What
Barack Obama sees is a way out, a way out that will -- if we play our
cards right -- leave him a eunuch in the whore house of Washington,
D.C.
---Mike
Ruppert
Obama
sees possible breakthrough in Syria weapons proposal
U.S.
President Barack Obama said on Monday he saw a possible breakthrough
in the crisis with Syria after Russia proposed that its ally Damascus
hand over its chemical weapons for destruction, which could avert
planned U.S. military strikes.
10
September, 2013
But
Obama, speaking in a series of television interviews, remained
skeptical and pushed ahead to persuade a reluctant and divided
Congress to back potential U.S. action, saying the threat of force
was needed to press Syria to make concessions.
In
an extraordinary day of diplomacy over the war-wracked Middle Eastern
country, Russia seized on an apparently throwaway public remark by
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry to fashion a new approach that
could save face for all sides.
"My
preference consistently has been a diplomatic resolution to this
problem," Obama told NBC. He said an agreement for Assad to
surrender his chemical weapons to international control would not
solve the "underlying terrible conflict inside of Syria."
He
added: "But if we can accomplish this limited goal without
taking military action, that would be my preference."
"It's
possible that we can get a breakthrough," Obama told CNN,
although there was a risk that it was a further stalling tactic by
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who has presided over more than two
years of civil war.
"We're
going to run this to ground," he said. "John Kerry and the
rest of my national security team will engage with the Russians and
the international community to see, can we arrive at something that
is enforceable and serious."
Obama
has argued that Assad, fighting to continue his family's four-decade
rule, must be punished for what Washington says was a poison gas
attack on rebel areas that killed over 1,400 people on August 21.
Human
Rights Watch said evidence strongly suggested Syrian government
forces were behind the attack. It said in a report issued in New York
that the type of rockets and launchers used in these attacks
suggested weapon systems only in the possession of the Syrian
government's armed forces.
In
Congress, Democratic Senate leader Harry Reid pushed back a Senate
test vote on possible U.S. strikes that had been scheduled for
Wednesday as lawmakers evaluate the Russian plan.
The
vote is still expected this week, and a more contentious vote would
later be held in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives.
The
dramatic diplomatic twist in weeks of high-tension international
wrangling came when Kerry was asked by a reporter during a visit to
London whether there was anything Assad's government could do or
offer to stop a U.S. military strike.
"Sure.
He could turn over every single bit of his chemical weapons to the
international community in the next week - turn it over, all of it
without delay and allow the full and total accounting. But he isn't
about to do it and it can't be done."
The
State Department later said Kerry had been making a rhetorical
argument about the impossibility of Assad turning over chemical
weapons, which Assad denies his forces used.
RUSSIAN
PROPOSAL
Less
than five hours later, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said he
had put what sounded like Kerry's proposal to his visiting Syrian
counterpart during talks in Moscow. Walid al-Moualem said Damascus
welcomed the Russian initiative - while not spelling out whether
Syria would, or even could, comply.
Iran
supports Russia's offer to work with Syria to put its chemical
weapons under international control, the Iranian foreign ministry
said.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin has blocked U.N. action against Assad and
says Obama would be guilty of unlawful aggression if he launches an
attack without U.N. approval.
Lavrov
said: "If the establishment of international control over
chemical weapons ... makes it possible to avoid strikes, then we will
immediately get to work with Damascus."
He
said Russia was also urging Syria to eventually destroy the weapons
and become a full member of the Organization for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons (OPCW).
Rebels
fighting Assad's forces on the ground, where hundreds are being
killed by conventional bullets and explosives every week, dismissed
any such weapons transfer as impossible to police and a decoy to
frustrate U.S. plans to attack.
Kerry
later called Lavrov to tell him that while his remarks had been
rhetorical and the United States was not going to "play games,"
if there was a serious proposal, then Washington would take a look at
it, a senior U.S. official said.
U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon took up the same theme, saying that he
might ask the Security Council to end its "embarrassing
paralysis" over Syria and agree to act.
Asked
about Lavrov's proposal, Ban said: "I'm considering urging the
Security Council to demand the immediate transfer of Syria's chemical
weapons and chemical precursor stocks to places inside Syria where
they can be safely stored and destroyed."
Britain
and France, permanent members of the Security Council with Russia,
China and the United States, both tentatively welcomed the Russian
proposal.
WEAPONS
BANNED BY 1925 TREATY
U.N.
chemical weapons inspectors were in Damascus at the time of the
August attack, which Assad and Putin have blamed on rebel forces. Ban
said that if the evidence they were able to gather - after lengthy
bargaining over their movements with Syrian officials - proved the
use of toxins, the world must act.
Syria,
which has never signed a global treaty banning the storage of
chemical weapons, is believed to have large stocks of sarin, mustard
gas and VX nerve agents - the actual use of which is banned by a 1925
treaty to which Damascus is a signatory.
White
House officials were skeptical of the feasibility of the Russian
proposal. Syria is a battleground where access for foreign experts
would be dangerous. And it would be very hard to verify whether all
sites had been sealed.
Years
of cat-and-mouse maneuvering between U.N. weapons inspectors and
Saddam Hussein in neighboring Iraq shows how difficult it might be to
enforce any arms control orders on a timetable that would satisfy
Washington in the midst of a war.
Qassim
Saadeddine, a rebel commander in northern Syria and a spokesman for
the Supreme Military Council of Assad's opponents, said: "It is
a trap and deceitful maneuver by the Damascus regime and will do
nothing to help the situation.
"They
have tons of weapons hidden that would be nearly impossible for
international inspectors to find."
Putin,
however, would see major diplomatic advantages to any plan that
bolstered Russia's role in brokering international settlements and
thwarted strikes in which Obama may have French military support.
CONGRESSIONAL
LOBBYING
Obama
said he was pressing ahead to secure approval in Congress for limited
and targeted strikes against Syria, aware of the strong opposition of
most Americans after a decade of wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
"I
don't think that I'm going to convince ... the overwhelming majority
of the American people to take any kind of military action, but I
believe I can make a very strong case to Congress, as well as the
American people, about why we can't leave our children a world in
which other children are being subjected to nerve gas," he said
on PBS.
Kerry
said he was confident of the evidence that the United States and its
allies had presented to support their case that Assad's forces used
poison gas, a charge that Assad denies.
But
Kerry said he understood wariness among Americans lingering from
accusations against Saddam that led to the U.S. invasion of Iraq in
2003 and later proved to be false.
A
survey by the newspaper USA Today found majorities of both houses
remained uncommitted - reflecting broad and growing public opposition
to military action.
A
Reuters/Ipsos poll on Monday showed Americans' opposition to a U.S.
military strike against Syria was increasing. The poll, conducted
September 5 to 9, indicated that 63 percent of Americans opposed
intervening in Syria, up from 53 percent in a survey that ended
August 30.
Tapping into concerns in the West about the role of Islamist militants in the rebel forces, Syrian Foreign Minister Moualem said: "We are asking ourselves how Obama can ... support those who in their time blew up the World Trade Center in New York."
Assad
himself warned of reprisals - if he were attacked Americans could
"expect every action", he told CBS television.
Brent crude oil futures sank more than 2 percent on Monday, as the prospect of a wider war in the Middle East appeared to recede. "This has thrown some sand into the wheels of military preparation in the U.S.," said Michael Lynch of Strategic Energy & Economic Research.
"At
the very least, it means the debate is going to be stalled while we
wait and see if it works out."
Inside
Syria, government forces launched an offensive to wrest back control
of a historic Christian town north of Damascus on Monday, activists
said. In the past six days, the town of Maaloula has already changed
hands three times between Assad's forces and rebels, some of whom are
linked to al Qaeda.
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