US secretary of state says the US favors peaceful protest, nonviolent opposition, doesn't see Libya-style intervention.
By REUTERS
WASHINGTON - US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Friday Syria could slide into civil war but she did not foresee the the global community intervening in the same way it did in Libya."I think there could be a civil war with a very determined and well-armed and eventually well-financed opposition that is, if not directed by, certainly influenced by defectors from the army," Clinton told NBC news in an interview in Indonesia, where she was attending a regional summit.RELATED:Eleven killed in Syria on eve of Arab deadline No progress in Syria nuclear talks, IAEA chief says "We're already seeing that, something that we hate to see because we are in favor of a peaceful protest and a nonviolent opposition," she said.Clinton said, however, that she saw no prospect for the kind of coordinated international intervention that occurred in Libya, where a NATO-led coalition won a UN mandate to mount air strikes in support of rebels fighting Muammar Gaddafi."There is no appetite for that kind of action vis-a-vis Syria," Clinton said, pointing to regional moves by the Arab League and Turkey as key to persuading Syrian President Bashar Assad to halt the violence against civilians.The United States and the European Union have both imposed a series of targeted sanctions against Damascus. But UN sanctions are seen as unlikely given opposition from Russia and China, which last month vetoed a draft Security Council resolution condemning Syria.The Arab League has suspended Syria and set a Saturday deadline for it to comply with the Arab peace plan, which entails a military pullout from around restive cities and towns, threatening sanctions unless Assad acts to halt the violence..Clinton told CBS in a separate interview that it was clear Assad's days were numbered."Look, Assad's going to be gone; it's just a question of time. What we hope is that they avoid a civil war, that they avoid greater bloodshed, that they make the changes that they should have been making all along. And we think the Arab League pressure is probably the most effective pressure," she said.
Activists said Syrian security forces killed 11 people after weekly prayers on Friday, in the latest violence in the crackdown on protests, which the United Nations says has killed at least 3,500 people since March.