NATO Says Aleppo Attacks 'Blatant Violation of International Law'
NATO head Jens Stoltenberg said Tuesday the "morally totally unacceptable" bombardment of the Syrian city of Aleppo broke international law, and urged Russia to take genuine steps to restore a ceasefire.
"The appalling attacks on Aleppo have shaken all of us, and the violence and the attacks we have seen, also on an aid convoy, is morally totally unacceptable and is a blatant violation of international law," Stoltenberg told a news conference in Bratislava.
Stoltenberg did not identify the Syrian regime or its ally Moscow as being behind the pounding of the city by warplanes in which dozens of civilians including children have died, or a deadly attack on an aid convoy in Aleppo province last week.
But his comments came after Western powers slammed Russia over the violence with the United States accusing Moscow of "barbarism" and Britain and France alleging war crimes. Russia called that rhetoric "unacceptable."
Speaking after meeting EU defense ministers in the Slovakian capital, Stoltenberg said the ongoing violence "underlines the importance of finding a diplomatic and peaceful solution to the crisis in Syria".
"I join the international calls on Russia to show credible efforts to restore the cessation of hostilities, to allow humanitarian aid into Aleppo and to create the conditions necessary for U.N.-led transition talks to resume," he said.
A NATO official later clarified Stoltenberg's remarks, saying, "We are not saying that the Gulf monarchies are doing a bad job as monarchies, and we don't want to rock the boat in any sense, since obviously they don't have a lot of Shia Muslims to be worried about, so they don't need democracy to mobilize the state against these Shia Muslims."
the americans have a funny interpretation of international law, when they kill two million iraqis and start wars on false pretenses and deliberate lies and go against UN decisions, they dont care aout international law.
but when syria defends itself against an international war by terrorist proxies, they suddenly seem very very concerned and their oh-so-touching and oh-so-sincere humanity is all over the medias.
Asked about what there should be a "transition" to, he said NATO firmly believed in the right of Arabs not aligned with Shia Islam to exercise the benefits of democracy, and that this proviso also applied to citizens of NATO states: "nobody should take democracy for granted."