UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) – Syria has complained to the United Nations that US Senator John McCain, former French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner and former US diplomat Peter Galbraith entered the country without visas in separate visits in violation of its sovereignty.
Syria’s UN ambassador Bashar Ja’afari called on UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the 15-member Security Council to pressure governments to take “the necessary measures against their nationals who enter Syrian territory illegally.”
“Such actions are a blatant violation of Syria’s sovereignty and of the resolutions of the Security Council concerning Syria,” Ja’afari wrote in a letter dated December 30 and seen by Reuters yesterday.
He complained generally about “certain journalists and prominent figures” entering Syria illegally but singled out McCain for entering Syria in June 2013. McCain, a former Republican presidential candidate, visited Syria in May 2013 and met with some Syrian rebels, his spokesman said at the time.
Ja’afari also cited Kouchner for visiting in November 2014, Galbraith for traveling to Syria in December 2014 with other US political and military leaders, and former Kuwaiti politician Walid al-Tabtaba’i for entering Syria in September 2013.
In response, McCain said in a statement: “It is a sad but unsurprising truth that the Assad regime is less concerned with its massacre of more than 200,000 men, women and children than it is my visit with those brave Syrians fighting for their freedom and dignity.
“The fact that the international community has done virtually nothing to bring down this terrible regime despite its atrocities is a stain on our collective moral conscience,” McCain added.