Public Radio International
September 10, 2013
NATO leader says Syria not to be trusted
NATO, the U.S-led military alliance is standing largely in the background as the United Nations, the United States, France and others grapple with how to respond to last month’s chemical weapons attack. But leaders of the alliance, which is committed to protecting Syrian-neighbor Turkey, say Syria isn’t to be trusted.
As Congress weighs action on Syria and the world waits for President Barack Obama’s decision on military intervention, another body has been standing by, so far with limited involvement.
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization confirmed and condemned the Syrian government’s use of chemical weapons but has yet to outline any specific role in the conflict — beyond defending NATO member Turkey, which borders Syria and has endorsed President Obama’s calls for a military strike.
“There’s a lot of public evidence,” Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said of a chemical attack in Syria…
Rasmussen said based on the evidence he has seen, there is no doubt that the Syrian regime carried out these attacks. Inaction could be damaging not just to Syrians on the ground, but to the world at large, he said.
“If the horrendous chemical attacks remain unanswered, it might send a very dangerous signal to not only the regime in Damascus, but to dictators all over the world, that chemical weapons and other weapons of mass destruction can be used without any consequences,” Rasmussen said.
Under the NATO agreement, which calls an “attack against one or more of them in Europe or North America” an attack against all, NATO has deployed Patriot missiles to Turkey…
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Despite the lack of physical support, Rassmussen said the international community generally supports U.S. military action in Syria.
“You are not alone,” he said. “I understand very well that in free and open societies, in democracies, there are a lot of debates, there might be differences…”
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