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Time to start bombing IS, Cameron tells lawmakers

Prime Minister David Cameron leaves 10 Downing Street in central London yesterday, bound for the Houses of Parliament where he made a statement to back joining international action against Islamic State militants.

Reuters
London


Prime Minister David Cameron told lawmakers yesterday it was time to join air strikes against Islamic State militants in Syria, saying Britain cannot “subcontract its security to other countries”.
Cameron, who lost a vote on air strikes against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s forces in 2013, needs to persuade several lawmakers in his own Conservative Party and some in the opposition Labour Party to back his cause if he is to win parliament’s backing for military action.
The parliament’s foreign affairs committee criticised extending air strikes into Syria earlier this month, saying that without a clear strategy to defeat the militants and end the civil war such action was “incoherent”.
But since Islamic State claimed responsibility for killing 130 people in Paris, some lawmakers who were reluctant to launch new strikes in Syria have increasingly felt action was needed to protect Britain from such attacks.
“We do not have the luxury of being able to wait until the Syrian conflict is resolved before tackling IS (Islamic State),” Cameron wrote in a response to the committee’s objections.
He said in his 24-page response the campaign against Islamic State was entering a new phase, focusing on command and control, supply lines and financial support - something Britain could contribute well to.
“It is wrong for the United Kingdom to sub-contract its security to other countries, and to expect the aircrews of other nations to carry the burdens and the risks of striking IS in Syria to stop terrorism here in Britain,” he said.
Cameron on Monday visited Paris, where he met President Francois Hollande and paid tribute outside the Bataclan concert venue, where 90 people were killed.
“I firmly support the action President Hollande has taken to strike IS in Syria,” Cameron said after talks in Paris.
“It’s my firm conviction that Britain should do so too.”
Cameron will have to convince lawmakers that extending the air strikes will not mean that Britain becomes an even greater target for attacks. Militants downed a Russian airliner after Moscow launched strikes on Syria, killing all 224 on board.
Thirty Conservative lawmakers voted against the motion for military intervention in Syria in August 2013.
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, a veteran anti-war campaigner, says he is also reluctant to support the strikes without a political plan for Syria, fearful more bombing would complicate the more than four-and-a-half year civil war.
But, breaking with a British political tradition of using a “party whip” to keep party discipline, his finance spokesman said Labour was considering allowing its lawmakers to vote as they wish, which may increase support for Cameron.
“In these sort of issues of conscience it is better to allow MPs to make their own minds up,” John McDonnell told BBC television, adding Britain must learn lessons from the 2003 Iraq war. Islamic State hold territory in northern and western Iraq.
Finance Minister George Osborne, a frontrunner to succeed Cameron, said he understood people’s concerns that further involvement in the Middle East could make Britain a target.
“We know they want reassurance that we are getting this right ... first of all we are a target from this terrorist organisation IS (Islamic State),” he told BBC radio, referring to the attacks on tourists in Tunisia in June.
He said it was a “bit strange” that Britain’s air force could strike in Iraq but not Syria.
“I don’t think this is a country that lets others like the French or the Americans defend our interests and protect us from terrorist organisations - we should contribute to that effort.”

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