The rhetoric remains while the reality has changed
Susan
Rice: Regime change US objective in Syria
The
US National Security Adviser says the White House has been and is
seeking to oust Syrian President Bashar al-Assad from power.
29
September, 2013
“The
position of the United States has been and remains very clear, and
that is that Assad must go,” Susan Rice said in an interview with
CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS about the ongoing chemical weapons
negotiations with Syria.
“He
has inflicted horrific violence on his country that's spilled over
into the region. So our strong view is that there isn't a viable
future for Syria that is governed by Assad,” she added.
She
made the remarks in response to a question that how Washington can be
partner with President Assad to destroy the country’s chemical
weapons and at the same time, be trying to get rid of him.
Rice
added that the latest UN resolution which is aimed at destroying
Syria's chemical weapons is not limited to President Assad’s
government.
“Now,
the resolution and the agreement doesn't speak about Assad as an
individual, it speaks about the requirements and the obligations of
the Syrian government. And that's an important distinction, that
whatever Syrian government is there, near-term or in the future, will
have the same obligation to implement these commitments and this
resolution faithfully. So this is not specific to Assad."
Rice,
who is a former US Ambassador to the UN, also highlighted that the
Obama administration has not taken any options off the table and is
ready to unilaterally strike Syria if Damascus fails to comply with
the resolution.
“The
president has been very clear that we remain postured to act if - if
the choice is - is taken by him and if the necessity arises. We're
not taking any options off the table. And the president has been very
clear that as commander-in-chief he has the authority to act in the
interests of the United States and to use force if necessary,” she
said.
This
as the resolution does not threaten automatic punitive action against
the Arab state if Damascus does not meet its terms.
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