US acknowledges differences with India on Syria strike

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September 14, 2013

WASHINGTON: Acknowledging that India and the US have differing views on the issue of a military strike on Syria, the Obama administration has said that the UN Security Council needs to enforce international law, but it shouldn't be an impediment that can "protect somebody like Assad".

September 14, 2013

WASHINGTON: Acknowledging that India and the US have differing views on the issue of a military strike on Syria, the Obama administration has said that the UN Security Council needs to enforce international law, but it shouldn't be an impediment that can "protect somebody like Assad".

"Generally we recognize that India has been very reticent to support military action in general and has been very focused on the (United Nations) Security Council," a senior administration official told reporters in a media round table.

India has been opposed to unilateral military strike in any third country without the approval of the UN Security Council, while the US insists that as Russia has used its veto power to block any move by the Security Council, it is an obligation on the part of countries like US to hold the Bashar al-Assad regime responsible.

"I think part of the point is that the United States has expressed support for India's aspirations toward the Security Council. It's important that the Security Council can work," the official said.

"And so as India looks to take on that greater responsibility and as the US supports India in that effort, we'll continue to make the case that the Security Council has to be a vehicle to get things done and to enforce international law and it shouldn't be an impediment that can protect somebody like Assad," the official said.

"I think the point we would make to India is that sometimes the UN Security Council is unable to act because you have a veto wielding member in Russia that will block any action," the official said.

The US said that the Syria situation has forced it to confront a choice between "allowing an international law to be broken" and "taking action if necessary outside of the Security Council".

"And when confronted with this choice between allowing an international law to be broken through the use of chemical weapons because the Security Council chooses to do nothing about it or taking action if necessary outside of the Security Council – look we would always prefer to act within the Security Council…

"But we're not going to rule out the need to enforce consequences for the violation of international law outside. And it's just a difference, I think, we've had," the official said.


Courtesy: PTI