Syrian President Bashar al-Assad  has lost legitimacy and is "not indispensable," Secretary of State  Hillary Clinton said on Monday as tension soared over an assault by  Assad loyalists on the U.S. and French embassies in Damascus.
Clinton condemned the Syrian  attacks and said Washington did not believe the long-time Syrian ruler  would follow through on his promises to reform in the face of escalating  protests against his rule.
"From our perspective, he has lost  legitimacy, he has failed to deliver on the promises he's made, he has  sought and accepted aid from the Iranians as to how to repress his own  people," Clinton told reporters in an appearance with European Union  foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton in Washington.
Clinton's comments marked a  significant sharpening of U.S. rhetoric on Assad, whose security forces  have waged an increasingly brutal crackdown against protesters inspired  by pro-democracy movements elsewhere in the Arab world.
Several Assad loyalists broke into  the U.S. embassy in Damascus on Monday and security guards used live  ammunition to prevent hundreds from storming the French embassy, Western  diplomats in the Syrian capital said.
They said the attackers tore down  U.S. embassy plaques and tried to break security glass in protests  fueled by the government against a visit by U.S. and French ambassadors  to the city of Hama, focus of protests against Assad's rule.
One of the diplomats said: "This is  a violent escalation by the regime. You do not bring busloads of thugs  into central Damascus from the coast without its consent."
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A French foreign ministry official said the Syrian authorities had done nothing to stop the assault.
"(France) reminds (Syria) that it  is not with such illegal methods that the authorities in Damascus will  turn the attention away from the fundamental problem, which is to stop  the repression of the Syrian population and to launch democratic  reform," foreign ministry spokesman Bernard Valero said.
France has led Western attempts to  pass a United Nations Security Council resolution condemning Syria's  hierarchy for cracking down on protesters. It says the president has  lost legitimacy because of the number of killings to try to quell the  protests demanding political freedoms after 41 years of Assad family  rule.
"Four buses full of shabbiha  (Alawite militia loyal to Assad) came from Tartous. They used a  battering ram to try to break into the main door," a resident of Afif,  the old district where the French embassy is located. 
The United States, which sees Syria  as a fragile but crucial element of any lasting Middle East peace  equation, had been reluctant to take that step, but Clinton's comments  on Monday indicated Washington's patience had run out.
"If anyone, including President Assad, thinks that the United States  is secretly hoping that the regime will emerge from this turmoil to  continue its brutality and repression, they are wrong," Clinton said."President Assad is not indispensable and we have absolutely nothing invested in him remaining in power."
The United States condemned Syria  for "refusing" to protect the embassy from an assault it said had been  encouraged by a pro-government television station, and called in a  senior Syrian diplomat to deliver a formal complaint.
EMBOLDENED OPPOSITION
Human rights groups say at least  1,400 civilians have been killed since an uprising began in March  against Assad's autocratic rule, posing the biggest threat to his  leadership since he succeeded his father 11 years ago.
Assad loyalists also attempted to  attack the U.S. ambassador's residence in Damascus on Monday after  assaulting the embassy compound but failed to gain entry.
A businessman whose office  overlooks the residence said about 50 youths carrying posters of Assad  on sticks stopped traffic and started smashing two U.S. embassy cars  parked outside with sticks and climbing the walls of the compound.
"One of them stole the headlights  as if they were war spoils. The street was full of secret police and  military intelligence personnel. They stood just looking and some joined  the thugs in shouting abuse directed against the ambassador," the  Syrian businessman said.
A U.S. official said U.S.  Ambassador Robert Ford was at the embassy compound when the assaults  occurred, not at the residence several blocks away.
Emboldened by the spreading  demonstrations, leading Syrian opposition figure Haitham al-Maleh said  an opposition conference in Damascus later this month would form a shadow government of "independent, non-political technocrats" to prepare for when Assad loses authority.
The former judge was among 50  leading opposition figures who refused to accept Assad's invitation to  enter what the authorities termed a 'national dialogue' that mostly  brought handpicked Assad supporters. He issued a statement earlier this  month announcing plans for a "National Salvation" government.
Maleh said the conference would take place in Damascus on July 16 and would choose the shadow ministers.
"It won't be an actual government, it will be a shadow government. It  will be a regional government. Each minister will operate as a leading  figure for his region," Maleh said.Its aim would be to guide  opposition movements and anti-Assad protests, and ensure the country had  an alternative administration ready for what Maleh said he saw as  Assad's inevitable removal.
While using military assaults in  towns and cities to try to crush the protests, Assad has also called for  talks on reforms. But the opposition refused to attend a two-day  conference in the capital this week, saying it was futile as long as  violence continued. Mostly Assad supporters were taking part.
Vice President Farouq al-Shara,  whose role is ceremonial, told the conference's opening ceremony on  Sunday the authorities would 'turn the page', hinting that political  parties other than the ruling Baath party would be allowed to operate.
In other violence on Monday,  security forces killed one civilian and wounded 20 in machinegun fire on  Homs, Syria's third city, and went house-to-house arresting suspected  opponents in Hama, human rights activists said.
Mostafa Abdelrahman, a preacher at a  mosque in Hama, met Assad on Sunday to demand the release of 1,000  political prisoners and offer to remove makeshift roadblocks if given  guarantees there would be no more assaults, they added.



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