Times of Oman

‘UK has not dropped plans for vote on Syria air strikes’

Keen to avoid a repeat of his 2013 defeat over air strikes against Assad, Cameron has been trying to build cross-party support for extending British strikes to Syria from Iraq

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LONDON: Prime Minister David Cameron believes Britain should do more to tackle extremist militants in Syria and has not dropped plans to seek parliament­ary approval for air strikes there, his spokeswoma­n said on Tuesday.

She spoke after several newspapers said he had dropped the plans after failing to get enough backing. They also cited Russia’s move to support President Bashar Al Assad by bombing IS militants in Syria as a complicati­ng factor.

Keen to avoid a repeat of his 2013 defeat over air strikes against Assad, Cameron has been trying to build cross-party support for extending British strikes to Syria from Iraq.

He has a slim majority in par- liament and, with some of his own Conservati­ves opposed to strikes, he needs to win support from the opposition Labour Party now led by anti-war campaigner Jeremy Corbyn.

Cameron’s spokeswoma­n Helen Bower denied the vote had been shelved. “He has always been clear that he thinks there is a case for doing more to tackle the threat from ISIL, and that we would only go back to the House (of Com- mons) on this issue if there was clear consensus and that remains the case,” she said. “You can’t put a time scale on the vote.”

She said the government believed the situation in Syria would ultimately be resolved by political means and, along with allies, it was trying to “inject a bit more momentum into that”.

In France, President Francois Hollande said his government would continue its air strikes in Syria and would hold a defence council meeting to discuss the matter on Thursday.

“Every time we have informatio­n on training camps where there are jihadists, terrorists, who could at some point threaten our country, we strike,” he told Europe 1 radio.

The reports about Cameron’s plans came as an influentia­l committee of lawmakers warned Britain should not extend its air strikes into Syria until there is a coher- ent internatio­nal strategy with a “realistic” chance of defeating the militants. “In the absence of such a strategy, taking action to meet the desire to do something is still incoherent,” parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee said in a report published on Tuesday.

The committee, chaired by Conservati­ve parliament­arian Crispin Blunt, said the government should not seek approval until it gives details of its plans.

It called on the government to explain how British involvemen­t would improve the chances of the internatio­nal coalition’s success, warned about the legal ambiguity of taking action without a UN Security Council Resolution and asked which ground forces would support Britain’s air effort.

Blunt said there was now an “alarming range” of internatio­nal actors involved in Iraq and Syria and there was no expectatio­n British interventi­on would be militarily decisive.

“These forces desperatel­y need coordinati­ng into a coherent strategy and that is where our efforts should be focused,” he said.

On Friday 17 countries, the European Union and the United Nations called for a nationwide truce in Syria’s civil war at peace talks in Vienna, attended for the first time since the conflict began in 2011 by Assad’s ally Iran.

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— AFP CONFLICT: A group of coalition forces, which includes People’s Protection Units (YPG), Women’s Protection Units (YPJ), Sutoro militia, a pro-government Syriac Christian movement, and other forces, monitor the area in Al Hol in the Syrian Hasakeh...
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