US says reviewing all options on Syria
You cannot make reasoned decisions without doing intense
analysis and operational planning - Clinton:
US: The United States said Monday it has not ruled out any
option to bring about the departure of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad,
following renewed speculation about a possible no-fly zone.
White House spokesman Jay Carney was asked about comments by
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Turkey that sparked a new round of
questions about a stepped-up Western role in the violence-wracked country.
“The president and his team have ruled out no option as we
try to bring about, with all of our partners and with the Syrian people, the
diplomatic transition that is so desperately needed in Syria,” he said. But
Carney did not explicitly refer to a no-fly zone and insisted the current US
approach -- of aiding rebels with non-military supplies as well as imposing
sanctions on the regime -- was putting pressure on Assad.
“We review all options as you would expect and will continue
to do so,” he said, in comments which did not seem to mark a new departure for
US policy.
On Saturday, Clinton was asked after talks with Turkish
Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu whether operational planning being conducted
by Washington and its allies included a possible no-fly zone to protect Syrian
civilians. “The issues you posed in your question are exactly the ones the
minister and I agreed need greater in-depth analysis,” she said in Istanbul. “It
is one thing to talk about all kinds of potential actions, but you cannot make
reasoned decisions without doing intense analysis and operational planning,”
she added. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said Monday that the
United States wanted to work with the opposition to speed up the fall of Assad.
“In the context of that, the secretary spoke about
operational planning -- contingency planning -- that we are doing with the
Turkish government, looking at how we can support those on the ground who are
trying to hasten the day without ourselves making the suffering worse,” Nuland
told reporters.
Clinton, who has returned to Washington, will spend the week
consulting with additional countries about Syria, Nuland said. Washington
insists Assad must leave office as part of any solution to the 17-month-old civil
conflict in Syria, which has left more than 21,000 dead. But there appears to
be little appetite in Western capitals for another military intervention in the
Middle East, even the imposition of an aerial exclusion zone like that imposed
in Libya by NATO last year.
US military officers have warned that the imposition of a
no-fly zone could quickly escalate into a broader intervention, as it did in
Libya.
The Pentagon on Monday said the Syrian regime was employing
more air power in its war with the rebels.
“We've seen a very troubling and despicable uptick in
attacks from the air, perpetrated by the Syrian regime,” Pentagon spokesman
George Little told reporters. AFP
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