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| US President Barack Obama: "I have a deeply held preference for peaceful solutions" |
US President Barack Obama has postponed a Congress vote on military
action in Syria, vowing to pursue diplomacy to remove the regime's
chemical weapons.
Damascus has admitted for the first time that it has chemical
weapons, and has agreed to abide by a Russian plan to hand over its
arsenal.
The US threatened strikes after a gas attack killed hundreds last month.
Mr Obama blames the regime and said the military would respond if talks failed. Syria blames rebels for the attack.
More than 100,000 people have died since the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad began in 2011.
The latest report by UN rights experts, released on
Wednesday, says torture and rape are widespread and war crimes are being
committed by both sides.
'Encouraging signs'
Russia announced the plan on Monday and Syria quickly responded, saying it "welcomed" the initiative.
Late on Tuesday, Foreign Minister Walid
Muallem then made the fullest public admission of the regime's stockpile
and a much clearer commitment to the Russian plan.
"We are ready to inform about the location of chemical
weapons, halt the production of chemical weapons, and show these objects
to representatives of Russia, other states and the United Nations," he
said.
"Our adherence to the Russian initiative has a goal of halting the possession of all chemical weapons."
Until Tuesday morning, Mr Obama's government had been lobbying hard for support in Congress for military strikes.
But surveys of politicians had shown he was unlikely to win the planned vote.
In a televised speech from the White House, President Obama said the
Russian plan and the regime's admission that it held chemical weapons
were "encouraging signs".
"It's too early to tell whether [the Russian plan] will
succeed, and any agreement must verify that the Assad regime keeps its
commitments," he said.
"But this initiative has the potential to
remove the threat of chemical weapons without the use of force,
particularly because Russia is one of Assad's strongest allies."
He said the diplomatic movements were in part a result of the
credible threat of US military action, but that he was willing to
postpone the Congress vote to allow diplomacy to be pursued.
He added: "Meanwhile, I've ordered our military to maintain
their current posture, to keep the pressure on Assad and to be in a
position to respond if diplomacy fails."
During his speech, Mr Obama restated the US position that Mr
Assad's government was responsible for the 21 August attack, which he
described as "sickening".
He said that such an attack was not only a violation of international law it was also a danger to US national security.
He confirmed earlier reports that US Secretary of State John
Kerry would meet his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov in Geneva on
Thursday, adding: "I will continue my own discussions with President
Putin."
There were heated debates at the UN on
Tuesday, with the UK, US and France calling for a timetable and the
consequences of a Syrian failure to comply with any resolution spelt
out.
Washington had warned it would "not fall for stalling tactics".
Russia said any draft resolution putting the blame on the
Syrian government was unacceptable and urged a non-binding declaration
backing its initiative.
Moscow also opposes any resolution that would be authorised
under Chapter VII of the UN charter, which would in effect sanction the
use of force if Syria failed in its obligations.


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