Iran
warns west against military intervention in Syria
Tehran
threat comes as John Kerry says US would respond to 'undeniable' use
of chemical weapons by Assad regime
27
August, 2013
Iran
has warned that foreign military intervention in Syria will result in
a conflict that would engulf the region.
The
threatening rhetoric from Tehran came in response to a statement by
the secretary of state, John Kerry, on Monday that the US would
respond to the "undeniable" use of chemical weapons in
Syria.
In
the strongest signal yet that the US intends to take military action
against the Assad regime, Kerry said President Bashar al-Assad's
forces had committed a "moral obscenity" against his own
people.
"Make
no mistake," Kerry said. "President Obama believes there
must be accountability for those who would use the world's most
heinous weapon against the world's most vulnerable people. Nothing
today is more serious, and nothing is receiving more serious
scrutiny".
Iranian
foreign ministry spokesman, Abbas Araqchi, indicated it was equally
resolved to defend Assad.
"We
want to strongly warn against any military attack in Syria. There
will definitely be perilous consequences for the region,"
Araqchi told a news conference. "These complications and
consequences will not be restricted to Syria. It will engulf the
whole region."
Shi'ite
Iran is Syria's closest ally and has accused an alliance of militant
Sunni Islamists, Israel and western powers of trying to use the
conflict to take over the region.
The
White House immediately echoed Kerry's comments, and said it would
release an intelligence assessment about the use of chemical weapons
in the coming days.
"The
fact that chemical weapons were used on a widespread basis, against
innocent civilians, with tragic results is undeniable," said
White House spokesman Jay Carney. "And there is very little
doubt in our minds that the Syrian regime is culpable."
He
added that while the president is still considering the appropriate
response, he had already concluded that the attack constituted a
"horrific violation of an international norm".
Pressed
on whether the US would take military action, Carney said the last
time the administration determined chemical weapons had been used,
"on a smaller scale", it had decided to provide opposition
fighters with assistance. On that occasion, in June, the US announced
the CIA would begin supplying rebel groups with small arms and
ammunition.
"The
incident we're talking about now is of a much more grave and broader
scale, and merits a response accordingly," Carney said, adding
that the attack in Damscus was "obviously significantly more
serious, with dramatically more heinous results".
The
hardening of Washington's response came on a day which saw the UK,
France, Germany and Turkey join the calls for intervention. David
Cameron cut short his holiday in Cornwall to return to work in
Downing Street on Tuesday ahead of a meeting of the National Security
Council on Wednesday. However, Russia maintained its opposition to
military action, with its foreign minister appearing to rule out
becoming embroiled in any conflict.
On
Monday night the rift between Russia and the western allies appeared
to deepen when the White House postponed a meeting with diplomats
from Moscow that had been scheduled for Wednesday in The Hague.
Washington
said the high-level talks meant to discuss a Syria peace conference,
had been put off because of "ongoing consultations" over
the alleged chemical weapons attack But Russia's deputy foreign
minister, Gennady Gatilov, said it was a "regrettable"
decision that the US had taken unilaterally.
Kerry
said that Obama was liaising with world leaders to determine the
appropriate response to an "indiscriminate use of chemical
weapons" in Syria, but provided no timetable, and no further
indication about what form any US-led action might take.
On
Monday night the White House announced Obama had spoken with Kevin
Rudd, the prime minister of staunch wartime ally Australia, about the
Syrian situation and "possible responses by the international
community".
Australia
takes the rotating chair of the UN security council from Sunday.
Speaking in Sydney on Tuesday, Rudd said: "I do not believe the
world can simply turn a blind eye to the use of chemical weapons
against a civilian population resulting in nearly 300 deaths, or
more, and some 3,600 people hospitalised."
UN
inspectors were able to access some of the alleged sites of chemical
attacks in the east Ghouta region of Damascus on Monday, but had to
cut short their trip after regime officials warned that they could
not guarantee the inspectors' safety.
The
UN team collected some biological and environmental samples but
refused to accept other samples of blood and urine that had already
been taken by medical workers, presumably because they were unable to
verify their source.
Earlier
in the day two mortars landed near the Four Seasons hotel where the
inspectors are staying before they set off for east Ghouta, and on
the way there their convoy was hit by gunfire as they crossed the
buffer zone from the regime-controlled centre of Damascus to the
rebel-held east of the city.
The
presence of the inspectors had been a central demand of the UN and
their belated permission to enter the affected areas did little to
calm the situation.
A
build-up of military aircraft on RAF Akrotiri on Cyprus suggested
that planning had reached a developed stage. With Russia and China
likely to block a UN resolution, the UK and US have both signalled
that they are prepared to act without a UN mandate. International law
experts say intervention could be legally justified without a
security council resolution under the UN's "responsibility to
protect".
Earlier
the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, was outspoken over the
necessity to act if his inspectors found evidence of chemical weapons
use. "If proven, any use of chemical weapons by anyone under any
circumstances is a serious violation of international law and an
outrageous crime. We cannot allow impunity in what appears to be a
grave crime against humanity," he said.
Under
the terms of its mandate negotiated in the security council, the UN
inspection team under Swedish scientist, Ake Sellstrom, can determine
whether chemical agents have been used, but not who has used them.
Kerry
said that regardless of the outcome of the UN weapons inspections,
the US had already concluded that Syria had used chemical weapons.
"Anyone who could claim that an attack of this staggering scale
could be contrived or fabricated needs to check their conscience and
their own moral compass," he said "What is before us today
is real. And it is compelling."
Chemical
weapons could only have been used by Assad's forces, which has
"custody" over chemical weapons in the country, Kerry said.
He added that failure to co-operate with UN weapons inspectors for
five days, and its decision to shell the affected neighbourhoods,
"destroying evidence", indicated an attempt to conceal the
truth. "That is not the behaviour of a government that is has
nothing to hide," he said. "That is not the behaviour of a
regime eager to prove to the world that it had not used chemical
weapons".
"Our
sense of basic humanity is offended, not only by this cowardly crime,
but also by the cynical attempt to cover it up," Kerry said. He
said the decision to allow weapons inspectors to the scene of the
attack on Monday "is too late, and is too late to be credible".
"What
we saw in Syria last week should shock the conscience of the world,"
Kerry said. "It defies any code of morality. The indiscriminate
slaughter of civilians, the killing of women and children and
innocent bystanders by chemical weapons is a moral obscenity. By any
standards, it is inexcusable, and despite the excuses and
equivocations that some have manufactured, it is undeniable,"
Kerry said, adding that the US and its allies had gathered more
information about the atrocity which it would release in the "days
ahead".
In
Britain, No 10 said that the prime minister earlier clashed with
Vladimir Putin over whether the Assad regime was responsible for the
attack. In a telephone conversation, the Russian president said
Moscow had no evidence as to whether such an attack had taken place –
or who was responsible – after Cameron said there was "little
doubt" that the Syrian regime was responsible.
Nick
Clegg has cancelled a trip to Afghanistan to allow him to attend the
NSC amid a growing expectation that parliament could be recalled
before the end of the week to allow MPs to debate developments in
Syria.
William
Hague, who insisted Britain shared a common position with the US and
France, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "We have tried those
other methods – the diplomatic methods – and we will continue to
try those. But they have failed so far."
Meanwhile,
General Sir Nick Houghton, chief of the UK defence staff, discussed
military options with his US counterpart, General Martin Dempsey, and
other allied military chiefs at a military summit in the Jordanian
capital Amman.
A
Ministry of Defence spokesman said: "The chief of defence staff
has met with General Dempsey in Amman as part of pre-planned talks
with the Americans and other allies to consider how the international
community should best respond to the ongoing crisis in Syria.
"As
you would expect, the discussions have focused on the chemical
weapons attack in Damascus last Wednesday. No decisions have been
taken – as we've said, we are looking at all the options."
On
Monday night, British government sources were downplaying
expectations that a strike could be imminent. They said that Britain
and the US wanted to consider the findings of the UN weapons
inspectors with care before deciding whether to act. Downing Street
said it would consult attorney general Dominic Grieve on the
legalities of intervention.
However,
it seemed unlikely on Monday night that the findings of the UN
inspection team would heal the deep rift over Syria in the UN
security council. Sergei Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, warned
that any attack on Syria without security council sanction would be
"a crude violation of international law." He compared the
situation to the run-up to the Iraq invasion in 2003. Asked what
Russian would do if missile strikes were launched, he appeared to
rule out military retaliation, saying Russia is "not planning to
go to war with anyone".
In
a reminder of the potential for any military action to escalate
across the Middle East, Israel warned that it would hit back if there
were any Syrian reprisals in the wake of western air strikes. The
Israeli minister for intelligence and strategic affairs, Yuval
Steinitz, said on Monday: "If we are under attack, we will
protect ourselves and we will act decisively."
In
Paris, France's president, Francois Hollande, said it was unthinkable
that the international community would fail to respond to the use of
chemical weapons, telling the Parisien newspaper: "Everything
will be decided this week."
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