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WAR REPORT
Obama skeptical on major military action in Syria
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) June 17, 2013


Arming rebels is 'incitement to murder,' Syria warns
Damascus (AFP) June 17, 2013 - Discussions by Western countries on arming Syria's rebel fighters are "incitement to murder," Syria's deputy foreign minister, Faisal Muqdad, said on Monday.

"This is the principle of those who want continued killing in Syria," Muqdad told Al-Watan newspaper, after the United States said it would provide "military support" to the rebel side.

Both Britain and France have also discussed the prospect of arming the rebels, who have been battling to overthrow the government of President Bashar al-Assad for more than two years.

Muqdad told the newspaper, which is close to the Syrian government, that such discussions were "incitement to murder and unacceptable on a human and moral level."

"Syrians must have a national dialogue without foreign intervention to reach a peaceful solution," Muqdad said.

Washington said last week that it would provide Syria's rebels with military support after it determined that the Syrian regime had used chemical weapons.

And both London and Paris have discussed the possibility of sending weapons to the diverse fighters that are battling the Syrian government.

Despite backing opposite sides in the conflict, Russia and the United States have sought to convene a peace conference in Geneva to seek a political solution to the conflict.

Muqdad told Al-Watan that Syria "would work for the success of the Geneva conference," adding that he hoped other participants would be "sincere".

The mooted conference was originally expected to take place in June, but is now unlikely to be held before July.

The opposition has said it will not attend unless certain conditions are met, including the withdrawal from Syria of members of Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite group allied with the regime.

President Barack Obama expressed skepticism Monday that setting up a no-fly zone in Syria or other major US military action could save lives or tip the balance against President Bashar al-Assad's regime.

Speaking to PBS television, Obama said critics urging bold intervention failed to understand there was no simple solution and "if you set up a no-fly zone, that you may not be actually solving the problem."

Obama's deputies last week announced plans to arm the Syrian opposition after the administration concluded the Assad regime had resorted to using chemical weapons.

The US president has been accused by some lawmakers of dithering over Syria, but Obama warned of a litany of dangers associated with direct military action -- repeating his determination not to be drawn into another ground war in the Middle East.

Responding to calls to shut down Syria's combat aircraft with American air power, Obama said "the fact of the matter is for example, 90 percent of the deaths that have taken place haven't been because of air strikes by the Syrian air force."

"Syrian Air Force isn't particularly good. They can't aim very well," he said, adding that most of the action was taking place "on the ground."

On a possible "humanitarian corridor" to safeguard civilians in areas controlled by the opposition, Obama said such a step would require bombing raids that could carry unintended consequences, including triggering more civilian deaths.

"Or if you set up a humanitarian corridor, are you in fact committed not only to stopping aircraft from going that corridor, but also missiles?

"And if so, does that mean that you then have to take out the armaments in Damascus and are you prepared then to bomb Damascus? And what happens if there's civilian casualties?" he said in an interview recorded before he departed for a G8 summit in Northern Ireland.

In an unusual public comments by a president weighing military options, Obama said bombing also would carry the risk of inadvertently hitting a chemical weapons site, potentially unleashing lethal agents into the air.

"And have we mapped all of the chemical weapons facilities inside of Syria to make sure that we don't drop a bomb on a chemical weapons facility that ends up then dispersing chemical weapons and killing civilians, which is exactly what we're trying to prevent?"

Obama implied he was wary of supplying more advanced weapons to the rebels and rejected arguments from some lawmakers and commentators that such a move would turn the tide of the war.

He said "any notion that somehow we're just a few, you know, anti-helicopter or tank weapons away from tipping in that direction I think is not being realistic analyzing the situation."

He said some critics had proposed "we go in hot and heavy, no fly zones, setting up humanitarian corridors, and so forth" and that this supposedly offered "a simpler solution."

Referring to meetings in the White House "Situation Room" with military officers, Obama said: "Unless you've been involved in those conversations, then it's kind of hard for you to understand that the complexity of the situation and how we have to not rush into one more war in the Middle East."

However, Obama said he also rejected any suggestion that the United States had no role to play.

Washington has "serious interests there and not only humanitarian interests," he said.

"We can't have the situation of ongoing chaos in a major country that borders a country like Jordan which in turn borders Israel."

Obama made clear he opposed siding with the Sunnis in the Syrian conflict as some voices in the region have demanded, saying that would not serve American interests.

The US administration wanted to see a tolerant government in Syria that was "not sectarian," he added.

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