I Did Not See This Coming………
Something else I did not expect, MoveOn's ad on this is not lame
Russia opened up a possible diplomatic solution to the Syrian chemical weapons crisis on Monday with a pledge to persuade the Assad regime to hand over its chemical arsenal to international supervision to be destroyed.FWIW, the Syrians have appeared to welcome the proposal:
Russia's new initiative was announced by its foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, hours after the US secretary of state, John Kerry, suggested that the Syrian government could avert punitive US air strikes in retaliation for an alleged chemical attack on 21 August, if it surrendered "every single bit" of its arsenal by the end of the week.
However, Kerry added that Assad "isn't about to do it", and the state department hastily issued a clarification saying that apparent ultimatum was "rhetorical" rather than a concrete bargaining position.
But Lavrov appeared to seize on the idea as a means of averting US military intervention.
"If the establishment of international control over chemical weapons in that country would allow avoiding strikes, we will immediately start working with Damascus," he said.
"We are calling on the Syrian leadership to not only agree on placing chemical weapons storage sites under international control, but also on its subsequent destruction and fully joining the treaty on prohibition of chemical weapons," Lavrov said after a meeting with his Syrian counterpart, Walid al-Moallem.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's foreign minister on Monday said he welcomed Russia's proposal that Damascus hand over control of its chemical weapons arsenal to international supervision to avoid US military action.I am not one to favor the "eleventy dimensional chess" bullsh%$ put forward by the Obamabots out there, but this is a welcome development.
"I carefully listened to (Russian foreign minister) Sergei Lavrov's statement about it. In connection with this, I note that Syria welcomes the Russian initiative based on the Syrian leadership's concern about the lives of our nationals and the security of our country," Walid al-Muallem said in comments carried by Russian state news agency ITAR-Tass.
I'm not sure if it is luck or design.
The tough part will be insuring that the rebels get rid of their poison gas.
The Assad regime cannot be comfortable with disarming without that.
Of course, that would unmask the House of Saud's complicity in arming Jihadist rebels with chemical weapons, and I'm not sure that Prince Bandar bin Sultan would like to be labeled a war criminal.
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