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Frame Game :
How you look at things.
Pain in the Assad, Continued
Syria won’t follow through on chemical weapons compliance unless we stay ready to strike.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's interview Thursday with Russian
state television is further proof he's responding to the threat of
force.
Photo by Sana Sana/Reuters
Photo by Sana Sana/Reuters
Bashar al-Assad, the dictator of Syria, wants to make one thing very
clear: His offer to join the global convention against chemical weapons
and submit his poison gas stockpiles to foreign supervision wasn’t
driven by fear of a U.S. military strike. “Kerry, Obama, and the
American administration seek to appear victorious, as if their threats
yielded success,” Assad told a Russian TV interviewer
Thursday. “This is insignificant to us. What matters is for the
decision to be based on Syria’s convictions and a significant Russian
role. … Without the Russian initiative, the matter would not have been
deliberated with any other country.”
Like most of what Assad says, this is a lie. He responded to the threat of force,
and only the threat of force will make him follow through. To extract
his compliance, we’ll have to maintain our military readiness and
resolve.
On Sept. 8, with U.S. forces poised to attack, Assad sat for a CBS
News interview with Charlie Rose. Assad refused to admit he had chemical
weapons. But he added, “We’ll do anything to prevent the region from another crazy war.”
The next day, after U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry conceded that
Assad could theoretically avert the attack by turning over all his
poison gas, Russia seized on the remark. Sergey Lavrov, Russia’s foreign
minister, said Russia would “immediately begin work with Damascus” to
implement Kerry’s suggestion “if the establishment of international control over chemical weapons in the country will prevent attacks.”
On Sept. 10 Syrian officials signaled their acquiescence. Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem said Syria "agreed to the Russian initiative as it should thwart the U.S. aggression against our country." Prime Minister Wael al-Halki said Syria would go along in order “to spare Syrian blood.”
Russian President Vladimir Putin urged the U.S. to call off its
military plans. The Russian-Syrian initiative could succeed, he argued, “only if we hear that the American side and those who support the United States in this sense rule out the use of force.”
On Thursday Lavrov repeated that plea: “We proceed from the fact that the solution on this problem will make unnecessary any strike on the Syrian Arab Republic.” In a New York Times op-ed, Putin called the Russian-Syrian offer “a new opportunity to avoid military action.”
Now that the U.S. Congress has withdrawn consideration of its
authorization to use force, Assad is regaining confidence. He thinks he
can jerk us around. In the Russian TV interview, he says he’ll follow
through with his chemical weapons offer only if the U.S. stops “delivering arms to terrorists”
in Syria. In other words, he won’t even submit to inspections of his
poison gas, let alone relinquish it, unless we cut off all aid to the
Syrian rebels.
Don’t fall for it. If we relax, Assad has endless ways to drag this
out. So far the only tangible concession he has produced is a letter of
intent to join the chemical weapons treaty. He hasn’t signed the treaty,
reported where his stockpiles are, admitted inspectors, or allowed them
to begin destroying his arsenal. Each of these steps can be delayed and
dangled as leverage for further demands: noninterference in the civil
war, Israeli disarmament, the Golan Heights, you name it. He’ll keep his
gas. And he’ll use it again.
Assad appears on Russian state TV station RU24 in Damascus in this
Sept. 12, 2013, handout photo by Syria's national news agency Sana.
Photo by Sana Sana/Reuters
The only way to push him through the treaty and inspection process is
to stick with what works: force. “Why did Syria agree to the Russian
initiative?” the Russian interviewer asked Assad. “Why so rapidly?”
Assad blathered for a while about Syria’s long-standing wish to rid the
Middle East of such terrible weapons. Eventually he conceded that “in
relation to current developments, Syria as a state genuinely seeks to
avert another war of lunacy on itself and countries in the region,
contrary to the efforts of warmongers in the U.S.”
Exactly. He did it to avert the missile strike. Keep the missiles ready.
end quote from:
Syria Will Keep Its Poison Gas Unless We Stay Ready to Strike
end quote from:
Syria Will Keep Its Poison Gas Unless We Stay Ready to Strike
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