Washington - Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is losing his grip on power, the White House said on Tuesday, amidst confirmed reports of the defection of his Prime Minister Riyad Hijab.
"As we've said repeatedly, as we've seen more and more high-level defections, this is a sign that Assad's grip on power is loosening. If he cannot maintain cohesion within his own inner circle, it reflects on his inability to maintain any following among the Syrian people that isn't brought about at the point of a gun," White House Press Secretary Jay Carney told reporters.
Observing that Assad's days are numbered, Carney said the US has no reason to doubt the reports about the defection of the Prime Minister or other members of the government.
"That the titular head of the Syrian government has rejected the ongoing slaughter being carried out at Assad's direction only reinforces that the Assad regime is crumbling from within, and that the Syrian people believe that Assad's days are numbered," he said.
"The momentum is with the opposition and with the Syrian people. It's clear that these defections are reaching the highest levels of the Syrian government, and Assad cannot restore his control over the country because the Syrian people will not allow it," Carney said.
The quickest way to end the bloodshed and suffering of the Syrian people is for Assad to step aside, to enable a peaceful political transition to a government that is responsive to the aspirations of the Syrian people," he added.
Carney said the longer Assad is in power, the worse the situation gets in Syria. "I can simply say that what we are seeing, as is evidenced by these latest reports, is increasing instability within his leadership and, I think, increasing desperation in his efforts to wage war against his own people," he said.
| Other Articles: |
 |
Gurudwara shooting: FBI rules out involvement of second person (7th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Gurdwara shooting: Killer a former soldier (6th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Romney must recover from 'self-inflicted gaffes' if he hopes to topple Obama: Experts (6th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Fiza Mohammed commits suicide (6th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Gurudwara shooting: Obama briefed by counter-terrorism advisor (6th Aug, 2012) |
 |
North Korea floods,169 killed (6th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Yemen: Toll from al Qaeda bombing rises to 45 (6th Aug, 2012) |
 |
'Julian Assange is neither pirate nor terrorist' (4th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Hillary hopes for improved drones to find Kony (4th Aug, 2012) |
 |
UN vote undermines peace efforts in Syria: Russia (4th Aug, 2012) |
 |
BMW hit-and-run: Supreme Court refuses to enhance Nanda jail term (3rd Aug, 2012) |
 |
Bomb design flaw averted mayhem in Pune (3rd Aug, 2012) |
 |
Romney ropes in Indian to reach out to Asia-Americans (3rd Aug, 2012) |
 |
US blames Russia, China for Kofi Annan resignation (3rd Aug, 2012) |
 |
Team Anna to end fast Friday 5 p.m. (2nd Aug, 2012) |
 |
CCTV cameras at Pune blast sites non-functional (2nd Aug, 2012) |
 |
Dark Knight' shooting victim says Homes deserves 'helpless and fearful death by firing squad' (2nd Aug, 2012) |
 |
Pune blasts planned, coordinated: Home Secretary (2nd Aug, 2012) |
 |
Obama leads Romney in 3 swing states (2nd Aug, 2012) |
 |
Pune blasts: New weapon – cake bomb? (2nd Aug, 2012) |
 |
Four blasts in Pune, one injured, on a night when Sushil Shinde, Home minister was expected (2nd Aug, 2012) |
 |
Nineteen train disaster victims identified (1st Aug, 2012) |
 |
Bombs kill 21, underlining Iraq chaos (1st Aug, 2012) |
 |
Anna adamant on Lokpal; Kejriwal, Rai sink further (1st Aug, 2012) |
 |
At least 17 killed in clashes at Yemen's interior ministry (1st Aug, 2012) |