Only
‘diplomatic support’: UK Foreign Secretary says Syria military
action ruled out
William
Hague, the UK’s foreign secretary, has ruled out military
intervention in Syria stating Britain will only be offering
diplomatic support in the light of PM Cameron’s defeat on the
parliament vote. The UK Chancellor slammed Labour “opportunists.”
RT,
1
September, 2013
“Parliament
has spoken. I don't think it is realistic to think that we can go
back to parliament every week with the same question having received
no for an answer,” Hague said on the Murnaghan Show on Sky News on
Sunday. It was his first major interview since the House of Commons
defeat late on Thursday.
Hague
said that Labour would need to be “less partisan” in order to
reverse the Commons vote, and even in the event that more chemical
strikes were alleged within Syria, UK intervention would still be
unlikely.
“Anybody
looking objectively at this would see that, in order for parliament
in any circumstances to come to a different conclusion, people would
have to be more persuaded by the evidence. There is a great deal of
evidence there but I'm not sure that the extra evidence that the
United States presented would have made a difference to those
doubting the evidence in the House of Commons,” said Hague.
“We
will have another discussion with Russia to see if we can find a
diplomatic and peaceful solution to the crisis in Syria,” Hague
also commented.
UN
inspectors are yet to publically provide the results of their
analysis, after having departed Syria on Saturday.
US
Secretary of State John Kerry stated on the same day that the US has
its own evidence of sarin gas having been used in Syria, telling NBC
that “hair samples and blood samples have tested positive” for
the neurotoxic gas’ signature. The UN stated that it would take
some three weeks for the results of their investigation to be
processed.
A
video grab from footage broadcast by the UK Parliament’s
Parliamentary Recording Unit (PRU) via Parliament TV on August 29,
2013 shows British Prime Minister David Cameron (L) speaking at the
dispatch box during the debate about a response to the situation in
Syria in the Houses of Parliament in central London on August 29,
2013 (AFP Photo)
The
UK’s ruling Conservative party has been strongly in favor of
military intervention, forcing its leader, UK Prime Minister David
Cameron to concede “it is clear to me that the British
parliament... does not want to see British military action.”
Ongoing
protests against UK military intervention Syria have been taking
place, the most recent of which fell on Sunday. Thousands gathered in
London’s Trafalgar Square, marching under banners stating that “war
solves nothing.”
The
vote was defeated by a 285 to 272 margin, constituting what was
deemed a “major blow” to the party. The war vote was the first
lost by a British prime minister since 1782.
The
UK’s Conservative Chancellor, George Osborne, confirmed that the UK
would not seek a further vote on action in Syria. He made comments
along the same vein as Hague in an almost concurrent interview on the
BBC’s Andrew Marr Show. “Parliament has spoken,” he declared
with an air of finality on Sunday. “I don't think another UN
report, or whatever, would make the difference.”
Osborne
went on to state continuing support for the move, despite full
knowledge that it would be unlikely.
“Of
course I wanted us to be part of a potential military response. Now
that is just not going to be open to us,” he said. Osborne added
that his party’s opposition rivals, Labour, played the vote
opportunistically, in his opinion, saying that the move against the
government’s desire for military action by Labour made the party
leader, Ed Miliband, look less like a future prime minister.
AFP
Photo / Abo Al-Nur Sadk
Former
Prime Minister, Tony Blair, renowned for his unwavering support of
the joint UK/US invasion of Iraq in 2003, labeled the outcome of the
Commons vote “shocking” in a Sunday Times column.
Obama
announced on Sunday that he would be seeking Congressional approval
for a strike on Syria, adding that the strike was not
“time-sensitive.”
“In
consultation with the President, we expect the House to consider a
measure the week of September ninth,” House Speaker John Boehner
said in a statement released on the same day.
French
President Francois Hollande also said on Sunday that he would wait
for a parliamentary vote before committing France to a military
attack on Syria.
Russia
has warned that Washington’s apparent plans for military
intervention in Syria would only serve to increase the violence now
gripping the country.
“Any
unilateral use of force without the authorization of the UN Security
Council, no matter how 'limited' it is, will be a clear violation of
international law, will undermine prospects for a political and
diplomatic resolution of the conflict in Syria and will lead to a new
round of confrontation and new casualties,” Russian Foreign
Ministry spokesman Aleksandr Lukashevich said. There is currently a
lack of proof that the Syrian government used chemical weapons, he
added.
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