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Harper, Obama call on Assad to step down — but military action ruled out
Steven Edwards/Postmedia News/18 August
http://www.canada.com/news/Harper+Obama+call+Assad+step+down+military+action+ruled/5272684/story.html#ixzz1VQo8BWvj
UNITED NATIONS — The United States on Thursday ruled out launching military action to protect civilians in Syria as it led co-ordinated calls with Canada and other U.S. allies for Syrian President Bashar Assad to step down over the Syrian government's escalating bloody crackdown on peaceful protesters.
While U.S. President Barack Obama said in a statement that Syrian civilians had "braved ferocious brutality at the hands of their government," a senior administration official said during a White House briefing for journalists that the call for Assad's departure did not come with a military protective screen for the protesters.
The position is in stark contrast to that which the United States and many of it allies — among them Canada — took with their decision to launch strikes against Libya to protect Libyan civilians under threat from dictator Moammar Gadhafi's forces.
"I don't think that anybody believes that (military intervention) is the desired course in Syria — not the United States and our allies, nor the Syrian people themselves," said the administration official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were to be the public faces for the new measures against Syria.
"So the simplest way to bring this to a conclusion is for the Syrian people to get the democratic transition they are demanding and for President Assad to step aside."
Administration officials stressed how the stepped-up pressure on Syria came from a "chorus" of U.S. allies, while Clinton emphasized at a news conference that the United States "understood the strong desire of the Syrian people that no foreign power should intervene in their struggle."
The Syrian crackdown has been one of the bloodiest within the broader Arab Spring uprisings, which have forced the collapse of governments in Tunisia and Egypt, sparked civil war in Libya and significant unrest elsewhere — but which have also hastened substantial reform in Morocco.
The United Nations has said that at least 2,000 people have been killed in Syria since the uprising began in mid-March, and that thousands were missing or detained.
But Obama's statement early Thursday marked the U.S. government's first explicit call for Assad to step down. Prime Minister Stephen Harper issued his own communique a short time later, as part of a co-ordinated campaign that also saw a joint statement from the leaders of Britain, France and Germany and another from the European Union's foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton.
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Harper, Obama call on Assad to step down — but military action ruled out
Steven Edwards/Postmedia News/18 August
http://www.canada.com/news/Harper+Obama+call+Assad+step+down+military+action+ruled/5272684/story.html#ixzz1VQo8BWvj
UNITED NATIONS — The United States on Thursday ruled out launching military action to protect civilians in Syria as it led co-ordinated calls with Canada and other U.S. allies for Syrian President Bashar Assad to step down over the Syrian government's escalating bloody crackdown on peaceful protesters.
While U.S. President Barack Obama said in a statement that Syrian civilians had "braved ferocious brutality at the hands of their government," a senior administration official said during a White House briefing for journalists that the call for Assad's departure did not come with a military protective screen for the protesters.
The position is in stark contrast to that which the United States and many of it allies — among them Canada — took with their decision to launch strikes against Libya to protect Libyan civilians under threat from dictator Moammar Gadhafi's forces.
"I don't think that anybody believes that (military intervention) is the desired course in Syria — not the United States and our allies, nor the Syrian people themselves," said the administration official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were to be the public faces for the new measures against Syria.
"So the simplest way to bring this to a conclusion is for the Syrian people to get the democratic transition they are demanding and for President Assad to step aside."
Administration officials stressed how the stepped-up pressure on Syria came from a "chorus" of U.S. allies, while Clinton emphasized at a news conference that the United States "understood the strong desire of the Syrian people that no foreign power should intervene in their struggle."
The Syrian crackdown has been one of the bloodiest within the broader Arab Spring uprisings, which have forced the collapse of governments in Tunisia and Egypt, sparked civil war in Libya and significant unrest elsewhere — but which have also hastened substantial reform in Morocco.
The United Nations has said that at least 2,000 people have been killed in Syria since the uprising began in mid-March, and that thousands were missing or detained.
But Obama's statement early Thursday marked the U.S. government's first explicit call for Assad to step down. Prime Minister Stephen Harper issued his own communique a short time later, as part of a co-ordinated campaign that also saw a joint statement from the leaders of Britain, France and Germany and another from the European Union's foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton.
article continues...