At least 115 people including 71 civilians were killed nationwide on Wednesday, according to the Observatory, which says a more than 23,000 people have died since the uprising began in March 2011.

Among the latest casualties, four Lebanese villagers died in an air strike while fighting alongside the rebels, according to a security source in Lebanon.

The Observatory has a network of activists on the ground but its claims cannot be independently verified.

The United States and France again pushed for Assad to resign after a top Syrian official said on Tuesday that Damascus was ready to discuss his exit as part of a negotiated settlement to the conflict.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

“As far as his resignation goes — making the resignation itself a condition for holding dialogue means that you will never be able to reach this dialogue,” Deputy Prime Minister Qadri Jamil said in Moscow.

But he added: “Any problems can be discussed during negotiations. We are even ready to discuss this issue.”

Moscow, however, bluntly told the West not to meddle in Syria after Obama hinted at possible military action if Damascus resorted to its chemical weapons arsenal.

“There should be no interference from the outside,” Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said after talks with Jamil. “The only thing that foreign players should do is create conditions for the start of dialogue.”

Washington was unimpressed by the apparent overture from Damascus.

“We still believe that the faster Assad goes, the more chance there is to quickly move on to the day after,” US State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said, dismissing Jamil’s comments as “nothing terribly new”.

US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said that the United States was preparing for “threats” from Iran and Syria’s turmoil as an aircraft carrier headed to the region ahead of schedule.

The USS John Stennis and its strike group will set forth shortly for the Middle East, a deployment ordered four months ahead of time to minimize the gap in which the United States has only one carrier in the region.

About The Author

Comments
Advertisement

More on Capital News