US
Secretary of State John Kerry has declared that military pressure may be needed
to oust Syria’s President Bashar Assad. It comes as knowledge has emerged that
the US, along with Turkey, has started training Syrian rebels.
“Ultimately
a combination of diplomacy and pressure will be needed to bring about a
political transition. Military pressure particularly may be necessary given
President Assad's reluctance to negotiate seriously,”Kerry
said at a Thursday meeting of Gulf foreign ministers at Riyadh Air Base,
according to AFP.
“He’s
lost any semblance of legitimacy, but we have no higher priority than
disrupting and defeating Daesh and other terror networks,” he
added, using “Daesh” – an Arabic acronym for the Islamic
State group (formerly known as ISIS/ISIL) that has seized large territories in
Syria and Iraq.
Last
December, President Assad told French
reporters, “let’s be honest:
Had Qatar not paid money to those terrorists at that time, and had Turkey not
supported them logistically, and had not the West supported them politically,
things would have been different. If we in Syria had problems and mistakes
before the crisis, which is normal, this doesn’t necessarily mean that the
events had internal causes”.
Syria’s
president criticized the actions of the US-led coalition targeting the
militants in Syria. He called its air strikes “merely
cosmetic” and said that “terrorism cannot be destroyed
from the air.” Assad added
that “saying that the
alliance’s airstrikes are helping us is not true.”
What’s
more, he explained that Syria was fighting against “not only gangs”, but also
states that support them with “billions
of dollars.”
Last
November, Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov commented on the issue,
saying that: “Russia condemns
the use of extremist groups in efforts to change the regime [in Syria].
The US-led
coalition started air strikes in Syria last September as a part of a joint
effort to battle the jihadist group, which had seized Syrian and Iraqi
territories. Despite carrying out airstrikes in Syria, Washington has refused
to work with the country’s government, stating that it wants to see Bashar
Assad ousted.
Turkey
backs the position of the US, and in March the two NATO allies began training“moderate” Syrian rebels to battle against the
Islamic State militants.
A
civil uprising in Syria broke out in the spring of 2011, falling in line with
Arab Spring protests and composing high-profile nationwide protests against the
government of President Bashar Assad. The conflict which grew into a war has
taken lives of 210,278-295,278 people, according to February estimates by the
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
This
April, Moscow is set to host a meeting between the Syrian opposition and
representatives of the government. Published
time: March 05, 2015 19:36 RT.
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