PARIS (AP) --
France's government offers a preview Wednesday of what the Obama
administration faces next week, as lawmakers debate the wisdom and
necessity of a military response to a chemical weapons attack in Syria
that killed hundreds.
Shoring up support for a
military response, French officials said a punitive military response
would help shift the balance in a 2 1/2-year-old civil war that was
tipping in favor of Bashar Assad.
"If you want
a political solution you have to move the situation. If there's no
sanction, Bashar Assad will say `that's fine, I'll continue what I'm
doing,'" France's foreign minister, Laurent Fabius, told France Info
radio Wednesday morning, hours ahead of the debate.
As
the Obama administration worked to build its own support ahead of the
Congress vote, the U.S. and Israel conducted a joint missile test
Tuesday in the eastern Mediterranean in an apparent signal of military
readiness. In the operation, a missile was fired from the sea toward the
Israeli coast to test the tracking by the country's missile defense
system.
But Russian President Vladimir Putin,
one of Assad's most vocal supporters, warned the West against taking
one-sided action in Syria, although he told The Associated Press that
Russia had frozen new shipments to Syria of an air defense missile
system.
There's a major difference between the
French debate and the one coming up on Capitol Hill: President Francois
Hollande has an easy majority in the French parliament, and he neither
needs nor - unlike President Barack Obama - wants their vote of
approval. But with the prospect of military action against Assad facing
dwindling support internationally, the government has been building its
case.
The U.S. and France accuse the Syrian
government of using chemical weapons in an Aug. 21 attack on rebel-held
suburbs of Damascus that killed hundreds of people. Obama and Hollande
are pushing for a military response to punish Assad for his alleged use
of poison gas against civilians - though U.S. officials say any action
will be limited in scope, not aimed at helping to remove Assad.
Putin
said Russia "doesn't exclude" supporting a U.N. resolution on punitive
military strikes if it is proved that Damascus used poison gas on its
own people, but he questioned the proofs released by Britain, the United
States and France as part of their efforts to build international
support.
Any proof needs to go before the
Security Council, Putin told The Associated Press. "And it ought to be
convincing. It shouldn't be based on some rumors and information
obtained by special services through some kind of eavesdropping, some
conversations and things like that."
Fabius, the French foreign minister, said Syria would certainly come up at this week's G-20 meeting in Russia.
"We
will discuss with the Russians, because they are an important player in
the region. Up until now they've been blocking things. If there's been
an evolution that would be very desirable," Fabius said.
On
Tuesday, the White House won backing for military action from two
powerful Republicans - House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner and
House majority leader Eric Cantor.
In Syria,
Al-Baath newspaper, the mouthpiece of the country's ruling Baath party,
slammed U.S. senators and members of the Congress for their support.
An
editorial in the paper's Wednesday edition branded the American
lawmakers who backed military action in Syria as "advocates of war and
terrorism."
"When the Obama administration
seeks a broader mandate from the Congress, which it basically in no need
of, this means that it prepares itself for what is bigger and more
dangerous," the paper said.
In Paris, Hollande
said that the U.S. vote "will have consequences on the coalition that
we will have to create." He did not specify whether that meant a
military coalition.
Fabius on Wednesday acknowledged the U.S. vote was crucial.
"If
the United States backed off - which I don't plan on, but anything can
happen - this type of action wouldn't be possible and so we would have
to consider the Syrian question in another way," he said.
Syria's
parliament speaker sent a letter to his counterparts in France ahead of
Wednesday's debate, urging them not to make any "hasty" decisions. The
office of Assembly President Claude Bartolone confirmed receipt of the
letter and promised a public response later Wednesday.
The
Syrian lawmakers sent a similar letter to Britain ahead of a
parliamentary vote there that came down against military action.
Since
the outbreak of the Syria conflict in March 2011, the two sides have
fought to a stalemate, though the Assad regime has retaken the offensive
in recent months. Rebel fighters control large rural stretches in
northern and eastern Syria, while Assad is holding on to most of the
main urban areas.
French government
spokeswoman Najat Vallaud-Belkacem said punitive action in Syria would
"re-balance" the situation on the ground.
The
Syrian conflict, which began as a popular uprising against Assad in
March 2011, later degenerated into a civil war that has killed more than
100,000 people.
The U.N. refugee agency said Tuesday that the number of Syrians who have fled the country has surpassed the 2 million mark.
Along
with more than four million people displaced inside Syria, this means
more than six million Syrians have been uprooted, out of an estimated
population of 23 million.
Antonio Guterres,
the head of the Office for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, said
Syria is hemorrhaging an average of almost 5,000 citizens a day across
its borders, many of them with little more than the clothes they are
wearing. Nearly 1.8 million refugees have fled in the past 12 months
alone, he said.
The agency's special envoy,
actress Angelina Jolie, said "some neighboring countries could be
brought to the point of collapse" if the situation keeps deteriorating
at its current pace. Most Syrian refugees have fled to Jordan, Lebanon
and Turkey.
---
Associated
Press writers Karin Laub in Beirut, Daniel Estrin in Jerusalem, Lori
Hinnant, Sylvie Corbet and Jamey Keaten in Paris, John Danisziewski,
Lynn Berry and Vladimir Isachenkov in Novo-Ogaryovo, Russia, and Lolita
C. Baldor in Washington contributed to this report.
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