McCain sneaks into Syria, meets rebels
Republican Senator John McCain, a staunch advocate of US military aid to the Syrian opposition, has made a surprise visit to war-torn Syria and met with rebels. The controversial move comes as Russia and the US are trying to set up a peace conference.
According to a report by the Daily Beast, Arizona Senator McCain
crossed into Syria form Turkey with General Salem Idris, who
leads the Supreme Military Council of the Free Syrian Army, and
stayed there for several hours before returning back. The senator
met with assembled leaders of Free Syrian Army units in both
Turkey and Syria.
Idris told the Daily Beast "We need American help to have
change on the ground; we are now in a very critical
situation."
A senior State Department official has confirmed that the senator
did "cross into Syrian territory" but referred all
questions to McCain's office. McCain’s spokesman confirmed that
the visit took place but declined to give any details.
The move had come shortly before the EU agreed to end its arms
embargo on Syrian rebels on Monday. Last week, a US Senate panel
voted overwhelmingly to send weapons to forces fighting the
Syrian government, underlining growing sentiment among lawmakers
for a change in the US approach to the Syrian conflict.
Meanwhile Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and US Secretary
of State John Kerry have met in Paris where they are discussing
the upcoming Geneva peace conference on Syria.
Lavrov, emerging from the talks said that a peace conference on
Syria was a “tall order,” but expressed hope that "when
the United States and the Russian Federation take this kind of
initiative, the chances for success are there."
Kerry spoke for both countries when he said they were committed
to upholding the principles outlined in the Geneva Communique of
2012, which proposed a transitional government to be elected by
mutual consent between the government of Bashar Assad and the
Syrian opposition.
McCain’s actions are a dangerous provocation reminiscent of his actions on Iraq and Libya, says independent researcher and writer Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich. She adds that under the US Constitution, one of the things that is considered treason is to promote or to bring about war.
"McCain did the same thing for Iraq. He was a part of a Committee for the Liberation of Iraq and he met with the Iraqi opposition and we saw the war there. He was all for this Libyan opposition group.”
“McCain does not serve the interests of the American people or the world at large,” she told RT.
It remains unclear if the Arizona senator and an outspoken critic of Obama’s handling on Syria crisis had informed the White House about his plans to visit Syria.
However Sepahpour-Ulrich does not believe the Obama administration was unaware of the McCain’s move.
“I don’t think that Senator McCain would take it upon himself to go to Syria and meet with the opposition had he not had a nod from the government otherwise he would be locked up the minute he returns because he is acting against America’s interest if indeed that’s America’s interest.”
The researcher claims that we are seeing two sides here - “We are seeing the government, the administration, Obama, trying to play the nice guy. But everything that is going on is what had led up to all the other wars in the region.”
“I don’t think they want peace – peace doesn’t serve them.”