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Murdering regime': US closes Syrian embassy, British ambassador recalled
Elizabeth Kennedy and Bradley Klapper
February 7, 2012 - 7:39AM
'Doomed' ... anti-Syrian regime protesters demonstrate in Damascus. Photo: AP
The US has closed its Syrian embassy and Britain has recalled its ambassador to Damascus in a dramatic new Western push to get President Bashar al-Assad to leave power as diplomatic efforts to resolve one of the deadliest conflicts of the Arab Spring collapsed.
The moves by the US and Britain were a clear message that Western powers no longer see the point of engaging with Assad as they turn their attention to bolstering Syria's disparate and largely disorganised opposition to form a credible alternative to the current government.
"This is a doomed regime as well as a murdering regime," British Foreign Secretary William Hague told MPs on Monday as he recalled his country's ambassador from Syria for consultations on the escalating violence in the country.
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"There is no way it can recover its credibility internationally," Hague said.
President Barack Obama said the Syrian leader's departure is only a matter of time, even as the Damascus regime intensified its assault on a revolt that has raged for nearly 11 months.
"The deteriorating security situation that led to the suspension of our diplomatic operations makes clear once more the dangerous path Assad has chosen and the regime's inability to fully control Syria," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said in a statement.
Robert Ford, the American ambassador, and 17 other US officials left Syria and were expected to travel back to the United States. Ford informed Syrian authorities of the decision to leave earlier in the day, State Department officials said.
Even as the US stepped up pressure on Assad to quit, Obama said a negotiated solution in Syria is possible and it should not be resolved by foreign military intervention.
There are fears that international intervention, akin to the NATO intervention that helped topple Libya's Muammar Gaddafi, could make the already combustible conflict in Syria even worse.
The most serious violence on Monday was reported in Homs, a city so battered that some opposition members have started calling it "the capital of the Syrian revolution".
Several neighbourhoods in the city, such as Baba Amr, are under the control of rebels.
Using tanks and machine guns, regime forces shelled a makeshift medical clinic and residential areas, killing a reported 40 people on the third day of a relentless assault on Homs, activists said. More than a dozen others were reported killed elsewhere.
Activists also reported a military offensive using tanks and armoured vehicles in the mountain town of Zabadani, west of the capital, Damascus.
The Homs offensive began on Saturday, the same day Syria's allies in Russia and China vetoed a Western- and Arab-backed resolution aimed at trying to end the crackdown on dissent.
That day, military forces killed up to 200 people in Homs - the highest death toll reported for a single day in the uprising - according to several activist groups.
There was no way to independently confirm the toll, and the Syrian regime denied it.
The government says terrorists acting out a foreign conspiracy to destabilise the country are behind the uprising, not people seeking to transform the authoritarian regime.
Syria has blocked access to trouble spots in the country and prevented independent reporting, making it nearly impossible to verify accounts from either side as the conflict spirals out of control and turns increasingly bloody.
AP
China Defends Its Veto of UN Resolution on Syria
China strongly defended its veto of a United Nations Security Council resolution on Syria again Monday, saying its decision was ultimately aimed at avoiding more casualties.
Monday's Foreign Ministry briefing was dominated by China's decision, along with Russia's, to block the resolution condemning Syria's crackdown on anti-government protesters and calling for President Bashar al-Assad to resign.
Spokesman Liu Weimin said China has been actively involved in UN efforts to address the Syrian crisis, but sees the latest resolution as divisive and ineffective.
China vetoed the resolution, said Liu, because it feels that supporters pushed through the vote while different sides were still "seriously divided." Thirteen of the 15 council members voted in favor of the measure.
This kind of practice, Liu added, does not help maintain unity within the UN Security Council nor does it solve the Syrian issue. Liu went on to say China is paying close attention to the situation in Syria and is calling on all sides there to stop violence. Beijing's ultimate goal, he said, is to avoid casualties of innocent civilians and restore normal order in Syria.
The spokesman did not directly respond to questions for comment about the rising death toll in Syria, where the opposition accuses government troops of regular attacks in the Syrian city, Homs. He also rejected Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's description of the Chinese and Russian vetoes as "a travesty."
Liu said China does not accept the accusation, adding that China is not trying to favor any side in Syria's civil conflict. China sees itself as "a responsible major country," and will continue to work with the international community for a positive outcome, Liu said.
Sun Zhe, international studies professor at Tsinghua University, believes there is still still room to negotiate stronger international action on Syria. If the situation deteriorates even further, China and Russia could still change their positions, said Sun, arguing that Western countries that are calling for sanctions should continue their discussions.
China is following Russia's lead on the Syria issue, but Sun acknowledged that Beijing also has its own concerns. Chinese leaders see the Syrian government's actions as "extremist," he said, but are afraid of Western intervention because, they do not want to see another Libya or another Egypt.
Russia's foreign minister is due in Syria on Tuesday. The Chinese spokesman said he had no information as to whether Chinese officials would be heading to Damascus anytime in the immediate future.
VOA News / Feb. 07, 2012 12:02 KST79 killed as Syria pounds protest hubs: activists
Washington closes its Damascus embassy; Britain recalls its ambassador
By
- AFP
Published Tuesday, February 07, 2012
An injured girl with her relatives in Baba Amro, a neighbourhood of Homs (REUTERS)
The Syrian regime's rocket and shell bombardment of protest hubs has left another 79 civilians dead, activists said, as Washington closed its Damascus embassy and Britain recalled its ambassador.
The opposition Syrian National Council (SNC) said the regime was surrounding Homs with tanks on Monday ahead of "a major offensive" and warned of a "genocide" in the central Syrian city.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 42 civilians were killed in Homs alone in another day of blood-letting, and warned the death toll was likely to rise with many of the dozens of wounded in critical condition.
State media reported the deaths of three soldiers and said a "terrorist group" blew up an oil pipeline in Homs.
The army also launched an assault on the Zabadani area near Damascus with heavy tank shelling, killing at least ten people, according to the Britain-based Observatory.
It also reported civilian deaths in Rastan, Hula and Qusair, all towns in Homs province, as well at Sarghaya, near Damascus, in the northern city of Aleppo and in Idlib, northwest Syria.
A resident of Homs told AFP the latest assault began shortly after 0400 GMT Monday, with unprecedented barrages of rockets, mortar rounds and artillery shells. "What is happening is horrible, it's beyond belief," said activist Omar Shaker, reached by telephone as loud detonations were heard in the background. "There is nowhere to take shelter, nowhere to hide," he said. "We are running short of medical supplies and we are only able to provide basic treatment to the injured."
One video posted on YouTube apparently showed a field hospital hit by shelling in the Baba Amro district and wounded patients lying on stretchers on the floor amid pools of blood and shattered glass.
Footage shot by a BBC undercover team in Homs showed buildings ablaze in rebel neighbourhoods as they were pounded with heavy weapons. Damascus blamed the bloodshed in Homs on "terrorist gangs" using mortars.
The violence comes as Western powers seek new ways to punish Damascus amid growing outrage over Saturday's veto by Russia and China of a UN Security Council resolution condemning Syria for its near 11-month crackdown on dissent.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called the veto a "travesty." White House spokesman Jay Carney warned Syria's allies that backing President Bashar al-Assad was a "losing bet."
The State Department said it had closed the American embassy in Syria and withdrawn remaining staff after Damascus refused to address security concerns.
Senior State Department officials told CNN that two embassy employees left by air last week and 15 others, including Ambassador Robert Ford, left overland through Jordan on Monday morning.
The Polish government is to provide emergency consular services to any American citizens remaining in Syria.
US President Barack Obama shied away from talk of military intervention and vowed to pursue diplomatic means. "It is important to resolve this without recourse to outside military intervention and I think that's possible," he said in an NBC television interview.
Britain recalled its ambassador to Syria "for consultations," Foreign Secretary William Hague told parliament. "We will use our remaining channels to the Syrian regime to make clear our abhorrence at the violence that is utterly unacceptable to the civilised world," Hague said.
Belgium also recalled its ambassador from Damascus.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy said, after meeting German Chancellor Angela Merkel, that he would call Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to discuss the international response to the crisis.
Neither France nor Germany, he said, would accept the "blocking" of action on Syria.
Russia and China both defended their vetoes, with Moscow condemning as "hysterical" the West's angry reaction. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Foreign Intelligence Service chief Mikhail Fradkov are due in Damascus on Tuesday, as news reports said the mission could try to persuade Assad to quit.
China called on both sides of the conflict to halt the violence that has claimed the lives of at least 6,000 people since March, according to opposition activists.
The Syrian National Council said the "genocide" in Homs showed the regime was "increasing the pace of its crimes and repression."
Saudi Arabia called for "critical measures" on Syria and warned of an impending "humanitarian disaster" after the failure of the UN resolution.
The six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council, of which Riyadh is the leading member, is to meet on Saturday on Syria, on the eve of an Arab League ministerial meeting at the organisation's Cairo headquarters.Assad's wife 'defends Syria crackdown'
By
- AFP
Published Tuesday, February 07, 2012
The British-born wife of Syria's President has spoken in support of her husband for the first time since the 11-month uprising against his regime began, a British newspaper reported Tuesday.
"The President is the President of Syria, not a faction of Syrians, and the First Lady supports him in that role," 'The Times' quoted Asma al-Assad as saying in an email sent via an intermediary from her office.
The email is her first communication with the international media since the uprising against Bashar al-Assad's regime began, 'The Times' said.
"The First Lady's very busy agenda is still focused on supporting the various charities she has long been involved with and rural development as well as supporting the President as needed," the email reportedly continued.
"These days she is equally involved in bridging gaps and encouraging dialogue. She listens to and comforts the families of the victims of the violence." it added.
The statement came after Syrian forces pounded protest hubs with rockets and shells, killing 79 civilians on Monday, according to activists, and as Britain recalled its ambassador to Syria "for consultations".
The 36-year-old First Lady originally hails from Homs - the central Syrian city rocked by some of the worst carnage since the revolt began in March last year. Stylish and charismatic and with a degree from King's College in London where she was raised, the former investment banker had helped promote the soft side of an iron-fisted regime. But she has virtually disappeared from the public eye since the revolt broke out and had drawn criticism for her silence on a crisis that has left more than 5,000 people dead in her country.
Last month she appeared with two of her children to support her husband of 12 years as he spoke at a pro-regime rally, but did not speak herself.
GCC ministers will take close look at Syria situation: Alawi AFP
Tue Feb 07 2012 0702 GMT+0400 (Arabian Standard Time) Oman Time
MUSCAT: Foreign ministers from the GCC countries will meet in the Saudi capital later this week to discuss developments in Syria, Oman’s minister responsible for foreign affairs Yusuf bin Alawi said yesterday.
The announcement comes two days after China and Russia vetoed a UN Security Council resolution condemning a deadly crackdown by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime on nearly 11 months of protests, drawing condemnation from other global powers and the Syrian opposition. “The foreign ministers of the GCC will meet in Riyadh... to debate and exchange views on the situation in Syria,” Alawi said.
The meeting will be held on the eve of an Arab League ministerial meeting in Cairo, and is expected to focus on “the situation after the failure of the UN” to adopt a Security Council resolution supporting a League plan to end the crisis, Alawi said.
The Arab League, which suspended an observer mission in Syria because of an upsurge in the violence there, is due to meet in the Egyptian capital on Sunday.
The Cairo meeting, which had been scheduled for Saturday, was “moved to Sunday based on a request from the Gulf Cooperation Council,” the Arab League assistant secretary general, Ahmed ben Helli, said. “The Arabs and everybody else face a dilemma over Syria,” said Alawi. “The Arab League must organise its efforts to resolve the crisis in such a way that it leads to dialogue.
“Everybody is afraid and does
not want to take part in any resolution or step that leads to international intervention,” said Alawi, adding that “everyone wants to promote dialogue.”
“I see no way to resolve the crisis except by pushing for dialogue.”
Thirteen countries voted on Saturday for the UN resolution to end the crackdown in Syria, where activists say at least 6,000 people have been killed since the protests against Assad’s regime erupted in mid-March last year.
The double veto by Russia and China on the resolution came hours after the opposition Syrian National Council reported a “massacre” in the central city of Homs, with more than 230 civilians killed in an assault by regime forces.Syrian government forces struck at a makeshift medical clinic and residential areas. The government has denied shelling the city, blaming “armed terrorist groups” for the violence. Interviews with residents inside the city paint an entirely different picture. The Globe reached Sami Ibrahim, an activist with the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, who is based in Homs:
Q. Can you describe in detail the situation in Homs Monday?
A: At 3 o’clock in the morning people woke up to hear loud gunfire coming from dozens of Syrian army tanks shooting in the Baba Amr area. The shooting seems random, on houses, people, buildings. No one can deny this situation because we recorded it. We have sent the footage to more than 10 channels, Arabic and English. The whole world can watch with its own eyes. We are unable to do anything.
Q: There are various reports about the death toll today. What is your count?
A: Today we lost 72 Syrians; 53 were from Homs. Seven children and four women are among those.
Q: What impact has the failure of the United Nations Security Council to censure Syria had on the situation on the ground?
A: The Assad regime has taken the green light from Russia and from China. This is reflected on the ground. The killing is continuous. Assad now feels his back is protected and nobody can interfere with him. So he doesn’t care now. He took the decision to fire at the people and kill as much as he can, so he can stop this revolution. The people in Homs have been protesting. For the last two days people on the streets have set the flags of Russia and China on fire. People in Homs are angry at the whole world and this will affect the shape of our revolution.
Q: How is the escalation of violence affecting daily life in the city?
A: Can you imagine how many people Homs lost since the beginning? Homs lost 2,700 people from Homs families. This is a huge amount. There are about 75 roadblocks in this city. At each of these roadblocks there are security forces full of weapons. If they hear at a certain area there are demonstrations or protesters, they start shooting up the area. People die every day around these barriers. We feel that we are under occupation. The electricity, water and food has been cut. It makes our lives hell. If people are found carrying medicine, they are accused of supporting al-Qaeda. If this was an earthquake or a flood, you would see hundreds of international organizations on the ground, helping the people. But here in Homs, nobody has come to help us. This situation is very rare. It is very terrible for this world to just stand by.
LinkIn Syria, We Need to Bargain With the Devil
By NICHOLAS NOE
Published: February 6, 2012
ALMOST one year after anti-government protests began in Syria, a disaster of enormous moral and strategic proportions is fast approaching. Full-scale civil war is now likely. And a multifront, conventional and possibly unconventional war ignited by events in the Levant is also increasingly plausible.
However, many in the West, in some Arab governments and even in the Syrian opposition still think a “controlled collapse” of Bashar al-Assad’s government is possible.
According to this view, increasing pressure from all around will, at some point, fracture the government and its supporters both at home and abroad. Any resulting death and destruction, as well as regional blowback, will be within acceptable limits.
Unfortunately, there are at least three problems that make a controlled collapse unlikely.
First, the Assad government, which still enjoys substantial support from the army, the elite and other segments of the population, may be able to prolong its bloody denouement, with help from outsiders. Russia, which sees Syria as an indispensable strategic asset, joined China on Saturday in vetoing a United Nations resolution against the Assad government.
Iran has staked its own vital interests on Mr. Assad’s regime, which is a crucial conduit for Tehran’s support for the militant Shiite Muslim group Hezbollah in their common struggle against Israel.
Second, the violence from any drawn-out collapse will most likely exceed the limits of moral or strategic acceptability for the West and its allies — not to mention the Syrian people. Sectarian conflicts that divide the Shiite and other minority communities from the majority Sunni population will accelerate, compounding tensions in neighboring Lebanon, where Sunni fighters are now staging attacks into Syria, and also in Iraq, where sectarian violence has sharply increased in recent weeks.
Third, the resulting movement of refugees will add yet another destabilizing element to a humanitarian crisis. After all, Syria already hosts millions of Iraqi and Palestinian refugees who are likely to experience further anguish and loss.
Far from controlled collapse, a likelier scenario is a bloody last-ditch effort by Mr. Assad, Iran and Hezbollah to save the Syrian government, which they have the means to do.
These “axis of resistance” forces would most likely project their formidable military power — which includes chemical weapons in the case of Syria — against their enemies in a fight for their collective existence. Conveniently for all three of them, there are multiple ways Israel could be goaded into a major conflict without it seeming as if Mr. Assad or Hezbollah were responsible, in the eyes of their supporters. Indeed, a lone rocket attack from southern Lebanon that kills a large number of Israeli civilians is a distinct possibility.
To counter this dangerous situation responsibly, the United States and its allies would have to be willing to plan for and then swiftly implement a wide pre-emptive military strike. In even the best-case scenario, this would mean holding large chunks of Lebanese and Syrian territory with ground forces.
Adequate pre-emptive planning and action, though, seems extremely unlikely given the political and financial constraints faced by Western countries at the moment, not to mention the repercussions a major war in the Middle East would have for Western interests.
It is not enough, then, to blame Russian and Chinese vetoes at the Security Council or even the murderous Assad regime for the danger that is gripping the region right now — even if they deserve much of the blame.
Instead, Washington should adopt a realistic, albeit distasteful, strategy that seeks to steadily defuse the conflict rather than watch it explode in everyone’s face. And that means dealing with Mr. Assad.
MR. ASSAD is a brutally repressive and dangerous leader who is responsible for most of the death and destruction that has plagued Syria in recent months, but the consequences of pushing Iran, Syria and Hezbollah beyond their red lines will most likely be far worse.
America must therefore dispense with the inconsistent maxim that bargaining is morally prohibited when a leader is deemed to have gone beyond the pale — especially when bargaining could actually mitigate future fallout, while eventually securing one’s interests and values.
The main reason for making a deal with Mr. Assad right now — even one where he is initially offered more carrots than sticks — is precisely that a Western-led process that steadily undermines his ability and desire to use violence would stabilize a quickly deteriorating regional situation, gradually opening up Syria’s political system and reducing repression over time.
Thankfully, America and its allies are far more powerful than Syria, which means they possess the tools and flexibility to see such a strategy of pre-emptive concessions through to a successful conclusion.
The broad coalition currently facing Mr. Assad would first have to publicly lay out a grand bargain that retreats from the position of demanding that he step down immediately.
In exchange, a robust and competent contingent of Arab and United Nations monitors should promptly fan out across the country in order to verify the army’s pullback of heavy weaponry and the steady release of political prisoners. They would provide a permanent presence, and citizens could approach them to register complaints about violence committed by any side.
A national reconciliation conference outside of Syria should then be convened under Arab League and United Nations auspices. This would lay the groundwork for writing a new constitution and holding multiparty, supervised parliamentary elections later this year — as Mr. Assad himself recently proposed — and presidential elections in 2013. The reconciliation conference should also begin an investigation into the violence of the past year.
Three incentives could make the deal extremely difficult for Mr. Assad to reject.
First, America and its allies should call on the Free Syrian Army and other insurgents to suspend their operations. This would entail working with neighboring countries like Turkey and Jordan to create internationally supervised, weapons-free safe zones for the fighters, their families and others who feared retribution.
Second, the United States and the European Union would relax sanctions based on the government’s adherence to the deal and would set up an international conference of donors to support the material needs of the Syrian people.
Finally, so that it is not tarred as a Western plot, any deal would have to include a serious American-led effort to broker the return to Syria of the Golan Heights, which Israel has controlled since 1967.
Although there appears to be little political will for such an approach in Israel at the moment — the government sees no need to make concessions to Mr. Assad’s weak, teetering government — expending American political capital on a more promising peace process makes sense. Unlike the now defunct Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, talks with Syria could actually succeed (they broke down over a few hundred meters of land in 2000). Achieving an Israeli-Syrian deal could truly isolate the intransigent Iran-Hezbollah axis at a critical moment in the standoff over Tehran’s nuclear program.
This benefit, together with the prospect of normalized ties between Israel and Syria, might prove attractive to members of Israel’s security establishment who have long viewed a deal with Syria as both politically doable and strategically vital.
For its part, the badly shaken government in Damascus might find this a propitious moment to accept a deal as a way back from the abyss, even if this would most likely mean Mr. Assad’s eventual exit in the future. And if Mr. Assad rejects it, such a patently unreasonable move might actually offer the best hope yet of splitting his government and controlling the resulting collapse.
Admittedly, the prospects of successfully orchestrating such a deal now are far less promising than they were early last year.
But the realization that die-hard elements in Damascus, Beirut and Tehran could unleash great regional destruction should prompt a long overdue discussion about putting forward a credible and comprehensive bargain.
Negotiations now, rather than war later, could lead to a far better outcome for all parties — even if that means Syrians’ aspirations for freedom might be met much later than anyone would like.
Nicholas Noe is a contributing writer for Bloomberg View and the editor of “Voice of Hezbollah: The Statements of Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah.”
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