http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/vi ... ing.416319Turkey mulling Nato ties over Syria shelling
Turkey is considering invoking the Nato alliance’s mutual defence treaty over “outrageous” Syrian shelling along its border, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said yesterday.
“Turkey is considering formally invoking Article Four of the North Atlantic Treaty,” Mrs Clinton said, at a meeting in Paris of senior envoys from countries seeking to pressure Bashar al-Assad’s Syrian regime.
Article Four states that members “will consult together whenever, in the opinion of any of them, the territorial integrity, political independence or security of any of the Parties is threatened”.
It is less strong than Article Five of the Nato treaty, under which members invoke the right to “individual or collective self-defence”, but would be a step towards a collective response to alleged Syrian aggression.
I saw Hillary talking about this on the news a couple of days ago, and my immediate thought was, "Thank God. We're finally laying the predicate for NATO action to deal with Assad without having our actions hamstrung by the 'big thugs trying to save little thug' problems we've had with the Russians and the Chinese, that have made the Security Council useless for dealing with this"
Frankly I'm surprised that Assad was stupid enough to start lobbing shells into Turkey. But now he's provided us with the justification to get rid of him.
We don't have to send in troops, but we can now provide full air support to destroy his capability to attack innocent civilians and rebel forces, just as we did in Libya ; we can train, equip, and support rebel fighters from over the Turkish border until they're ready to move on Damascus.
And we don't need the approval from the thugocracies in Moscow and Beijing to do it.
I have to believe that the only logical reason for Clinton to be employing this kind of language is because the Obama Administration has decided to seek a NATO solution to this. If this is the case, I applaud and support the decision.


