Alex Salmond: Obama intervention shows Cameron is
running scared
Scottish first
minister says prime minister right to be worried as recent showed 46% of Scots
in favour of independence
Andrew Sparrow
theguardian.com, Sunday 8 June 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/jun/08/alex-salmond-obama-cameron-scottish-independence
Alex Salmond, Scotland 's first minister, has said
that President Obama's decision to intervene in the debate on Scottish
independence showed how alarmed David Cameron was about the prospect of the no
camp losing.
In an interview on the BBC's Andrew Marr
show, Salmond said he was surprised to hear Obama suggest that he was opposed
to Scotland breaking away from the UK because in the past the American
government has made it clear it was remaining neutral in the contest.
"But then, of course, David Cameron
has been begging everybody internationally to say anything to help with his
travails at the moment," said Salmond, referring to reports that Cameron
asked Obama to speak out on Scotland before the two leaders appeared at a joint
news conference in Brussels on Thursday, where the question was raised.
Salmond said Cameron was "right to be
worried" because a recent Populus poll showed 46% of Scots in favour of
independence, and 54% against, when don't knows were excluded.
"Perhaps on the Richter scale of
presidential interventions, this was pretty mild," Salmond added.
"[Obama] hopes that the UK
will be strong and united as an ally. Well, if Scotland
becomes independent, America
will have two allies in these islands, not one."
Obama said that ultimately this was a
decision for the Scots. He also said that the UK
seemed to have worked "pretty well" and that Washington had "a deep interest in
making sure that one of the closest allies that we will ever have remains a
strong, robust, united and effective partner".
Although all the three main Westminster parties are proposing further devolution in
the event of Scotland
voting no, Salmond said the Scots would be "foolish" to rely on these
promises.
"The only guarantee of getting more
powers is to vote yes on 18 September," he said, pointing out that before
the 1979 referendum, in which the Scots voted for devolution but not by enough
to pass the threshold required for devolution to take place, the Tories had
suggested that a no vote would not rule out further devolution.
"Scots voted yes and, as it was, we
didn't get devolution and what we got was 18 years of Margaret Thatcher. So I
think, having had that experience, we'd be very foolish to rely on promises
from unionist parties."
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