WASHINGTON — With evidence that powerful new weapons are flowing to both
the Syrian government and opposition fighters, the bloody uprising in Syria
has thrust the Obama administration into an increasingly difficult
position as the conflict shows signs of mutating into a full-fledged
civil war.
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said on Tuesday that the United States believed that Russia was shipping attack helicopters to Syria that President Bashar al-Assad
could use to escalate his government’s deadly crackdown on civilians
and the militias battling his rule. Her comments reflected rising
frustration with Russia, which has continued to supply weapons to its
major Middle Eastern ally despite an international outcry over the
government’s brutal crackdown.
“We have confronted the Russians about stopping their continued arms
shipments to Syria,” Mrs. Clinton said at an appearance with President
Shimon Peres of Israel. “They have, from time to time, said that we
shouldn’t worry; everything they’re shipping is unrelated to their
actions internally. That’s patently untrue.”
Russia insists that it provides Damascus only with weapons that can be used in self-defense.
As fighting intensified across Syria, there were reports that government
forces were using helicopters to fire on a rebel-held enclave in the
northwestern part of the country. The Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights, based in Britain, reported that more than 60 people had been
killed in the fighting, one-third of them government soldiers, while the United Nations released a report
saying that Syrians as young as 8 had been deployed by government
soldiers and pro-government militia members as human shields.
The fierce government assaults from the air are partly a response to
improved tactics and weaponry among the opposition forces, which have
recently received more powerful antitank missiles from Turkey, with the
financial support of Saudi Arabia and Qatar, according to members of the
Syrian National Council, the main opposition group in exile, and other
activists.
The United States, these activists said, was consulted about these
weapons transfers. Officials in Washington said the United States did
not take part in arms shipments to the rebels, though they recognized
that Syria’s neighbors would do so, and that it was important to ensure
that weapons did not end up in the hands of Al Qaeda or other terrorist
groups.
The increased ferocity of the attacks and the more lethal weapons on
both sides threatened to overwhelm diplomatic efforts to resolve the
crisis. Kofi Annan, the special envoy of the United Nations and the Arab
League, continued to pressure Damascus to halt the violence and to
respect a cease-fire. But Mrs. Clinton said that if Mr. Assad did not
stop the violence by mid-July, the United Nations would have little
choice but to end its observer mission in the country.
Mrs. Clinton, State Department officials said, continues to push for a
“managed transition,” under which Mr. Assad would step aside. Russia’s
role is viewed as critical, however, and Mrs. Clinton’s claims about
helicopter shipments are certain to increase tensions with Moscow less
than a week before President Obama is scheduled to meet with President
Vladimir V. Putin at a summit meeting in Mexico.
Administration officials declined to give details about the helicopters,
saying the information was classified. But Pentagon sources suggested
that Mrs. Clinton was referring to a Russian-made attack helicopter that
Syria already owns but has not yet deployed to crack down on opposition
forces. While these helicopters, known as Mi-24s, are flown by Syrian
pilots, Russia supplies spare parts and provides maintenance for them.
A Pentagon spokesman, Capt. John Kirby, said the precise status of the
helicopters was not as important as the violence being directed against
opponents of the Syrian government. “The focus really needs to be more
on what the Assad regime is doing to its own people than the cabinets
and the closets to which they turn to pull stuff out.” Captain Kriby
said. “It’s really about what they’re doing with what they’ve got in
their hand.”
The use of helicopters is contributing to a growing sense that, as Hervé Ladsous, the head of United Nations peacekeeping operations, put it, the fighting could be described as a civil war.
“The government of Syria lost some large chunks of territories and
several cities to the opposition and wants to retake control of these
areas,” Mr. Ladsous told reporters at the United Nations. “So now we
have confirmed reports not only of the use of tanks and artillery, but
also attack helicopters.”
Members of the Syrian National Council are wary of the term civil war
because it suggests that the conflict is somehow an even match.
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