August 25 Photo Brief: The Incredible Dog Show, lobster business, arrests made in Mumbai gang rape of photojournalist
“DOGS: The Incredible Dog Show” promotes adoptions of shelter dogs in Latin America, lobster business is booming in Maine, arrests made in Mumbai gang rape of a photojournalist and more in today’s daily photo brief.
- The statue of Martin Luther King Jr. is pictured at a memorial on August 24, 2103, in Washington, DC, as thousands of people gather to commemorate the 50th anniversary of The March on Washington. (Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images)
- Visitors run away as waves from a tidal bore surge past a barrier on the banks of Qiantang River, in Hangzhou Zhejiang province, August 24, 2013. Picture taken August 24, 2013. (Stringer/Reuters)
- Police officers escort a man (face covered), who was arrested in connection with the gang-rape of a photo journalist, at a court in Mumbai August 25, 2013. Indian police arrested the man, the third suspect in connection with the gang-rape, an official said on Saturday. (Danish Siddiqui/Reuters)
- Palestinian schoolchildren look out the window of their classroom at a U.N.-run school in Dir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip, on the first day of the school year, August 25, 2013. (Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters)
- A Japanese sumo teacher is seen in a mock fight with two children during an exhibition before a two-day sumo tournament in Jakarta on August 24, 2013. The sumo world tour in Jakarta will be the opening event, and the first one since the Mongol Tour in August 2008, with the tournament marking the 55th year of diplomatic relation between Indonesia and Japan. (Bay Ismoyo/AFP/Getty Images)
- In this handout photo provided by Smithsonian’s National Zoo, a giant panda cub born on August 23 at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo receives an exam from animal care staff on August 25, 2013 in Washington, DC. Chief veterinarian Suzan Murray reports that the cub is robust, has a steady heartbeat, a full belly (is nursing well), and has successfully passed fecals. (Photo by Courtney Janney/ Smithsonian’s National Zoo via Getty Images)
- A Sphynx cat is pictured during the “Dog & Cat” pet fair in Leipzig, eastern Germany, on August 24, 2013. The fair is running until August 25, 2013. (Hendrik Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images)
- Activists apply finishing touches on an effigy of Philippine President Benigno Aquino in Manila on August 25, 2013. Demonstrators made preparations ahead of a nationwide protest on August 26 against corruption over miss-spending of government funds. (Noel Celis/AFP/Getty Images)
- A NASA photo from the International Space Station taken by astronaut Karen L. Nyberg shows wildfires near Yosemite National Park in this image tweeted on August 24, 2013.(NASA/Handout via Reuters)
- Lobsterman Steve Train tosses a lobster back into the sea while hauling traps in his boat “Wild Irish Rose” in the waters off Cape Elizabeth, Maine August 21, 2013. Lobster populations in Maine are booming like never before. The number of lobster processing plants in the state has more than tripled, from 5 in 2010 to 16 last year. (Brian Snyder/Reuters)
- Pigeons lie on the ground after dying from what activists say is the use of chemical weapons by forces loyal to President Bashar Al-Assad in the Damascus suburbs of Arbeen August 24, 2013. (Ammar Dar/Reuters)
- A Christian worshipper prays as she touches the Stone of the Anointing, where Christians believe the body of Jesus was prepared for burial, in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, in Jerusalem’s Old City, early morning August 25, 2013. (Darren Whiteside/Reuters)
- Close to 1,200 participants threw their hats into the air in an attempt to set a Guinness Book of World Record at an event to promote the city’s bid to host the 2020 Olympic Games at Haneda airport in Tokyo August 25, 2013. The challenge was organized by the Tokyo 2020 Bid Committee, ANA, JAL and Japan Airport Terminal Co. (Issei Kato/Reuters)
- Children prepare to take part in a parade on the first day of the Notting Hill Carnival in west London on August 25, 2013. (Leon Neal/AFP/Getty Images)
- A woman with a mask tries to help at the site of a wildfire in Sandin, near Ourense in Spain on August 24, 2013. (Pedro Armestre/AFP/Getty Images)
- Carrie practices backstage before performing in “DOGS: The Incredible Dog Show” during their tour in Panama City August 24, 2013. The tour raises awareness about the neglect and cruelty suffered by animals, while also promoting adoptions from animal shelters and will continue to Costa Rica, Honduras and Mexico. The dogs of the show are mostly rescues. (Carlos Jasso/Reuters)
- Grit jumps over people for a frisbee as he performs in “DOGS: The Incredible Dog Show” during their tour in Panama City August 24, 2013. (Carlos Jasso/Reuters)
- Matrix jumps for a frisbee as he performs in “DOGS: The Incredible Dog Show” during their tour in Panama City August 24, 2013. (Carlos Jasso/Reuters)
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U.S. says Syria offer to show chemical attack sites ‘too late’
Mark Felsenthal and Susan Cornwell, Reuters
2:20 PM EDT, August 25, 2013
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A U.S. military response to alleged chemical weapons attacks in Syria appeared more likely on Sunday after Washington dismissed the Syrian government’s offer to allow U.N. inspection of the sites as “too late to be credible.”
A senior official of the U.S. administration said there was little doubt the Syrian government had used chemical weapons against civilians in suburbs of Damascus last week and that President Barack Obama was weighing how to respond.
A year ago, Obama said the use of chemical weapons in Syria’s war would be a “red line” for the United States. However, Obama has been reluctant to intervene in Syria and U.S. officials stressed that he has yet to make a decision on how to respond.
U.S. lawmakers from both political parties urged a limited American military response, such as cruise missile strikes, but a senior Democrat, Senator Jack Reed, cautioned that any move by Washington should not be unilateral.
Senator Bob Corker, the top Republican on the Foreign Relations Committee, said he had discussed the issue with the administration in the past week and believed Obama would ask Congress for authorization for intervention once Congress returns from its recess on September9.
“I think we will respond in a surgical way and I hope the president as soon as we get back to Washington will ask for authorization from Congress to do something in a very surgical and proportional way,” he told Fox News Sunday.
Americans strongly oppose U.S. intervention in Syria’s civil war and believe Washington should stay out of the conflict even if the reports are true that the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons, a Reuters/Ipsos poll says.
About 60 percent of those surveyed in the poll said the United States should not intervene, meaning Obama would have to make a convincing case to the American public for any action that he would decide to take.
Russia on Sunday warned the United States against repeating the “mistakes of the past” in Syria, saying any U.S. action should not bypass the United Nations. Iran, another key ally of Assad, said Washington should not cross a “red line” by attacking Syria, while Syria’s information minister said any U.S. military action would “create a ball of fire.”
INADEQUATE OFFER
The Syrian Foreign Ministry said on Sunday it had agreed to allow U.N. inspectors access to sites in suburbs of Damascus where the alleged chemical attacks are said to have occurred last week.
The senior U.S. official made clear the Syrian government’s move was inadequate, saying that if the Syrians had nothing to hide they would have let the inspectors in five days ago after the attack was first reported.
“At this juncture, any belated decision by the regime to grant access to the U.N. team would be considered too late to be credible, including because the evidence available has been significantly corrupted as a result of the regime’s persistent shelling and other intentional actions over the last five days,” the official said.
“Based on the reported number of victims, reported symptoms of those who were killed or injured, witness accounts, and other facts gathered by open sources, the U.S. intelligence community, and international partners, there is very little doubt at this point that a chemical weapon was used by the Syrian regime against civilians in this incident,” the official told Reuters.
“We are continuing to assess the facts so the president can make an informed decision about how to respond to this indiscriminate use of chemical weapons,” the official said.
Andrew Tabler, a Syria expert at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said Obama would have to make a strong case to Americans for any intervention.
“He (Obama) hasn’t prepared the American public for the strategic issues that are coming out of Syria,” he said. “I think something will change when he does that.”
The president and his top military and national security advisers hashed out options on Saturday. Obama also spoke with British Prime Minister David Cameron and agreed that chemical weapon use by Assad’s forces would merit a “serious response”.
While several U.S. lawmakers called for a limited U.S. military response, Reed, a senior senator in Obama’s Democratic Party and of the of the Senate Armed Services Committee, warned this should not be unilateral.
“This has to be an international operation, it can’t be a unilateral American approach,” he said on CBS television’s Face the Nation show. He added that Washington could not get into a “general military operation in Syria.”
Lawmakers favoring military action included Eliot Engel, the ranking Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee. “I certainly would do cruise missile strikes,” he told Fox News.
Such “stand-off” strikes that could be fired at Syria from a distance, such as from ships in the Mediterranean, were also urged by Republican senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham. However, House Homeland Security Chairman Michael McCaul, a Republican, told CBS there was “no guarantee” that such strikes could destroy all of Syria’s chemical weapons.
(Reporting By Mark Felsenthal; additional reporting by Robert Rampton, Lesley Wroughton, David Morgan, Caren Bohan and David Brunnstrom)