75,000
troops needed to secure chemical weapons if Damascus falls
The
potential of strategic US strikes in Syria has sparked fears
Damascus’ chemical weapons could fall into the wrong hands if the
government is toppled. A recent congressional report says 75,000
troops would be needed to safeguard the WMD caches.
RT,
5
September, 2013
The
Congressional Research Center (CRS) report,
issued just one day before the alleged August 21 chemical weapons
attack in a Damascus suburb, was compiled with the aim of “responding
to possible scenarios involving the use, change of hands, or loss of
control of Syrian chemical weapons.”
It
states that Syria’s chemical weapon stockpiles, which a French
intelligence report recently estimated at over 1,000 tons, have been
secured by Syrian special forces.
“Due
to the urgency of preventing access to these weapons by unauthorized
groups, including terrorists, the United States government has been
preparing for scenarios to secure the weapons in the event of the
Assad regime’s loss of control,”
the document reads
Testifying
before the Senate Armed Services Committee on March 7, 2012,
then-Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta warned the ouster of Assad
would present a scenario “100
times worse than what we dealt with in Libya.”
In
order to secure the 50 chemical weapon and production sites spread
across Syria, in addition to storage and research facilities, “The
Pentagon has estimated that it would take over 75,000 troops to
neutralize the chemical weapons,”
the document continues, citing a February 2012 CNN report.
Meanwhile,
a resolution backing the use of force against President Bashar
Assad's government cleared the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on
a 10-7 vote on Wednesday, although section 3 of the draft ostensibly
ruled out US combat operations on the ground.
The
wording of the text, however, could potentially allow for troops on
the ground for the sake of non-offensive operations, including
securing chemical weapons stockpiles and production facilities.
ason
Reed)
While
the Senate committee initially opted to limit US military involvement
in the country to 90 days with no potential of ground operations,
Republican Senator John McCain joined forces with Democratic Senator
Chris Coons to add a provision calling for "decisive
changes to the present military balance of power on the ground in
Syria."
The
Obama administration’s vacillations on Syria were perhaps best
exemplified by Secretary of State John Kerry. Speaking before the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Tuesday, Kerry suggested it
would be preferable to give the White House the power to send in
ground forces in the event that Syria “imploded”
or if chemical weapons were at risk of being obtained by extremists.
"I
don't want to take off the table an option that might or might not be
available to a president of the United States to secure our country,"
he told the committee in the run up to the vote.
After
being told by Senator Bob Corker – the top Republican on the
committee – his sentiments regarding boots on the ground were
not “a very appropriate
response,”
Kerry quickly backtracked.
"Let's
shut the door now,"
Kerry said. "The answer
is, whatever prohibition clarifies it to Congress or the American
people, there will not be American boots on the ground with respect
to the civil war."
Having
cleared committee, the measure authorizing force in Syria is expected
to reach the Senate floor next week. Senator Rand Paul, a republican
with strong ties to the Tea Party movement, has threatened a
filibuster.
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