Oh, you mean Obama wants to bomb Syria?
US
accuses Syria of chlorine gas attacks
19
September, 2014
The
US claims Syrian President Bashar Assad has broken the chemical
weapons treaty he agreed to earlier this year, by launching chlorine
gas attacks in Syrian villages. It comes as the Senate officially
approved a plan to arm and train Syrian rebels.
US
Secretary of State John Kerry on Thursday accused Assad of breaching
the terms of the global pact on chemical weapons, by unleashing
chlorine gas via barrel bomb attacks earlier this year.
“We
believe there is evidence of [President Bashar] Assad’s use of
chlorine, which when you use it – despite it not being on the list
– it is prohibited under the Chemical Weapons Convention,”
Kerry told the US House of Representatives. “He’s
in violation of the convention.”
Kerry went on to add that Washington is studying ways to hold
Assad to account.
The US official was not alone in what
appeared to be a new wave of Western pressure on Assad’s
government, which was previously accused of perpetrating deadly
chemical attacks in March 2013 near Aleppo and in August 2013 in
Ghouta.ascus
A
former British army officer who led The Telegraph’s independent
investigation
into the alleged chlorine gas attacks said Kerry’s comments showed
that war crimes were continuing to take place in Syria.
“Five
months after we proved that Assad had the US red line that chemical
weapons must not be used, Secretary Kerry has now stated that Assad
has broken international law,”
Hamish de Bretton-Gordon said.
“Since
then there have been multiple other incidents including another
attack on Kfar Zita that killed one person just a few days ago.
Surely there must be action to stop this now.”
Earlier this month, the Organization for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons (OPCW) – the world’s chemical watchdog –
confirmed the “systematic”
use of chlorine as a weapon in war-torn Syria.
Meanwhile, the
US Congress has given its final approval
of a plan to arm and train select “moderate” Syrian rebels who
are trying to both overthrow Assad and defeat Islamic State
(ISIS/ISIL) militants.
The Senate, controlled by President
Barack Obama’s Democratic Party, easily passed the measure late
Thursday by a bipartisan vote of 78-22. The US will now spend $500
million to arm and train the anti-government militants, as well as to
expand its military action in Iraq.
Meanwhile, French President
Francois Hollande said his country is ready to launch airstrikes
against ISIS militants inside Iraq. However, Hollande rejected
extending the aerial bombardment to Syria.
The US Senate’s
approval of arming the Syrian rebels comes despite concerns by some
Democrats that the US is involving itself in another Middle East war
– as well as some Republicans who say the effort will not do enough
to defeat the ISIS.
Duncan Hunter, a Republican representative
from California and a former marine who served in Fallujah, said:
“Army
Islamists to fight other Islamists is not a winning strategy. I don’t
believe the weapons and tactics that we bestow to the Islamists will
only be used against America’s enemies.”
Reuters
/ Ammar Abdullah
However,
Obama praised the House vote, saying the arming and training of
rebels is a key part of his comprehensive plan to defeat the
extremists.
Since the start of the bloody uprising in Syria
that began in March 2011, Assad’s government and the rebels have
traded accusations of using chemical agents, including chlorine.
In
April 2013, Israel – an old foe of its northern Arab neighbor –
was the first to charge Syria with using chemical weapons against
areas held by rebels in the ongoing civil war.
Western powers
soon echoed the charge and Washington threatened Damascus with
airstrikes.
A
series of initiatives by Russian President Vladimir Putin managed to
prevent US airstrikes and led to Assad's decision to give up the
government's chemical arsenal.
Damascus promised to hand over
all its chemical arms, and tons of chemical agents have been
destroyed by international monitors.
Syria did not have to
declare its stockpile of chlorine under the disarmament deal.
Chlorine is a weak toxic agent that can be considered a chemical
weapon if used in battle, but the material is widely used for
commercial and domestic purposes.
International diplomats told
Reuters this week that Syria had revealed a previously undeclared
research and development facility and a laboratory to produce ricin.
Those disclosures appeared to support Western allegations in recent
months that the Assad regime had not been fully transparent in
detailing its chemical weapons program.
Free
Syrian Army fighters take position.(Reuters / Hosam Katan)
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