seriously - IS ANYTHING AT ALL BEING SAID HERE?
Tillerson:
‘Steps are underway’ to remove Assad from
power
in Syria
Dylan
Stableford
Secretary
of State Rex Tillerson said Thursday that there is “no doubt” Syrian President
Bashar Assad is responsible for the suspected chemical weapons attack that
killed dozens of people, including children, earlier this week — and that
diplomatic steps to remove him from power are underway.
“There
is no doubt in our minds and the information that we have supports that Syria
and the Syrian regime under the leadership of President Bashar al-Assad are
responsible for this attack,” Tillerson said in a press briefing at Palm Beach
International Airport. “And furthermore, I think it is very important that the
Russian government consider very carefully their continued support for the
Assad regime.”
Assad’s
“role in the future is uncertain, clearly,” Tillerson said. “And with the acts
that he has taken, it would seem there would be no role for him to govern.”
For
Assad to leave, the secretary said, would require an “international community
effort” that would include the defeat of the Islamic State group in Syria, stabilization
of the war-torn country and “a political process that would lead to Assad
leaving.”
When
asked if President Trump would be organizing an international coalition to
remove Assad, Tillerson said, “Those steps are underway.”
He
added: “We are considering an appropriate response for this chemical weapons
attack, which violates all previous U.N. resolutions, which violates
international norms and long-held agreements of parties including the Syrian
regime, the Russian government and all other members of the U.N. Security
Council.”
Speaking
to reporters aboard Air Force One, Trump suggested Assad may have to leave.
But
Trump declined to offer specifics when pressed on what the U.S. response would
be to the attack in Syria, saying only it “shouldn’t have happened, and it
shouldn’t be allowed to happen.”
At a
joint press conference with King Abdullah II of Jordan on Wednesday afternoon
in Washington, Trump condemned the attack, saying, “It
crossed a lot of lines for me.”
“A
chemical attack that was so horrific in Syria against innocent people,
including women, small children and even beautiful little babies. Their deaths
were an affront to humanity,” Trump said. “These heinous actions by the Assad
regime cannot be tolerated.”
Speaking
in Turkey last week, Tillerson said, “The status and the longer-term status of
President Assad will be decided by the Syrian people.”
Those
comments drew sharp criticism from some Republican lawmakers, including Arizona
Sen. John McCain, who called it “one of the more incredible statements I’ve ever heard.”
“Syrian
people cannot decide the fate of Assad or the future of their country when they
are being slaughtered by Assad’s barrel bombs, Putin’s aircraft and Iran’s
terrorist proxies,” McCain said in a statement. “U.S. policy
must reflect such basic facts.”
Florida
Sen. Marco Rubio said Tillerson’s remarks may have given Assad an opening to
carry out this week’s attack without fear of reprisal.
“In
essence [it’s] almost nodding to the idea that Assad was gonna get to stay in
some capacity,” Rubio said in a radio interview on Wednesday.
“I don’t think it’s a coincidence that a few days later we see this.”
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