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British FM eyes ‘military options’ in Syria

By AFP - Oct 13,2016 - Last updated at Oct 13,2016

LONDON — Britain should consider “military options” in Syria, but they are still a distant prospect and could only happen in a coalition with the United States, Foreign Minister Boris Johnson said Thursday.

“It is right now we should be looking again at the more kinetic, military options,” said Johnson, who is due to host talks on the conflict with other Western powers on Sunday.

“Whether that means we can get a coalition together fore more kinetic action now, I can’t prophesise,” he told a parliamentary committee.

The British parliament in 2013 voted against air strikes on President Bashar Assad’s forces.

It has since voted to approve air strikes but only against the Daesh terror group targets in Syria.

Some lawmakers have recently called for Britain to impose a no-fly zone in Syria to prevent Russian and Syrian forces bombing Aleppo.

Referring to military options, Johnson said: “We must be realistic about how these work and what is deliverable.

“You can’t do anything without a coalition, without doing it with the Americans. We’re still a pretty long day’s march from getting that.

“It doesn’t mean that discussions aren’t going on. They are,” he said.

“Most people, including John Kerry, feel that the process of discussion with the Russians has basically run out of road,” he said. 

Prime Minister Theresa May’s spokeswoman said the British premier would “weigh up very carefully” any military or other options put forward to end the crisis in Syria.

“Clearly when the government and parliament considered this before, there were concerns about a range of action.

“Since then, obviously the conflict has continued and we started taking action against Daesh,” she said.

“But I think the prime minister would weigh up very carefully any options that were put forward and the potential consequences of those,” she said.

Russia said on Thursday, it was prepared to secure safe passage for rebels to quit Syria’s Aleppo but kept up air strikes on the battleground city as world powers readied new truce talks.

 

Syria has been plunged into some of the worst violence of its five-year war since the collapse last month of a truce brokered by Washington and Moscow.

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