U.S. President Barack Obama says Syria’s government has lost its legitimacy by killing tens of thousands of its citizens in a bloody civil war, but he refused to describe the type of military support Washington will provide rebel forces.
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Speaking at a news conference Wednesday in Berlin with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Obama said reports the United States is heading into a new Middle East war in Syria are exaggerated.
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He reiterated his view that President Bashar al-Assad’s government had used chemical weapons, while acknowledging that Russia was skeptical on this point. Obama called for the United Nations to do “a serious investigation” into chemical weapons use.
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Meanwhile, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said anti-government rebels seized an army checkpoint on the Ariha-Latakia stretch of an international highway that goes through Syria’s largest city, Aleppo, to the Turkish border.
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Other rebel groups said opposition forces had seized three checkpoints and needed to capture three more to cut army access to the M5 highway.
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Observatory head Rami Abdelrahman said a successful rebel campaign could sever all ground supply routes into northern Syria from the Mediterranean coast, where many of the country’s most fortified military sites are located.
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In the port city of Latakia, part of Assad’s coastal stronghold where rebel attacks have been rare, opposition and state media said an arms store on a military site had exploded.
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Also Wednesday, Syrian troops backed by Lebanese Hezbollah fighters clashed with rebel forces south of a Damascus suburb that is home to a major Shi’ite Muslim shrine.
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Syrian media said government forces were able to push rebels out of one neighborhood near the ornate Sayida Zeinab shrine.
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Some information for this report was provided by AP, AFP and Reuters. [Read More]
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Source: VOA News: Economy and Finance
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