Putin: US should present Syria evidence to Security Council
by alethoRT | August 31, 2013
Russian
President Vladimir Putin has declared ‘utter nonsense’ the idea that
the Syrian government has used chemical weapons on its own people and
called on the US to present its supposed evidence to the UN Security
Council.
Putin has further called the Western tactic a ‘provocation.’
Washington
has been basing its proposed strategy of an attack on Syria on the
premise that President Bashar Assad’s government forces have used
chemical agents, while Russia finds the accusations unacceptable and the
idea of performing a military strike on the country even more so.
Especially as it would constitute a violation of international law, if
carried out without the approval of the UN Security Council.
Further
to this, Putin told Obama that he should consider what the potential
fallout from a military strike would be and to take into consideration
the suffering of innocent civilians.
The
Russian president has expressed certainty that the strategy for a
military intervention in Syria is a contingency measure from outside and
a direct response to the Syrian government’s recent combat successes,
coupled with the rebels’ retreat from long-held positions.
“Syrian
government forces are advancing, while the so-called rebels are in a
tight situation, as they are not nearly as equipped as the government,”
Putin told ITAR-TASS. He then laid it out in plain language:
“What
those who sponsor the so-called rebels need to achieve is simple – they
need to help them in their fight… and if this happens, it would be a
tragic development,” Putin said.
Russia
believes that any attack would, firstly, increase the already existing
tensions in the country, and derail any effort at ending the war.
"Any
unilateral use of force without the authorisation of the U.N. 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," said the Russian Foreign
Ministry’s spokesman, Aleksandr Lukashevich, adding that the threats
[have been] issued by Washington “in the absence of any proof” of
chemical weapons use.
On Friday,
Washington said a plan for a limited military response was in the works
to punish Assad for a “brutal and flagrant” chemical attack that
allegedly killed more than 1,400 people in the capital Damascus 10 days
ago.
The
Syrian government has been denying all allegations, calling the
accusation preposterous and pointing its own accusations against rebel
forces, especially Al-Qaeda-linked extremists who have wreaked havoc on
the country in the two years since the start of the civil war.
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