US approves drawdown of non-emergency personnel who wish to leave Adana

US approves drawdown of non-emergency personnel who wish to leave Adana

WASHINGTON - Agence France-Presse

A view of the entrance of the U.S. consulate building in Adana Sept. 6. The United States tightened security at diplomatic missions in Lebanon and Turkey on Friday because of threats, ordering personnel out of Lebanon and offering to evacuate those in Adana in southern Turkey. REUTERS photo

The United States evacuated non-essential staff from its Beirut embassy Sept 6 and urged Americans not to travel to Lebanon, Pakistan or southern Turkey, as Washington considers strikes against neighboring Syria.

"The Department of State has ordered a drawdown of non-emergency U.S. government personnel and family members in Beirut, Lebanon and approved the drawdown of non-emergency personnel and family members who wish to leave Adana, Turkey," deputy State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said.

The evacuations came as the United States has been trying to build support for U.S. military strikes on the Syrian regime in retaliation for its alleged use of chemical weapons in an August 21 attack on Damascus suburbs.

Harf warned any U.S. citizens who chose to remain in Lebanon or southern Turkey that they "should limit non-essential travel within the country, be aware of their surroundings whether in their residences or moving about, make their own contingency emergency plans." Separately, the State Department said the consulate general in Adana, "has been authorized to draw down its non-emergency staff and family members because of threats against US government facilities and personnel."

Adana, a major agricultural hub in southern Turkey, lies only a few kilometer away from the İncirlik NATO air force base, which will likely be used by the United States during an eventual military operation against Syria.

But Harf said she was not aware of "any specific threats" against the mission in Turkey.

The decision had been made due to "current tensions in the region, as well as potential threats to U.S. government facilities and personnel," Harf said, refusing to go into how many people were involved in the evacuation.

But she stressed the State Department was acting out of "an abundance of caution" and told journalists the embassy remained open for consulate services.

U.S. President Barack Obama and his administration are pressuring U.S. lawmakers to approve limited military strikes on Syria, while at the same time seeking to build an international coalition in support of action.

It remains unclear when or if any strikes would come, but the threat has sent tensions soaring in an already volatile region.

Lebanon boosts security measures

At a press conference in St Petersburg Sept. 6 after a summit of G20 leaders, Obama refused to answer whether he would go ahead with strikes if Congress votes against military action, saying he "would not engage in parlor games." But he insisted he was elected to make the right decisions for America's national security.

Making a parallel with World War II, Obama said: "When London was getting bombed, it was profoundly unpopular both in Congress and around the country to help the British. It doesn't mean it wasn't the right thing to do." Lebanese authorities said they were already boosting security measures at foreign diplomatic missions ahead of any international military action.

Lebanon's security council met "in light of the tensions resulting from preparations for potential military action and the regional and international responses that could follow," the presidency said in a statement.

The State Department also sent out a renewed warning to all U.S. citizens to defer any non-essential travel to Pakistan, and a reminder that consular services are still unavailable in Lahore after non-essential staff were pulled out last month.

The U.S. warnings would be reviewed, Harf said, adding "we'll continue evaluating on a post-by-post basis to see if we have to take any additional steps." The Beirut evacuation comes a month after a number of U.S. embassies in the Middle East and Africa were closed for about a week due to an Al-Qaeda security alert.