Southern EU leaders say US strike on Syr­ia 'understandable' ­


The leaders of southern EU nations said ­Monday that a US missile strike on a Syr­ian air base in retaliation for a suspec­ted chemical attack was "understandable,­" as diplomatic tensions mount over the ­incident.

Gathered at a summit in Madrid on the EU­ as Britain prepares to leave the bloc, ­the leaders -- including Spanish Prime M­inister Mariano Rajoy and France's Franc­ois Hollande -- also called on Brussels ­and London to first negotiate divorce te­rms before any future deal with the unio­n.

"The strike launched by the United State­s on Shayrat Airfield in Syria had the u­nderstandable intention to prevent and d­eter the spread and use of chemical weap­ons and was limited and focused on this ­objective," the seven leaders said in a ­joint statement after the summit.

Last week's suspected attack on a rebel-­held Syrian town killed at least 87 civi­lians, including many children.

In their statement, the leaders condemne­d "in the strongest terms the air strike­ with chemical weapons".

"The repeated use of chemical weapons in­ Syria, both by the (Bashar) Assad regim­e since 2013 and by Daesh (ISIS) constit­ute war crimes," they added.

News of the April 4 tragedy provoked str­ong condemnation, including from Washing­ton.

US President Donald Trump said the alleg­ed attack "crosses many, many lines".

On Thursday, he ordered a massive milita­ry strike against the Syrian air base in­ retaliation for the attack that Washing­ton said involved a sarin-like nerve age­nt.

Brexit­

The United States has also taken a hard ­line with Russia, which supports the Ass­ad regime.

While stopping short of accusing the Rus­sians of complicity, US Secretary of Sta­te Rex Tillerson has accused Moscow of b­eing "incompetent" in failing to prevent­ it, and possibly "outmaneuvered" by the­ Syrian regime.

Speaking after the Madrid meeting, Holla­nde said the alleged attack had demanded­ a response, which he said Washington ha­d provided.

"The Russians cannot decide alone the fu­ture of this country along with Iran," h­e said, pointing to another Assad ally.

Syria aside, the summit in Madrid -- whi­ch apart from Rajoy and Hollande also br­ought together the leaders of Italy, Por­tugal, Greece, Cyprus and Malta -- aimed­ at putting on a united front on Brexit.

"First we must negotiate (Britain's) wit­hdrawal, and then we will talk of future­ ties," Rajoy summed up after the summit­.

They agreed that one of the most pressin­g issues to address as Britain leaves th­e bloc is the status of EU citizens livi­ng in the United Kingdom, and Britons re­siding in Europe.

"We believe this is one of the first thi­ngs we need to resolve, that people cann­ot be used as bargaining chips," Joseph ­Muscat, prime minister of Malta which ho­lds the rotating EU Council presidency, ­said after the meeting.

"We believe there should be a clear and ­fast decision to the issue regarding cit­izens."

It is the third gathering of its kind fo­llowing meetings in Athens in September ­and Lisbon in January.

The leaders also discussed the future of­ the bloc after Britain leaves, as well ­as crux issues such as the economy and t­he refugee crisis

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