Turkey would join
any international coalition against Syria even if a wider consensus on action
cannot be reached at the U.N. Security Council, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu
was quoted as saying on Monday.
"We always prioritise acting together with the
international community, with United Nations decisions. If such a decision
doesn't emerge from the U.N. Security Council, other alternatives ... would
come onto the agenda," Davutoglu told the Milliyet daily.
"Currently 36-37 countries are discussing these
alternatives. If a coalition is formed against Syria in this process, Turkey
would take its place in this coalition."
Turkey has
emerged as one of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's most vocal critics during
the two-and-a-half year conflict, sheltering half a million refugees and
allowing the opposition to organise on its soil.
The NATO member
has criticised world powers for failing to take a decisive stance. The U.N. Security
Council has been hamstrung by the opposition of veto-wielding members, Russia
and China, to any firm action.
"From the outset, Turkey has argued that the international
community must not stand by in the face of the Assad regime's massacres,"
Davutoglu said.
"Leaving unpunished leaders and regimes which resort to
such practices undermines the deterrence of the international community. Those
who commit war crimes and crimes against humanity must definitely be
punished."
Reuters
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