Obama to make G20 push for Syria strike
Thursday September 5, 2013
World leaders are set to meet at a G20 summit in Russia where
US President Barack Obama will strive to bridge deep divisions over his
push for military action against the Syrian regime's alleged use of
chemical weapons.
Obama cleared the first hurdle on Wednesday in
his race to win domestic congressional backing for punitive strikes but
is also seeking broader international support.
Speaking during a
trip to Stockholm he said the world had set 'a red line' for Syria and
it could not now remain silent in the face of the alleged chemical
weapons attack on Damascus suburbs.
But Russian President Vladimir
Putin, a fierce opponent of the proposed military action, warned on
the eve of the summit he is hosting in Saint Petersburg that it would
be unacceptable for the West to go ahead with military action against
Damascus without UN Security Council approval.
The Kremlin
demanded 'convincing' proof that the regime of Bashar al-Assad was
responsible for using chemical weapons against its own people.
According
to US intelligence, more than 1400 people living in rebel-held suburbs
of Damascus were killed in the strike, which involved the use of the
sarin nerve gas.
Beyond convincing Russia, Obama has a tough sell
ahead elsewhere, with China - another veto-wielding Security Council
member state - having already expressed its 'grave concerns' over
unilateral military strikes.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has
repeatedly ruled out her country's participation in any US-led military
strike against Assad's regime, while the British parliament has also
rejected the idea.
But Obama said in Sweden: 'I didn't set a red
line. The world set a red line,' referring to international rules
banning the use of chemical weapons, even in case of war.
'My
credibility is not on the line,' he said. 'The international
community's credibility is on the line and America and Congress's
credibility is on the line.'
The Syria conflict threatens to
torpedo items on the G20 agenda - such as an 'action plan' for
sustainable and balanced global growth - even though it has not been
formally pencilled in.
Syria is certain to be the top issue in the
flurry of bilateral meetings between the leaders of the world's top 20
developed and emerging nations around the seaside Tsarist
Konstantinovsky palace in Strelna on the Gulf of Finland seashore.
White
House officials have said Obama will hold meetings on the sidelines of
the G20 with French President Francois Hollande, the main foreign
backer of a strike on Syria, as well as the leaders of China and Japan.
While
no formal bilateral meeting is planned with Putin, a White House
official suggested there would likely be some kind of dialogue.
Russian
and US ties have sunk to a new low since the Cold War, over deep
seated divisions over Syria, Russia's granting of asylum to US fugitive
intelligence leaker Edward Snowden and a string of Russian laws
targeting non-governmental organisations and opposition rallies.
In
a fresh sign of the bilateral tensions John Boehner, the top
Republican in the US House of Representatives, has rejected a request
to meet a Russian delegation to discuss Syria.
Putin, asked on
Russian state television whether Russia would agree with US-led
military strikes if it was proven that the Syrian regime had carried
out the chemical attack, replied: 'I do not exclude that.'
But he
later told members of the board of human rights in the Kremlin that
'only the UN Security Council can give approval for the use of force
against another state'.
The United Nations is making a desperate
new push for a Syria peace conference even as the United States
prepares a possible military strike.
Talks on a conference are to be relaunched at the G20 summit, envoys said.
Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Muqdad said his government was ready to retaliate in case of foreign military action.
'The
Syrian government will not change position even if there is World War
III. No Syrian can sacrifice the independence of his country,' Muqdad
said.
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