Syria
hails 'historic American retreat' as Obama hesitates
Syria
hailed a "historic American retreat" on Sunday, mockingly
accusing President Barack Obama of hesitation and confusion after he
delayed a military response to last month's chemical weapons attack
near Damascus to consult Congress.
1
September, 2013
U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry said tests had shown sarin nerve gas
was fired on rebel-held areas on August 21, and expressed confidence
that U.S. lawmakers would do "what is right" in response.
Washington
says more than 1,400 people, many of them children, were killed in
the attack.
It
was the deadliest incident of the Syrian civil war and the world's
worst use of chemical arms since Iraq's Saddam Hussein gassed
thousands of Kurds in 1988. But opinion polls have shown strong
opposition to a punitive strike among Americans weary of wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
Obama's
announcement on Saturday that he would seek congressional
authorization for punitive military action against Syria is likely to
delay any strike for at least nine days.
But
the United Nations said his announcement could be seen as part of an
effort to forge a global consensus on responding to the use of
chemical arms anywhere.
"The
use of chemical weapons will not be accepted under any
circumstances," U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky said. "There
should be no impunity and any perpetrators of such a horrific crime
against humanity must be held accountable."
Arab
states called on the international community to take action against
the Syrian government.
The
final resolution of a meeting of Arab League meeting foreign
ministers meeting in Cairo urged the United Nations and international
community to "take the deterrent and necessary measures against
the culprits of this crime that the Syrian regime bears
responsibility for".
The
ministers also said those responsible for the attack should face
trial, as other "war criminals" have.
Saudi
Arabian Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal told Arab League counterparts
on Sunday that opposing international intervention would only
encourage Damascus to use weapons of mass destruction.
The
Syrian government says the attack was staged by the rebels. With
Obama drawing back from the brink, President Bashar al-Assad reacted
defiantly to the threat of Western retaliation, saying Syria was
capable of confronting any external strike.
He
left his most withering comments to his official media and a junior
minister.
"Obama
announced yesterday, directly or through implication, the beginning
of the historic American retreat," Syria's official al-Thawra
newspaper said in a front-page editorial.
Syrian
Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad accused Obama of indecision.
"It is clear there was a sense of hesitation and disappointment
in what was said by President Barack Obama yesterday. And it is also
clear there was a sense of confusion as well," he told reporters
in Damascus.
Before
Obama put on the brakes, the path had been cleared for a U.S.
assault. Warships were in place and awaiting orders to launch
missiles, and U.N. inspectors had left Syria after gathering evidence
on the use of chemical weapons.
Kerry
invoked the crimes of Adolf Hitler, Saddam and the potential threat
to Israel from Syria and Iran in urging skeptical U.S. lawmakers to
back a strike on Assad's forces.
"This
is squarely now in the hands of Congress," he told CNN, saying
he had confidence "they will do what is right because they
understand the stakes."
WEARY
AMERICANS
It
became apparent on Sunday that convincing Congress of atrocities
committed by Assad's forces was only one of the challenges
confronting Obama.
Lawmakers
raised a broad array of concerns, including the potential
effectiveness of limited strikes, the possible unintended consequence
of sparking a wider Middle East conflict, the wisdom of acting
without broader international backing to share the burden and the war
weariness of the American public.
Many
Democrats and Republicans are uneasy about intervening in a distant
civil war in which 100,000 people have been killed over the past 2
1/2 years, and lawmakers have not cut short their summer recess,
which ends September 9.
Mike
Rogers, Republican chairman of the House of Representatives
Intelligence Committee, told CNN there were "real challenges,"
but added: I think that at the end of the day, Congress will rise to
the occasion. This is a national security issue."
Republican
Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky took a more skeptical view. "It's
at least 50-50 whether the House will vote down the involvement in
the Syrian war," he told NBC.
"I
think the Senate will rubber stamp what he wants," he said. "The
House will be a much closer vote." The Senate is controlled by
Obama's Democratic Party, while the House is in the hands of the
Republican Party.
Members
of Congress were briefed by Obama's national security team on the
case for military action and Kerry said he had more evidence backing
accusations against Damascus.
"I
can share with you today that blood and hair samples that have come
to us through an appropriate chain of custody, from east Damascus,
from first responders, it has tested positive for signatures of
sarin," he told CNN.
U.N.
weapons inspectors collected their own samples and diplomats say
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has told the five permanent Security
Council members - Britain, China, France, Russia and the United
States - that it would take up to two weeks before the final report
is ready.
In
Damascus, ordinary Syrians reacted with a mixture of relief,
disappointment and scorn to Obama's decision. "I have to admit
this morning was the first time I felt I could sleep in," said
Nawal, who works as a housekeeper in the Syrian capital.
Bread
had returned to the bakeries and members of the state security forces
appeared relaxed, drinking tea and chatting at their posts outside
government buildings.
"We
always knew there wouldn't be a strike," one of them said. "It's
not going to happen. Anyway, we were never nervous about it. We were
just worried for the civilians. But we're confident it's not going to
happen."
FRANCE
CANNOT GO IT ALONE
The
United States had originally been expected to lead a strike
relatively quickly, backed up by its NATO allies Britain and France.
But British lawmakers voted on Thursday against any involvement and
France said on Sunday it would await the U.S. Congress' decision.
"France
cannot go it alone," Interior Minister Manuel Valls told Europe
1 radio. "We need a coalition."
French
President Francois Hollande, whose country ruled Syria for more than
two decades until the 1940s, has come under increasing pressure to
put the intervention to parliament.
A
BVA poll on Saturday showed most French people did not approve of
military action and most did not trust Hollande to conduct such an
operation.
Jean-Marc
Ayrault, his prime minister, was to meet the heads of both houses of
parliament and the conservative opposition on Monday before lawmakers
debate Syria on Wednesday.
French
first lady Valerie Trierweiler said on Sunday she was still in shock
over pictures of Syrian children killed in the attack and told
France's M6, "I do not know how one can bear it, how one can
accept it."
Syria
and its main ally, Russia, say rebels carried out the gas attack to
draw in foreign military intervention. Moscow has repeatedly used its
U.N. Security Council veto to block action against Syria, saying it
would be illegal and only inflame the civil war.
Critics
say further delay by Obama is simply buying Assad more time.
The
Istanbul-based Syrian opposition coalition said Assad had moved
military equipment and personnel to civilian areas and put prisoners
in military sites as human shields against any Western air strikes.
It
said rockets, Scud missiles and launchers as well as soldiers had
been moved to locations including schools, university dormitories and
government buildings inside cities.
Reuters
could not independently verify the reports, and attempts to reach
Syrian officials for comment were unsuccessful.
Obama's
credibility has already been called into question for not punishing
Assad over earlier alleged gas attacks, and he is under pressure to
act now that he believes Damascus has crossed what he once described
as a "red line".
Failure
to act, some say, could mean Iran would feel free to press on with a
nuclear program the West believes is aimed at developing an atomic
bomb and that might encourage Israel to take matters into its own
hands.
"If
Obama is hesitating on the matter of Syria, then clearly on the
question of attacking Iran - a move that is expected to be far more
complicated - Obama will hesitate much more, and thus the chances
Israel will have to act alone have increased," Israeli Army
Radio quoted an unnamed government official as saying.
Financial
markets have been concerned about possible intervention in Syria and
a delay caused by seeking congressional approval would be "a
positive," said Michael Yoshikami, CEO of Destination Wealth
Management in Walnut Creek, California.
"A
delay will let investors calm down and assess things. There was a lot
of concern that there would be unilateral military action, because
that could have had a major impact on oil prices, which in turn would
have impacted GDP and consumer spending - not what we want to see
with economic growth still so slow, he said.
Pope
Francis called for a negotiated solution to the conflict in Syria and
announced he would lead a worldwide day of prayer for peace in the
country on Saturday.
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