Britain could intervene in Syria within months - top UK general
The
UK’s most senior general said on a BBC interview Sunday that
Britain had in place contingency plans for a “very limited”
response in the case of a worsening humanitarian situation in Syria
within the next few months.
RT,
12 November, 2012
The
admission from Chief of the Defense Staff General Sir David Richards
is the most serious warning yet that Britain is preparing for some
kind of military involvement in Syria.
It
seems that British policy has now shifted from trying to support and
organize the disparate rebel groups to considering full-blown
military action.
“The
situation this winter I think may deteriorate and may well provoke
calls to intervene in a limited way,” General
Richards told the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show.
“It’s
my job, amongst other people in my sort of position, to make sure
these options are continually brushed over to make sure we can
deliver them,” he
continued.
Defense
Secretary Phillip Hammond, who was interviewed on the BBC’s Sunday
Politics program, also confirmed that the UK had not ruled out
military intervention – but was still focused on trying to
overcome objections from Russia and China to get a strong UN Security
Council resolution condemning the Bashar al-Assad government.
“At
the moment we don’t have a legal basis for delivering military
assistance to the rebels. This is something the Prime Minster keeps
asking us to test – the legal position, the practical military
position, and we will continue to look at all options.” he
said.
However,
he stressed that Britain's main focus at the moment was making sure
the crisis in Syria doesn’t spill into any neighboring countries
like Lebanon, Turkey or Jordan.
General
Richards added that there could be British troops posted in countries
neighboring Syria.
“They’re
allies of ours – we have small numbers of people routinely deployed
there, and in the meanwhile we’re preparing plans to make sure that
when some disaster happens, we’re able to deal with it.”
However,
Marcus Papadopoulos, editor of magazine Politics First, told RT that
he didn’t think the British announcement should be taken too
seriously.
“I
think it’s more designed to actually invigorate the Syrian
militants – who are of course the proxies of the West – and at
the same time to try and scare the government of President Assad and
try and demoralize the Syrian armed forces, which of course are
fighting a very long, protracted, bloody war,” he
said.
Another
option that London is considering includes amending a 2011 European
Union trade embargo that would allow weapons to be sent to the
rebels, for "humanitarian" reasons.
David
Cameron wants to push for an end to the embargo,
which does not allow either said to receive military aid from abroad.
Cameron also wants to put more pressure on Washington to help the
Syrian rebels, and if he is successful, it could see the UK supplying
weapons directly to the Syrian resistance.
"Safe
havens" for
refugees are also being considered, but there are no plans to try and
impose no-fly zones over Syria. Without a no-fly zone, a safe haven
for refugees would be almost impossible to enforce.
Britain
already has troops in Afghanistan, while its overstretched army, navy
and air force face increasing budget cuts, so any credible military
intervention would need to be in support of a larger US operation, or
independently but on a minor scale.
British
public opinion would also likely be firmly opposed to any new
military intervention. A growing number of British people, including
many politicians, want their troops out of Afghanistan as soon as
possible. A new military intervention on any scale would be a
very hard sell for the coalition, which is already under fire
domestically for unpopular austerity measures and a faltering
economy.
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