Senators McCain, Graham blast Tillerson’s Russia stance

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (Photo by AFP)

Senior US Republican Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham have expressed concern over Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s commending of Russia’s “right approach” in Syria.

"His statements about Syria really disturb me. No, (Russian President Vladimir) Putin does not have it right when it comes to Syria," Graham said on Sunday. "I am so worried about the State Department.”

Tillerson said after attending a meeting between US President Donald Trump and Putin on Friday that Moscow may have "got the right approach" and Washington the wrong one to resolving the ongoing conflict in Syria.

Both Russia and the US have been leading military campaigns in Syria. Unlike Washington, however, Moscow only intervened upon a request from Damascus and has coordinated its airstrikes with Syrian military forces to minimize civilian casualties.

Senators John McCain (L) and Lindsey Graham (Photo by AFP)

“Maybe they've got the right approach and we've got the wrong approach,” Tillerson said after Putin and Trump’s first meeting on the sidelines of this year’s G20 summit in Hamburg Germany, where the two leaders also agreed on a ceasefire deal in southwest Syria.

In a firm rebuke to Tillerson, McCain, who chairs the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he “sometimes” regretted his support for the former oil-tycoon’s nomination for the job.

“I know that the Russians knew that [Syrian President] Bashar Assad was going to use chemical weapons. And to say that maybe we've got the wrong approach?" he said, referring to an unsubstantiated White House claim that the Assad government has been using chemical weapons against Syrian people.

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An unnamed department official told Reuters what Tillerson meant was to affirm that, despite unresolved differences, Moscow and Washington can work "to produce stability and serve our mutual security interests."

Despite the media frenzy surrounding Tillerson’s seemingly Russia-friendly comments, the state secretary made it clear in his Sunday trip to Ukraine that Washington and Moscow remained largely divided over other important issues.

During his visit to Kiev, Tillerson called on Russia to end the violence in eastern Ukraine and said that American and European sanctions against Moscow would remain in place until it reversed policy in the region.


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