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WAR REPORT
Russia tells US it needs UN approval for Syria strike
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Sept 04, 2013


Arab nations offered to pay for Syria strike: Kerry
Washington (AFP) Sept 04, 2013 - Arab nations have offered to help pay for any US military intervention in Syria, Secretary of State John Kerry told lawmakers Wednesday as he sought support for missile strikes.

"With respect to Arab countries offering to bear the cost and to assist, the answer is profoundly yes, they have. That offer is on the table," Kerry said as he appeared before a House of Representatives panel.

The offer was "quite significant," he said.

"Some of them have said that if the United States is prepared to go do the whole thing the way we've done it previously in other places, they'll carry that cost. That's how dedicated they are to this."

But he stressed: "Obviously, that is not in the cards and nobody is talking about it, but they are talking about taking seriously getting this job done."

He was appearing before the House Foreign Affairs committee on the second day of the administration's blitz on Capitol hill to persuade lawmakers to approve limited military strikes.

Washington has led charges that the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad unleashed sarin gas on August 21 against the residents of a Damascus suburb killing what a US intelligence report said was some 1,400 people.

President Barack Obama has insisted that Assad's regime has crossed a red line against the use of such horrific weapons and should be punished and his military capability degraded.

But in a sign of the depth of opposition involvement in Syria, anti-war demonstrators held up red-stained hands behind Kerry's head in a silent protest during his testimony.

Lawmakers are now drafting a resolution to go before Congress which would give the US administration a 60-day deadline for military intervention, which could be extended once for 30 more days. It would also bar any American boots on the ground.

Asked if the time limit was acceptable to administration, Kerry said it would be preferable to have "a trigger in there" if Assad used chemical weapons again.

He indicated that a move to give the White House a further 60 days every time such arms were used would be acceptable.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee meanwhile held a three-hour, classified session to try to thrash out a draft resolution after Republican veteran Senator John McCain appeared to balk at the plan because he felt it did not go far enough.

Moscow warned on Wednesday that any US Congress approval for a military strike against Syria without UN approval would represent an "aggression" and that such action could have far-reaching nuclear security implications.

The Kremlin's stark language came as it demanded "convincing" proof that the regime of Bashar al-Assad was responsible for using chemical weapons against its own people.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said it would be unacceptable for the West to go ahead with military action against Damascus without UN Security Council approval, according to Russian news agencies.

"Only the UN Security Council can give approval for the use of force against another state," Putin told members of the board of human rights in the Kremlin prior to a meeting of the G20 in Saint Petersburg.

"Any other ways to justify the use of force against another sovereign and independent state are unacceptable and cannot be qualified as anything other than aggression.

"But Syria, as we know, does not attack the United States, it can therefore be no question of defence."

Earlier in the afternoon the Russian president suggested Russia could approve military strikes against Syria -- if the West presented watertight evidence of chemical weapons crimes.

Putin said the West needed to put forward cast-iron proof of the circumstances of the attack, which some Russian officials have previously blamed on rebels seeking to discredit the regime.

"If there is evidence that chemical weapons were used, and by the regular army,... then this evidence must be presented to the UN Security Council. And it must be convincing," Putin said.

If there was clear proof of what weapons were used and who used them, Russia "will be ready to act in the most decisive and serious way", he said.

However, on Wednesday evening, Russia's foreign ministry warned that military intervention in Syria could have "catastrophic" consequences for nuclear security.

"The escalation of the situation around Syria is of particular concern since an action against the country could reach sensitive targets from the viewpoint of nuclear safety," said a statement from ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich.

"If weapons fell on a mini-reactor in the suburbs of Damascus it could have catastrophic consequences: a possible contamination of land by highly enriched uranium and other radioactive materials," he said, adding it would be "impossible to guarantee control of nuclear material".

The United States has indicated it is prepared to go ahead with military action without UN approval, but President Barack Obama is first seeking approval from Congress which will push back the timetable until after the G20 meet which begins Thursday.

Speaking in Sweden ahead of travelling to the G20, Obama said he hoped Putin would change his position on Syria.

Secretary of State John Kerry and Pentagon chief Chuck Hagel on Tuesday in the Senate defended Obama's announcement of "limited" punitive strikes on Syria, but not before getting a green light from Congress.

The US, along with France, is trying to establish an international coalition for a military response against Damascus, which it holds culpable for a chemical weapons attack that killed hundreds in Damascus suburbs on August 21.

The conflict has so far claimed 110,000 lives, according to NGOs, and the UN estimates two million Syrian refugees have left the country.

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