The
West ‘prays’ Russia and China will continue blocking Syria action
RT,
22
December, 2012
The
West has “no appetite” for a military intervention in Syria,
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Saturday. At the same
time, Moscow’s intelligence shows the Arab country’s chemical
arsenal is “so far” secured, he revealed.
“No
one has any appetite for intervention. Behind the scenes, I have a
feeling they are praying that Russia and China go on blocking
intervention, as sanctioning it would mean they must act – and they
are not ready,”
Lavrov told journalists on a flight back to Moscow from an EU summit
in Brussels.
The
FM was assessing the current mood in the UN Security Council after
NATO cleared the stationing of Patriot
missiles in
Turkey. Ankara and the alliance say this is a containment tool to
prevent any further Syrian violence from spilling over the border,
but political analysts believe the step might signal the West and
their Middle East allies are preparing to intervene in Syria.
Chemical weapons ‘so far’ secured, but US needs to ‘decide on priorities’
Syria’s
chemical arsenal remains one of the major international concerns
since the topic first emerged in July. Lavrov says that President
Bashar Assad’s government is doing whatever’s possible to secure
the weapons.
“So
far, the arsenal is under control. The Syrian authorities have
gathered all the stock in one or two locations. It used to be
scattered all over the country,”
the FM said adding that Moscow and Washington’s intelligence agree
on the matter.
Syria
is reportedly in possession of nerve agents, including mustard gas,
as well as the Scud missiles needed to deliver them. The country is a
non-signatory to the Chemical Weapons Convention, which outlaws their
production.
Since
July, Assad’s government has repeatedly stated that chemical
weapons will not be used on Syria, but Syrian officials have not
excluded the possibility they might be deployed in the event of “a
foreign attack.”
The
threat has drawn international condemnation.
The
EU, US and many others are also worried that Syria’s chemical
weapons might fall into the hands of the Syrian rebels, some of whom
have links to Al-Qaeda.
But
Lavrov pointed out at some inconsistency in Washington’s approach
where the chemical arsenal issues overlap with US support for the
Syrian opposition.
“Our
American partners admit that the main threat is rebels seizing the
chemical arsenal. The opposition forces include all kinds of groups
even ones the US has recently proclaimed terror
groups.
We tell them: ‘Guys but you support the opposition and its armed
struggle. This armed struggle might result in exactly what you fear.
You decide on your priorities.’ But there is no clear response to
that,”
said Lavrov.
‘No one will win this war’
Russia
refuses to act as an intermediary trying to Assad into fleeing,
Lavrov also said. At the same time Moscow is not going to accommodate
the Syrian president should he step down: “Assad
is not going anywhere, no matter what anyone says, be it China or
Russia.”
On
being asked whether the rebels will eventually oust President Assad,
Lavrov replied: “Listen,
no one is going to win this war.”
The
situation in Syria remains volatile with new deaths reported daily by
human rights groups. According to those reports, the death toll in
the country which has been engulfed in the civil unrest since March
2011 has exceeded 40,000 people. The UN Human Rights Committee also
says the conflict made 164,000 refugees.
Moscow
insists the Syrian conflict should be resolved through direct and
unconditional negotiations between the government and opposition.
Russia insists the country should be given the right to
self-determination and neither side should be supported.
The
US, the UK, France, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and a number of other
countries in the West and the Middle East, on the other hand, call on
President Assad to step down immediately and grant
financial and military support to
the Syrian opposition forces. But despite all the support, the Syrian
National Coalition which was deemed to become an umbrella for all the
Syrian opposition groups still failed
to unify Assad’s opponents and
therefore does not have leverage on all the forces fighting the
goverment’s troops on the ground.
The
UN says the Syrian war is growing more sectarian than civic with each
day and that there is no end in sight to the conflict.
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