Well, those promoting US attacks on Syria are about to get their dreams to
come true.

An enemy of mine enemy is not my enemy.

The Children always suffer the most, the general population second, the
only winners are those who sell the weapons of war and those who profit
from the clean up. The US Specialized in regime change and the
installation of bloody dictatorships, the Democracy desiring
Revolutionists are about to see how good they had it with a restrained
Assad.

Time for those who carried nothing but the Wests Propaganda, to stockpile
the party supplies, it's what they do, not the sweet nothings the proclaim
they stand for- Scott

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/syria/10265765/Navy-ready-to-launch-first-strike-on-Syria.html

Navy ready to launch first strike on Syria
Britain is planning to join forces with America and launch military action
against Syria within days in response to the gas attack believed to have
been carried out by President Bashar al-Assad’s forces against his own
people.



By Tim Ross and Ben Farmer

10:00PM BST 25 Aug 2013

Royal Navy vessels are being readied to take part in a possible series of
cruise missile strikes, alongside the United States, as military
commanders finalise a list of potential targets.

Government sources said talks between the Prime Minister and international
leaders, including Barack Obama, would continue, but that any military
action that was agreed could begin within the next week.

As the preparations gathered pace, William Hague, the Foreign Secretary,
warned that the world could not stand by and allow the Assad regime to use
chemical weapons against the Syrian people “with impunity”.

Britain, the US and their allies must show Mr Assad that to perpetrate
such an atrocity “is to cross a line and that the world will respond when
that line is crossed”, he said.

British forces now look likely to be drawn into an intervention in the
Syrian crisis after months of deliberation and international disagreement
over how to respond to the bloody two-year civil war.
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    22 Aug 2013

The possibility of such intervention will provoke demands for Parliament
to be recalled this week.

The escalation comes as a direct response to what the Government is
convinced was a gas attack perpetrated by Syrian forces on a civilian
district of Damascus last Wednesday.

The Assad regime has been under mounting pressure to allow United Nations
inspectors on to the site to establish who was to blame for the atrocity.
One international agency said it had counted at least 355 people dead and
3,600 injured following the attack, while reports suggested the true death
toll could be as high as 1,300.

Syrian state media accused rebel forces of using chemical agents, saying
some government soldiers had suffocated as a result during fighting.

After days of delay, the Syrian government finally offered yesterday to
allow a team of UN inspectors access to the area. However, Mr Hague
suggested that this offer of access four days after the attack had come
too late.

“We cannot in the 21st century allow the idea that chemical weapons can be
used with impunity, that people can be killed in this way and that there
are no consequences for it,” he said.

The Foreign Secretary said all the evidence “points in one direction”, to
the use of illegal chemical agents by Assad regime forces.

A Government source added that even if UN inspectors visited the site of
the attack, “we would need convincing by the UN team that this was not the
regime’s attack because we believe everything points to the fact that it
was”.

Officials said the Assad regime has continued bombarding the area in the
days since the attack, making it likely that any evidence which could
establish who was responsible will have been destroyed.

Mr Cameron interrupted his holiday in Cornwall for talks with Mr Obama,
François Hollande, the French president, and Angela Merkel, the German
chancellor. After discussions via a secure telephone line over the
weekend, all the leaders agreed on the need for a “serious response”.
Government sources confirmed that military action was among the options
“on the table” but said no decisions had been taken.

The Prime Minister, however, is believed to have abandoned hope of
securing any further meaningful response from the UN amid opposition from
Russia.

Labour said Parliament must be recalled if Mr Cameron was considering a
military response, but Downing Street sources said this may not be
necessary as the Prime Minister retained the right to act urgently if
required.

Mr Cameron will face criticism for any British military involvement from
many MPs, who believe the Armed Forces are already overstretched and must
not be committed to another distant conflict.

Any retaliatory attack would be likely to be launched from the sea as the
Syrian air force is judged to be strong enough to shoot down enemy jets.

A Royal Navy nuclear-powered submarine is said to be in the region while a
number of warships recently left Britain for exercises in the
Mediterranean.

Commanders may also need to make use of the RAF base at Akrotiri, Cyprus
for air support.

If military action is approved, the first wave of missiles could start
within a week.

Military sources suggested the early hours of the 2011 campaign against
Col Muammar Gaddafi could form a template for any operation. The Libya
campaign began with a blitz of Tomahawk cruise missiles from US warships
and from a British Trafalgar Class submarine.

The Royal Navy declined to comment on the current positions of its
submarines, but they regularly pass through the area on their way to the
Suez Canal.

America’s Sixth Fleet currently has four guided missile destroyers in the
area, each of which could join the attack.

The Royal Navy also has its rapid response task force in the
Mediterranean. The group includes two frigates and the helicopter carrier
HMS Illustrious.

Navy sources said there were no plans to change the exercises, but the
group provided “strategic contingency” if needed.









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