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Friday, September 6, 2013

Barack Obama says most G20 leaders agree Syrian President Bashar al-Assad behind chemical attack

Obama said he planned to
 speak to the American public about Syria on Tuesday as Congress considers his request for
 limited military action in Syria.
President Barack Obama said on Friday that most leaders of the G20 countries agree
 that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is responsible for using poison gas against civilians
 as the US leader tried to rally support at home and abroad for a military strike.
Obama said he planned to speak to the American public about Syria on Tuesday as Congress
 considers his request for limited military action in Syria.
Speaking to reporters at an international diplomatic summit, Obama said the leaders of the
 world's largest economies agreed that chemical weapons were used in Syria and that the
 international ban chemical weapons needs to be maintained. However, he said there was
 disagreement about whether force could be used in Syria without going through the United
Nations.
The United States has been unable to win UN Security Council approval for military action
 against Syria because of the opposition of veto-wielding Russia.
"The majority of the room is comfortable with our conclusion that Assad, the Assad government,
 was responsible for their use," he said at a news conference, adding that this is disputed by
 Russian President Vladimir Putin.
A number of countries believed that any military force needed to be decided at UN Security Council,
 a view he said he does not share. "Given Security Council paralysis on this issue, if we are
 serious about upholding a ban on chemical weapons use then an international response is
 required, and that will not come through Security Council action," he said.
Obama has been trying to rally support internationally and domestically for a limited military
 response to the chemical weapons attack on Syrian civilians August 21.

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