Amid
Airstrikes in
Syria,
Coordination
with Aid
Workers
UNanswered
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, September
23, updated
with transcript --
After a day of
UN
formalities,
and with John
Kerry with the
Syrian
Opposition
Coalition at
the
Metropolitan
Museum of Art,
the US started
bombing in
Syria, see
below. It
cited help
from five Arab
Kingdoms in
hitting ISIL
by Raqqa, but
went it alone
against the
Khorosan group
near Aleppo.
On September
23 when UK
Development
Secretary
Justine
Greening spoke
about aid to
Syria, Inner
City Press
asked her if
these
airstrikes
were
coordinated in
any way with
humanitarians
on the ground,
amid reports
one was close
to a hospital.
Greening
declined to
get into the
specifics,
saying the UK
was not part
of the
airstrike but
supported
them. She said
that the
spread of ISIL
had hurt
humanitarian
efforts, which
is certain.
From
the UK Mission
transcript:
Inner
City Press:
What is the
status of aid
operations by
Raqqa and
Aleppo where
these strikes
took place?
Are aid
workers or
organizations
given some
kind of prior
notice or is
it the idea
that it missed
them.
Apparently one
was by a
hospital. I’m
just wondering
what the
interplay is
between the
airstrikes and
the
humanitarian
situation is?
Justine
Greening: I
don’t think I
can comment
into any of
the detail
you’ve just
requested. And
obviously, as
I just pointed
out, the UK
wasn’t part of
those
airstrikes.
However, I
think we’ve
all been
greatly
concerned by
the advance of
ISIL and the
pressure and
the risks that
was posing
posing on the
ability of the
humanitarian
community to
get aid to
people. It’s a
breach of
international
to stop
assistance
from getting
to civilians
who are in
need. And
therefore we
condemn any
and indeed all
actors who
stop that,
whether it’s
the Syrian
government,
whether it has
been some of
the extremist
militia
groups, or
more recently
ISIL itself.
But why not
coordinate
with aid
workers on the
ground?
And what about
this Khorosan
group, until
now mentioned
only once in a
White House
briefing?
On a
background
White House
press call, a
Senior
Administration
Official said
that the US
long told
Russia that
its support
for Assad
would lead to
the rise of
extremism.
Unsaid was
Russia's
position that
US allies'
support of
fighters in
Syria led to
extremism.
Tellingly, Ban
Ki-moon has
yet to speak
about the air
strikes. Inner
City Press
asked his
spokesman for
a comment on
the night of
September 22,
and saw this
spokesman on
September 23.
But no answer.
Inner City
Press has put
these
questions to
Dujarric:
Press
questions on
deadline: what
is Ban
Ki-moon's
response to US
on the record
(and
reportedly
Saudi Arabia,
Jordan and
UAE) bombing
in Syria
without
consent of
Syrian
government, or
approval of
the UN
Security
Council?
Separately,
was Ban
Ki-moon
informed in
advance?
Hours later,
no response
from the UN.
Their climate
change-fest,
complete with
a dozen
scheduled
press
conferences on
September 23,
would now
provide
ground-cover.
Earlier
this arrive,
on the record
from Rear Adm.
John Kirby,
Pentagon Press
Secretary:
"I can confirm
that U.S.
military and
partner nation
forces are
undertaking
military
action against
ISIL
terrorists in
Syria using a
mix of
fighter,
bomber and
Tomahawk Land
Attack
Missiles.
Given that
these
operations are
ongoing, we
are not in a
position to
provide
additional
details at
this time. The
decision to
conduct theses
strikes was
made earlier
today by the
U.S. Central
Command
commander
under
authorization
granted him by
the commander
in chief. We
will provide
more details
later as
operationally
appropriate.""
The US was
proud it did
not
coordinate.
Obama would
cometo New
York on
September 23.
Would it be a
coronation?
On
September 19
while the UN
Security
Council's
meeting on
Iraq went on,
Canada's
Foreign
Minister John
Baird came out
to take
questions at
the Council
stakeout.
Inner City
Press asked
him if Canada
thinks that
for airstrikes
in Syria
against ISIL,
the consent of
the Assad
government or
of the
Security
Council should
be sought.
Baird said
that on
"intervention
in Syria there
are two views.
One could say
that every
country has a
right to
defend itself.
Iraq is being
attack by
terrorists in
the
neighboring
country. We
take great
issue with
Assad... That
has yet to be
determined."
The Syrian
Opposition
Coalition, it
emerges, will
hold a press
conference
inside the UN
building on
September 22.
But it will
not be a UN
press
conference -
instead, it
will be in the
clubhouse the
UN gives to
what has
become its UN
Censorship
Alliance
(having tried
to get the
investigative
Press thrown
out of the UN),
publicized
only to those
who pay money
to UNCA in
dues.
Why not go
through the
front door,
and have a
member state
like Canada
sponsor the
Syrian
Coalition's
Hadi Al Bahra
in the UN
Press Briefing
Room, as
others do?
We'll have
more on this.
On September
18, the day
after the US
House of
Representatives
voted to arm
and train
"moderate"
rebels in
Syria, the
Syrian
Opposition
Coalition said
training 5,000
will not be
enough. An
hour later,
they put out a
statement
about ISIL
stranding
7,000
civilians on
the Syrian -
Turkish
border:
"As
the 'Islamic
State'
intensifies
shelling on
Ayn al Arab
(Kobanę in
Kurdish) in
northern
Syria,
thousands of
people remain
trapped in the
towns and
villages in
the area. As
as a result,
activists
reported a
mass exodus of
civilians from
the
neighboring
villages of
Kaalak, Zark
Qumshi,
Zalkhek, and
Turaman. The
Syrian
Coalition
condemns
ISIS's brutal
tactics and
calls on
Turkish
authorities to
open borders
in the area
and provide
refuge to
those fleeing
from the
barbaric
group. More
than 7000
civilians are
reported to be
stranded along
the Turkish
Syrian borders
since
Thursday, most
of them women
and children."
Echoes
of Mount
Sinjar in Iraq
- and that led
to airstrikes.
Earlier on
September 18,
the Syrian
Coalition put
this out:
"Abdelahad
Astepho,
member of the
political
committee,
said that the
US Congress’s
vote in favor
of President
Obama’s plan
to train and
equip the Free
Syrian Army is
'a step in the
right
direction
though it was
made late.
Limiting the
training and
equipment
program to
5,000 FSA
fighters is
not enough to
counter the
threat of the
Assad regime
and ISIS.
Therefore, it
is necessary
to increase
the number of
trainees to
solve the
whole problem
of terrorism
once and for
all. Moreover,
limiting the
program to
this small
number may
prolong the
bloody
conflict, thus
prolonging the
suffering of
the Syrian
people.'
Astepho calls
on the US
Senate 'to
back the
training and
equipment
program and
for its
immediate
implementation,
as any delay
will cost
Syrians more
lives. Any
delay in the
implementation
of this plan
will lead to
further
expansion of
the terror
practiced by
the Assad
regime and the
terrorist
group ISIS.'"
This
after on the
Senate floor
just who these
"moderate"
rebels are was
still being
questioned. If
5000 is not
enough, how
many would be?
To the Senate
Foreign
Relations
Committee on
September 17,
former
Ambassador Bob
Ford said
there are
80,000
"non-Nusra,
non-ISIL"
rebels. Where
do these
figures come
front?
Back on
September 13,
hours after US
President
Barack Obama's
speech, the
Syrian
Coalition put
out a press
release
requesting
airstrikes and
cash from
Congress,
pronto.
While
more than two
dozen
countries
pledged
support for
Iraq against
the Islamic
State in the
Security
Council on
September 19,
who would
speak on UNTV
about it?
For
more than an
hour the media
was told that
French foreign
minister
Laurent Fabius
would be
“coming to the
stakeout” to
take questions
on UNTV. It
was pushed
back, then
when finally
Fabius emerged
he rushed
past the
stakeout into
the hallway,
where he spoke
only in French.
Update:
to be fair,
the French
Mission put
out this
transcript.
So too
with Turkey's
foreign
minister
Mevlut
Cavusoglu.
When he
emerged from
the Security
Council, he summoned
Turkish media
down the
hallway
for a private
stakeout. Some
non-Turkish
journalists
weren't
allowed to go,
something
protested by
the Free
UN Coalition
for Access.
But why not
openly take
questions?
The
three
on-camera
stakeouts that
occurred were
by Syria's
Bashar
Ja'afari,
Iraq's
Foreign
Minister
Jaafari
(no relation,
if that needs
to be said),
and Canada's
John Baird.
To the last of
these, Inner
City Press asked if
before any
bombing in
Syria consent
should be
sought from
Damascus or
the Council.
That has “yet
to be
determined,”
Baird replied.
Iraqi
FM Jaafari,
when Inner
City Press
asked if the
Coalition
should speak
with Syria,
seemed to
dodge the
question. But
at least he
took questions
on camera, as
did Syria's
Ja'afari.
Where were the
others? Is
this how GA
Week will be?
FUNCA in is on
the case,
including
about faux
UN press
conferences
like those
held in the
private club
handed out by
the UN to its
Censorship
Alliance.
That group tried to
get the
investigative
Press thrown
out of the UN,
now
masquerades on
media freedom.
This is how
the UN works.
Watch this
site.
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