The G 20 meeting in St Petersburg has further exposed and deepened
international divisions on Syria. President Barack Obama believes that
the Syrian government is responsible for last month’s chemical weapon
attack in Damascus, whereas as the Russian President is convinced that
the rebels staged this attack to discredit the Syrian government.
Today, chemical weapons use by any government would be considered
unpardonable because of the 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention(CWC) that
outlaws their production and use and enjoins destruction of exisiting
stocks. That Syria is not a signatory shields it technically from an
infringment, but, given the evolution of international humanitarian law,
a pre-meditated use of such weapons by a state even within its own
territory would not be internationally tolerated.
Which is why the facts on the ground must first be established
impartially in the Syrian case. Only then can a consensus be built on
steps to punish and deter those responsible. Only on-site inspection by a
UN team and its report can provide an objective basis to proceed.
Unilateral
America’s Syria policy, as well as those of its close allies, has
been one-sided from the start. They have sought a regime change in Syria
by providing the rebels with funds and arms. They have made public
statements repeatedly that President Assad’s days are numbered. Syrian
opposition leaders have been officially received and given political
recognition. The western media has generously purveyed unverified
stories of human right violations in Syria sourced from rebel outfits.
The Syrian President has been demonized incessantly. The good faith of
the US and others when they liberally accuse Syria of humanitarian
misdeeds lies eroded as a result.
Unfortunately, even before the UN inspectors could begin their work,
the US and its key allies determined that the Syrian regime was guilty.
Such alacrity in reaching this conclusion without physical presence and
investigation on the ground puzzles. Evidence from partisan rebel
sources can hardly be considered reliable. Are the powerful technical
means at US’s disposal sufficient to reach definitive conclusions so
quickly in a highly murky situation? And if its evidence is so
unimpeachable, why cannot it be fully shared with others?
After all, the stakes involved are consequential in terms of state
sovereignty, UN’s role and authority, peace and stability in a volatile
region and the humanitarian consequences of external military
intervention as Libya and Iraq showed. Russia has found the evidence
presented by the US unconvincing and queries the standard US response
that more cannot be shared as the intelligence is “classified”. US
claims to possess irrefutable evidence is contested by others because in
Iraq’s case the same intelligence sources purveyed pumped-up
information to make the case for intervention. The Russians, in turn,
have presented a detailed report which finger-points at the rebels for
the chemical weapons attack.
Growing Opposition
To make the UN report irrelevant to their decision to “punish”
President Assad, the US announced even before the team could begin its
work that its mandate was to determine if chemical weapons were used,
not who used them, besides alleging that the team was not given access
to the site for five days, and that constant bombardment of the area by
the Syrian military was intended to destroy all evidence. Failing to
make a case for intervention at St. Petersburg, the US and others are
now willing to wait till the UN report is submitted, but they have
effectively untied their hands already.
President Obama’s declared willingness to strike at Syria even
without UN approval confirms this. He is seeking US Congressional
approval as if that can replace UN approval and legitimize US action
against a third country with which the US is not at war and which has
not committed any act of aggression against it. President Putin has
declared that such Congress-approved US action would constitute
aggression and that US unilateralism will fuel insecurity globally.
President Obama claims that the “international community” wants
action against Syria seems to exclude Russia, China, India, Brazil,
South Africa and many others from its ambit. To their credit, NATO, the
EU and major countries like Germany do not support military action. The
Pope is opposed; the UN Secretary General has cautioned that action
without UN approval would be against international law.
Popular opinion even in the US, UK and France is against military
action, with the UK parliament restraining the Cameron government from
joining the US and many senior French politicians opposing military
intervention and pressing the government to seek parliamentary approval.
India’s Position
Too much focus on the US-Russia spat over Syria is distorting
perceptions about the merits of the Syrian situation. To argue that
Russia is responsible for the blockage in the UN Security Council
because it is either protecting its selfish interests or its position is
morally skewed begs the question whether the disinterested US stand is
fired with a superior moral purpose alone, in which Israel, Saudi
Arabia, Qatar, Turkey, Iran, the Hezbollah, the Shia-Sunni conflict are
non-existent factors.
The argument that if Assad goes unpunished, other dictators would use
chemical weapons and US interests and security are therefore threatened
is exaggerated. While Myanmar and Israel have not ratified the CWC,
only Angola, North Korea, Egypt, South Sudan and Syria have not signed
it. Unlike Syria, none of these countries is in the throes of a civil
war and the danger from North Korea is nuclear.
India’s position at St. Petersburg was correct: the use of chemical
weapons in Syria is deplorable if true, the responsibility for it should
be determined without bias and any action should be taken only with UN
approval.
Rendering justice is important but who has committed the crime should also be clear.
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