Daily Mail

U.S. SNUBS BRITAIN AND GETS COSY WITH FRENCH

After Cameron’s Commons humiliatio­n, Obama prepares to blitz Syria without us

- James Chapman Political Editor

THE US delivered a stunning snub to Britain yesterday, lavishing praise on its ‘oldest ally’ France as the two countries prepared to launch missile strikes on Syria as early as this weekend. Secretary of State John Kerry paid tribute to the French for standing ready to join the US in confrontin­g the ‘thug and murderer’ President Bashar Assad.

In a White House address last night, Mr Kerry pointedly made no mention of Britain – despite the historic ‘special relationsh­ip’ between the two nations. Instead America was ‘confident and gratified’ it was ‘not alone’ in its will to act, he said, praising France, Australia and even Turkey for their support.

He called France ‘our oldest ally’, apparently forgetting the anger a decade ago at its refusal to support the Iraq War, which led to the French being satirised in US media as ‘cheese-eating surrender monkeys’.

In a further snub, Barack Obama later said he would prefer to take multilater­al action rather than acting alone but added: ‘Ultimately

we don’t want the world to be paralysed.’ In a coded swipe at the UK, the President said: ‘A lot of people think something should be done but nobody wants to do it.’

Insisting that the use of chemical weapons is the ‘ kind of offence that is a challenge to the world,’ he confirmed the US was considerin­g a ‘limited, narrow act’ intended to deter their use.

He left it no doubt that the US intends to press ahead with targeted strikes aimed at preventing Assad from launching another chemical weapons attack on his own people. Whitehall sources expect the strikes to begin this weekend.

‘We’re not considerin­g any open-ended commitment,’ he said. ‘We’re not considerin­g any “boots on the ground” approach.’

Mr Kerry said there was overwhelmi­ng evidence, from thousands of sources, that the Syrian government killed 1,429 people, including 426 children, in a nerve gas attack in a Damascus suburb last week.

He said the West’s ‘fatigue’ with conflict ‘does not absolve us of our responsibi­lity’, insisting: ‘History will judge us all extraordin­arily harshly, if we turn a blind eye to a dictator’s wanton use of weapons of mass destructio­n.’

Defence Secretary Philip Hammond said

‘We stand and watch’

last night it would be deeply ‘uncomforta­ble’ to see the Americans and French working together ‘while we stand and watch’.

‘I am disappoint­ed and I am slightly apprehensi­ve,’ he said. ‘We have a very close working relationsh­ip with the Americans. It is a difficult time for our armed forces, having prepared to go into this action, to then be stood down and have to watch while the US acts alone or perhaps the US acts with France.’

Amid bitter recriminat­ions in Westminste­r over Parliament’s refusal to back potential British involvemen­t in military action, Mr Cameron accused Labour leader Ed Miliband of ‘siding with’ Russia and ‘letting down America’.

Anger grew as, despite ordering his MPs to vote against action, Mr Miliband insisted Britain could not ‘wash its hands’ of the Syrian people.

As one Tory rebel said the vote had ‘relieved Britain of its imperial pretension’, Chancellor George Osborne called for a period of soul searching over Britain’s place in the world

Cabinet ministers are in despair at the self-inflicted wound delivered by the Prime Minister’s rush to recall Parliament and his doomed attempt to persuade MPs to back his judgment.

Thirty Tory rebels joined Labour MPs in rejecting even the ‘principle’ of Britain joining military action against Syria and another 32, including ten members of the Government, were absent.

With his authority at home and standing on the world stage badly damaged, Mr Cameron insisted that he still favoured a ‘robust response’ to Assad’s brutality.

‘We will continue to take a case to the United Nations, we will continue to work in all the organisati­ons we are members of – whether the EU, or Nato, or the G8 or the G20 – to condemn what’s happened in Syria,’ he said.

Foreign Secretary William Hague, who last night faced a call from UKIP to resign over the fiasco, was said to be ‘deeply depressed’ about the outcome, the first time since the 18th century that a prime minister had lost a vote on military interventi­on. Former Liberal Democrat leader Lord Ashdown said: ‘In more than 50 years of trying to serve my country in one form or another, I don’t think I’ve ever felt more depressed this morning or, indeed, more ashamed.’

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