A Syrian rebel leader plans to visit London to
beg Foreign Secretary William Hague to support British and American military
action against President Assad, British Daily mail reported.
The plea
comes after a chemical attack, apparently by Assad’s forces, killed hundreds of
people including children last week.
General
Salim Idriss, head of the Free Syrian Army (FSA), is expected to arrive shortly,
amid growing pressure on the international community to arm the rebels or
launch air strikes against Assad’s forces, the newspaper said.
Mr Hague
said the atrocity in Damascus was ‘not something that a humane and civilised
world can ignore’.
Well-placed
diplomatic sources say General Idris is likely to challenge Mr Hague to match
his words with deeds and provide what he says would be ‘game-changing’
firepower.
Prime
Minister David Cameron was due to speak to US President Barack Obama yesterday
to discuss their response to the massacre.
The General
fiercely criticised Mr Cameron last month after the Prime Minister appeared to
backtrack on indications that he was ready to arm the rebels.
General
Idriss said: ‘What are our friends in the West waiting for? Soon there will be
no FSA to arm. The Islamic groups will take control of everything, and that is not in the interests of Britain.’
He added: ‘I
have not had the opportunity to ask David Cameron personally if he will leave
us alone to be killed.’
There are
several means by which the FSA could be helped, but all entail risks.
General Idriss has repeatedly asked to be given
more powerful weapons, but there are fears they could end up in the hands of Al
Qaeda insurgents.
Other
experts have urged air strikes on chemical weapons bases, but these could prove
ineffective.
Alternatively,
the RAF could help impose a no-fly zone or create narrower ‘safe corridors’
that would allow refugees to escape, but there are concerns that Western jets
would be hit by anti-aircraft batteries.
A full-scale
invasion is highly unlikely after the ill-fated intervention in Iraq.
General Idriss, 55, has vowed that he will not allow US-supplied weapons to fall into the hands of extremists.
He became
leader of the FSA after his defection from the Syrian Army in July 2012. A
German-trained electronics professor, he is seen as a leading moderate in the
opposition.
He has also
said he will return the weapons when the conflict is over, a claim that some
commentators have viewed with scepticism.
However,
international military intervention of some kind has become significantly more
likely since the massacre.
Mr Hague dismissed claims by President Assad
that the rebels could have been responsible, saying: ‘I think the chances of
that are vanishingly small. We do believe this is a chemical attack by the
Assad regime on a large scale.’
Mr Hague has
called on President Assad to give UN chemical weapons inspectors access to the
site of the atrocity.
Last year,
President Obama said the use of chemical weapons by Assad would cross a ‘red
line’ and force a US response.
He said last
week the massacre was a ‘big event of grave concern’, but added the US was
seeking confirmation chemical weapons had been used.
Source:Daily Mail
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