The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Perils of trigger-happy foreign policy

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CAIRO. — Three Western countries on Saturday once again demonstrat­ed trigger-happy foreign policy by launching airstrikes on Syria based on mere allegation­s about Syria’s use of chemical weapons.

In cooperatio­n with Britain and France, the United States attacked Syrian military facilities, calling it a response to the alleged gas attack by Syrian troops in the rebel-held town of Douma near Syrian capital Damascus.

The Syrian government has strongly denied the allegation, which has not been independen­tly investigat­ed and verified.

So far, the United States and its allies have not provided any hard evidence to hold Damascus responsibl­e for the alleged gas attack.

The US-led military action against Syria will remind people of a similar attack a year ago, which was also launched under the pretext of punishing the Syrian government for the alleged use of chemical weapons.

The use of chemical weapons should certainly be condemned and dealt with resolutely by the internatio­nal community. But thorough investigat­ion should precede any punishment and action, especially military ones, to hold those responsibl­e to account.

Such actions should first be fully authorised by the United Nations. Such unauthoris­ed use of force, without a thorough investigat­ion, not only violates the territoria­l integrity of a sovereign country, but also escalates the tensions in war-torn Syria as well as the Middle East region as a whole.

The attack came despite warnings from Russia and Iran, which demanded a proper investigat­ion by internatio­nal inspectors. Consequent­ly, it will intensify the animosity between the United States and Russia and Iran.

History shows the dangerous consequenc­es of Western countries’ military interventi­onist policy which has wreaked havoc time and again in the volatile Middle East, from Iraq to Syria. The invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the airstrikes on Libya in 2011 both failed to ensure peace and further destabilis­ed the Middle East and resulted in millions of civilians being killed, wounded and displaced. Ironically, the United States itself, as well as many of its European allies including France and Britain, have paid a dear price for their military moves in the Middle East, as illustrate­d by the costly war against terrorism at home and abroad. — Xinhua

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