America
Gabbard declines to call Syria's Assad a war criminal
Washington, March 11
Tulsi Gabbard, the first Hindu US Congresswoman and Democratic 2020 presidential candidate, said that she believed her past comments on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad have been misunderstood, declining to call him a war criminal.
Gabbard was pressed during a CNN interview on Sunday whether she believed Assad used chemical warfare against Syrian civilians.
"I want to correct that because there has been some misunderstanding," the Hawaii Representative said.
"There have been reports showing that chemical weapons have been used in Syria, both by the Syrian Government as well as different terrorist groups on the ground in Syria.
"The scepticism and the questions that I raised were very specific around incidents that the Trump administration was trying to use as an excuse to launch a US military attack in Syria," she added.
Gabbard met Assad in Syria two years ago. She said last month that Assad was "not the enemy of the US because Syria does not pose a direct threat" to Washington.
When asked if she was unsure whether Assad was a war criminal now, Gabbard said: "Everything that I have said requires that we take action based on evidence. (If) the evidence is there, there should be accountability."
Gabbard cited her experience serving in Iraq as informing her approach to Syria.
"I served in a war in Iraq, a war that was launched based on lies, and a war that was launched without evidence," she said. "And so the American people were duped."
Gabbard was pressed during a CNN interview on Sunday whether she believed Assad used chemical warfare against Syrian civilians.
"I want to correct that because there has been some misunderstanding," the Hawaii Representative said.
"There have been reports showing that chemical weapons have been used in Syria, both by the Syrian Government as well as different terrorist groups on the ground in Syria.
"The scepticism and the questions that I raised were very specific around incidents that the Trump administration was trying to use as an excuse to launch a US military attack in Syria," she added.
Gabbard met Assad in Syria two years ago. She said last month that Assad was "not the enemy of the US because Syria does not pose a direct threat" to Washington.
When asked if she was unsure whether Assad was a war criminal now, Gabbard said: "Everything that I have said requires that we take action based on evidence. (If) the evidence is there, there should be accountability."
Gabbard cited her experience serving in Iraq as informing her approach to Syria.
"I served in a war in Iraq, a war that was launched based on lies, and a war that was launched without evidence," she said. "And so the American people were duped."
1 hour ago
Thalapathy Vijay’s final film ‘Jana Nayagan’ to release on July 23, 2026
2 hours ago
Malavika Mohanan shares first look from 'Idhayam Murali', says working with Fahadh Faasil 'felt like being back in college'
2 hours ago
FIFA WC: When and where to watch England vs Argentina, know all details
2 hours ago
Western Pentecostal Conference to Begin in Edmonton on July 16
2 hours ago
FIFA WC: Closing ceremony to celebrate historic tournament ahead of the final
2 hours ago
Trump's strategy of relying on Pak Army chief Munir ‘dangerously short-sighted’
2 hours ago
Biden memoir to reveal why he quit 2024 US Presidential race
2 hours ago
Trump to feature on new US $1 coin
2 hours ago
Pentagon taps new firms for low-cost missiles
2 hours ago
Beneath Her Bangles
7 hours ago
Kerala forest department seeks details after Mohanlal's 10 elephant tusk disclosure
7 hours ago
Bengaluru schoolboy attempts suicide after 'corporal punishment', critical
7 hours ago
Nasscom, FICCI hail UK FTA as India advances towards becoming a developed economy
