Google – AFP, 26 August 2013
Russian
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov (L) and US Secretary of State
John Kerry in
Washington, August 9, 2013 (AFP/File, Paul J. Richards)
|
MOSCOW —
Russia's two-and-a-half year dispute with the West over the conflict in Syria
hit a new peak Monday as Moscow warned against military action without UN
approval and cast doubt over the regime's involvement in a claimed chemical
weapons attack.
The alleged
use of chemical weapons in an attack outside Damascus has driven a new wedge
between Russia and the West, with Moscow and Western capitals offering vastly
different interpretations of the incident.
Whereas
Britain, France, Turkey and the United States have said the attack appears to
have been perpetrated by the regime of Bashar al-Assad, Russia believes it was
a ploy by rebels with the aim of discrediting the Kremlin's traditional ally.
A telephone
call Monday between Russian President Vladimir Putin and British Prime Minister
David Cameron underlined how far apart Moscow and the West were.
Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
gives a press conference on Syria in
Moscow on
August 26, 2013 (AFP,
Kirill Kudryavtsev)
|
With
clamour growing in Western states for military action against Assad, Russia
warned such intervention would destabilise the entire Middle East and be based
on false reasoning.
Any action
such as air strikes would likely have no mandate from the UN Security Council,
where Russia and its ally China would be almost certain to block resolutions
approving force.
Britain --
as well as staunchly anti-Assad Turkey -- raised the prospect of a
confrontation with Russia similar to that over the 2003 US-led Iraq invasion or
the 1999 Kosovo NATO air campaign by launching military action without UN
approval.
"If
force is used without a UN resolution it will lead to very serious consequences
in relations between Russia and the United States and its NATO partners,"
said Alexander Filonik, a Middle East expert at the Institute of Oriental
Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
At a
hastily called news conference Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
said any use of force against Syria without UN approval would be a "very
grave violation of international law."
He said
ideas floated in the West about knocking out the regime's military
infrastructure and helping hand victory to rebels were not just an
"illusion" but a "grave mistake that will not lead to any peace,
but only mark a new, even bloodier stage of the war in Syria."
Taking
military action against Assad would be a clear sign from the West that it does
not want to take account of Moscow's opinion, Maria Lipman of the Carnegie
Centre in Moscow told AFP.
"Moscow
could not let that go by without a response," she said, adding that Russia
could hit back by strengthening military cooperation with the Assad regime.
The surge
in tensions coincided with the appearance Monday in the Izvestia newspaper --
one of the most slavishly pro-Kremlin media outlets in Russia -- of a lengthy
interview with Assad.
Assad used
the interview to thank Russia for its support, ridicule as "nonsense"
the idea that his regime used chemical weapons and warn the United States of
failure if it attacked Syria.
"London
and Washington... just need a guilty verdict (on Assad). Any other verdict will
be rejected," the head of the lower house of Russian parliament's foreign
affairs committee, Alexei Pushkov, wrote on Twitter.
Russian
officials are now comparing the possible use of force against Syria to the
US-led invasion of Iraq, which was vehemently opposed by Putin as based on
flawed intelligence that Saddam Hussein's regime possessed weapons of mass
destruction.
The US
administration's claims of weapons justifying the invasion at the time later
proved false.
"There
are many similarities in the tactics of the Western states in Iraq,"
Filonik told AFP. "History is repeating itself."
Russia has
been chastened by its experience in the 2011 air campaign that ousted Libyan
leader and longstanding Moscow ally Moamer Kadhafi, which Moscow allowed to go
ahead by abstaining at the Security Council.
With Putin
now back as president after a four-year stint as prime minister, Russian
foreign policy has become newly assertive, notably avoiding further diplomatic
irrelevance by abstaining at the United Nations.
Russia also
has military and political interests in Syria dating back to the Soviet Union's
alliance with Assad's father and predecessor Hafez al-Assad that it is not
willing to surrender in a hurry.
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SB: Okay. Thank you, Lord. I’m going to put the Vladimir Putin question ahead of the Boston bombing question. I think a lot of Russian readers and listeners are wondering if they can trust Vladimir Putin.
Now, you’ve said he was in containment and he’s coming out of containment. Can you direct yourself to Russian listeners, please, and tell them what they need to know about Vladimir Putin, please?
AAM: Well, I will say that he has been gradually coming out of containment, and reintegrated, shall we say, into society and into his role and decisions. So what I say to you is be vigilant and be the observer. Do not get caught in what appears to be the drama of this readjustment of power. So, allow the shifting of the core and the centers of power to be adjusted.
Russia has a very important role to play in the future years, as I have said before. So, stand back, my friends. Be the observer. I am not asking you to extend your wholehearted trust and empathy to this individual. What I am asking you to do is to extend trust to your own discernment, because it is not 100 per cent clean, but it is not dirty either.
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