Assad:
Syria to hand over chem arms in 1 month, only if US drops strike
plans
Syria
will start handing over information on its chemical weapons to
international groups a month after it signs the Chemical Weapons
Convention, President Bashar Assad has told a Russian TV channel.
RT,
12
September, 2013
Damascus
has agreed to a Russia proposal to put its chemical weapons
stockpiles under international control.
“Syria is handing
over its chemical weapons under international supervision because of
Russia,” Assad said in an
interview with state-run news channel Rossiya-24.
“The
US threats did not influence the decision.”
Within days Damascus promises to submit to the United Nations
all documents required for joining the chemical weapons ban treaty. A
month after Syria signs the Chemical Weapons Convention it will start
handing over information on chemical weapons to international
organizations.
“I believe the agreement will come
into force a month after the signing and Syria will start submitting
data on its chemical weapons stockpile to international
organizations. These are standard procedures and we are going to
stick to them,” he said.
Meanwhile,
the UN says that it has received a letter from Syria on the country’s
intention to join the treaty banning the production of chemical arms,
their stockpiling and use. The Syrian government’s letter of
accession is being translated, AP cited UN associate spokesman Farhan
Haq as saying Thursday. Signing the letter accession begins the
process for a country to become party to the international agreement,
the official said.
“It
doesn’t mean that Syria will sign the documents, fulfill the
obligations and that’s it. It’s a bilateral process aimed, first
of all, at making the US stop pursuing its policy of threats against
Syria,”
Assad said, adding that a lot would also depend on the extent to
which Russia’s proposal is accepted.
“Terrorists
are trying to provoke American strike against Syria,”
Assad said. Rebel forces are receiving chemical weapons from abroad,
he added.
Countries
that provide “terrorists” with chemical weapons should be held
accountable, Assad said.
“We
should thoroughly investigate the [chemical weapons used in the
attack] to discover their components and which side used them,”
Assad said.
“All
states claim that they do not cooperate with terrorists, but we know
for sure that the West provides them with logistical support,”
he said, adding that the West and some countries in the region,
including Turkey and Saudi Arabia, “maintain
direct contacts with terrorists and supply them with all kinds of
arms.”
Both
the Syrian government and rebel forces have blamed each other for the
chemical weapon attack in a Damascus suburb on August 21.
Talking
to the Russian TV channel, Assad reiterated that the US has failed to
present evidence that the Syrian government was behind the incident.
No
country in the Middle East, including Israel, should possess weapons
of mass destruction, Assad said. That would protect the region and
the world from devastating and expensive wars in future, he said.
“If we want stability
in the Middle East, all the countries in the region should stick to
[international] agreements,"
Assad said. “And Israel is
the first state that should do so, since Israel possessed nuclear,
chemical, biological and all other kinds of weapons of mass
destruction.”
The president recalled that a project on the elimination of WMD
had been proposed, but the US opposed it “to
allow Israel”
to have such weapons.
Any
kind of a war against Syria would “destroy
the entire region”
and lead to decades of instability in the Middle East, Assad said.
“Syria
is making serious efforts so that our country and other states in the
region will not be involved in a new crazy war that some proponents
of the war in the US are trying to unleash in the Middle East,”
he said.
Earlier
in the week, RT, citing unnamed sources, reported that rebels could
launch a chemical attack
on Israel
by from government-controlled territories as a “major provocation.”
Assad did not rule out such a scenario. Toxic agents “were
used against Syrian Army soldiers and civilians”
and that therefore rebel forces did have these weapons, he said.
“Everyone
is aware that terrorist groups and those who control them are trying
to provoke an American strike. Earlier, they attempted to draw Israel
into the Syrian crisis,”
Assad said.
On Monday, as the White House was pushing for congressional approval of the military strike against the Syrian regime, Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov urged Damascus to put its stockpile of chemical weapons under international control.
Moscow
also called on the Syrian government to join the Organization for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons.
Syria
accepted the proposal and agreed to sign the Chemical Weapons
Convention.
Moscow’s
initiative was also welcomed in Washington. President Barack Obama
urged the US Congress to postpone a vote to authorize military
action, and said he was seeking a diplomatic solution to the Syrian
conflict.
US
Secretary of State John Kerry and Russia's foreign minister, Sergey
Lavrov, accompanied by groups of experts, are scheduled to meet
in Geneva
late Thursday to discuss in detail Moscow's plan to dispose of Syrian
chemical weapons.
Fair
enough! I'm sure Basher Assad does not want to go the same way as
Gaddhafi. Nuclear weapons, biological and chemical weapons –
Israel has them all, and the West has been arming the rebels since
day one.
Assad
tells Obama to stop arming rebels, or no deal
12
September, 2013
President
Obama must promise not to arm rebel forces or Syrian
dictator Bashar Assad
will not hand over his chemical weapons, the embattled leader told a
Russian state media outlet today while demanding that Israel also
surrender its nuclear arsenal.
“When
we see that the U.S. genuinely stands for stability in our region,
stops threatening us with military intervention and stops supplying
terrorists with weapons, then we will consider it possible to
finalize all necessary procedures and they will become legitimate and
acceptable for Syria," Assad told RIA
News.
Obama
asked Congress to postpone a vote authorizing use of military force
in Syria after Russian President Vladimir Putin offered
to broker a deal
whereby the U.S. would not attack the Assad regime if he surrendered
his chemical weapons.
Assad
said that the Middle East won't have peace until Israel also
surrenders its weapons of mass destruction.
“If
we really want stability in the Middle East, all the countries [in
the region] must honor the agreements. And the first country to do so
is Israel because it possesses nuclear, chemical and biological
weapons – all types of weapons of mass destruction,”
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