Strike against Assad regime stalled by British political rows | World news | The Guardian
Allied air strikes against the Syrian government over the alleged use
of chemical weapons could be delayed until next week in the face of
strong opposition in the UK parliament to British involvement in
immediate military action.
The British prime minister, David Cameron,
conceded that MPs would be given a second vote to approve military
action to defuse a parliamentary revolt, ahead of a Commons debate on Syria
on Thursday. Whitehall sources indicated that the US, which had planned
to launch the strikes by the weekend, is prepared to revive a back-up
plan to delay the strikes until Tuesday when Barack Obama is due to set
out for the G20 summit in Russia.
Such a move by the Obama
administration would effectively hand Cameron a political lifeline after
the opposition Labour party threatened to inflict a defeat on the
Conservative-led coalition in parliament.
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