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  • 9
    May
    2013
    1:32pm, EDT

    Exclusive: Turkish PM Erdogan: Syria has crossed red line, used chemical weapons

    Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told NBC's Ann Curry in an exclusive interview that the Syrian government has used chemical weapons and missiles, and crossed President Obama's "red line" long ago. Erdogan will meet with Obama on May 16 to discuss the evidence he claims to have.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Turkey's prime minister is charging that the Syrian government has used chemical weapons against its people and has called on the U.S. to take stronger action, he told NBC News' Ann Curry in an exclusive interview Thursday.

    "It is clear the regime has used chemical weapons and missiles," Turkish premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.

    Erdogan gave no specifics about when and where the weapons were allegedly used, but he said he believes President Obama's "red line" for the U.S. in deciding whether to take action has been crossed.

    Syria's Deputy Foreign Minister is angry at Israel's attacks on Syria. Faisal al-Mekdad said Syria "does not neglect its rights and its sacred right to defend its own people." ITV's Bill Neely reports.

    "It has been passed long time ago," said Erdogan, who is meeting with Obama on May 16.

    "We want the United States to assume more responsibilities and take further steps. And what sort of steps they will take, we are going to talk about this."

    Erdogan cited as evidence the "remainders of missiles" — at least 200 by his count — that he believes were used in chemical attacks, along with the injuries of Syrians brought over the Turkish border for medical treatment.

    "There are patients who are brought to our hospitals who were wounded by these chemical weapons," he said.

    Erdogan rejected any suggestion that the rebels might have used chemical weapons.

    "There is no way I can believe in this now. First of all, how are they going to obtain this? And who will give this to them?" he said.

    "But if it exists, we are against this...We are against whoever holds the weapons."

    In an interview with NBC's Ann Curry, Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan says Syrian President Bashar al-Assad crossed Obama's red line "a long time ago."

    A member of the United Nations' commission on Syria claimed this week "strong, concrete suspicions but not yet incontrovertible proof" that the rebels has used sarin gas, but the panel quickly backed away from those claims -- adding that it had "not reached conclusive findings as to the use of chemical weapons in Syria by any parties to the conflict."

    The White House — which has said it has varying levels of confidence that sarin was used on a small scale in Syria — quickly threw cold water on the suggestion that the rebels were to blame.

    Erdogan said he could not confirm that sarin was used in Syria. "We don't have such a finding yet," he said.

    Asked whether Turkey would support a U.S.-enforced no-fly zone in Syria, Erdogan said, "Right from the beginning...we would say 'yes.'"

    He denied that Turkey has provided military support to the rebels but said his country has spent nearly $1 billion on aid to 300,000 refugees from Syria.

    "We keep the open door policy because they are fleeing oppression." Erdogan said.

    Erdogan said he has heard reports that Assad's wife and children have already left Syria, their lives "ruined" by him.

    "The thing he should do now is to leave Syria," he said. "Sooner or later, the opposition are going to get him."

    Editor's note: An earlier version of this story included a response from Erdogan to a two-part question about whether he would support a U.S.-enforced no-fly zone and American troops in Syria. The translator only asked Erdogan about the no-fly zone, however, and the story has been changed to reflect that.

     

     

     

    961 comments

    we cannot and should not be the police for the world. This is a civil war within the country and we have no business interfering nor should we be sending taxpayer funded aid in any shape. Time to "laser" focus on jobs, the debt, the economy, and our citizens.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, syria, featured, chemical-weapons, erdogan, president-obama
  • Updated
    6
    May
    2013
    4:40am, EDT

    Israel strikes Syrian military research center, US official says

    Syrian opposition forces got a boost from two nights of Israeli airstrikes against President Assad's regime, NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    By Robert Windrem, Jim Miklaszewski and Andrea Mitchell, NBC News

    Israeli jets bombed a military research facility north of Damascus early Sunday, a senior official told NBC News. It marked the second Israeli attack on targets in Syria in recent days. 

    Heavy explosions shook the city, and video shot by activists showed a fireball rising into the sky after Sunday's strikes.

    Reuters reported that a Western intelligence source said the operation hit Iranian-supplied missiles that were en route to the Hezbollah militia in Lebanon.

    A rebel spokesman, who spoke from a “liberated area” held by the opposition in Damascus, told NBC News there were huge explosions just before 2 a.m. Sunday local time (7 p.m. Saturday ET) in the Qaysoun mountains on the edge of Damascus. 

    “Around 10 locations were hit," the spokesman said. "It was difficult to tell what was hit in the raid and what exploded afterwards.  Some of the targets were weapons and weapons depots.

    "Secondary explosions continued for about four hours.  They shook all of Damascus. There was still smoke in the air as the sun came up.”

    From its Damascus media office, the Free Syrian Army listed nine apparent targets, including the Syrian Revolutionary Guard, the 104th brigade headquarters, a weapons depot in Qasyoun and a military research center at Jamraya.

    The FSA said power was cut in parts of Damascus at 1:48 am local time Sunday (6:48 p.m. Saturday ET). A FSA spokesman said the fires and explosions "made Damascus look like the day at night."

    The White House said there would be no official comment on the latest attack, but diplomatic sources and U.S. officials told NBC News that the administration is fully supportive of the airstrikes.

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    /

    A look back at the conflict that has overtaken the country.

    Launch slideshow

    United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said he spoke with the head of the Arab League, Nabil ElAraby, about the Israeli air strikes on Sunday and expressed "grave concern" for the risks to regional security. 

    On Friday, Israeli warplanes launched strikes against targets inside Syria, U.S. officials told NBC News. It’s believed the primary target also was a shipment of weapons headed for Hezbollah, they said. A senior U.S. official said the airstrikes were believed to be related to delivery systems for chemical weapons.

    After that attack, an Israeli spokesman in Washington said that Israel would not comment specifically on the reports but said that “Israel is determined to prevent the transfer of chemical weapons or other game-changing weaponry by the Syrian regime to terrorists, especially to Hezbollah in Lebanon.”

    It wasn’t clear whether the Israelis alerted the U.S. before the attack. White House officials referred all questions to the Israelis.

    Rebel units were in disagreement about what type of weapons were in the convoy, Reuters reported. A rebel from an information-gathering unit in Damascus that calls itself "The Syrian Islamic Masts Intelligence" said the convoy carried anti-aircraft missiles.

    The rebel, who asked not to be named, added: "There were three strikes by Israeli F-16 jets that damaged a convoy carrying anti-aircraft missiles heading to the Shi'ite Lebanese party (Hezbollah) along the Damascus-Beirut military road. One strike hit a site near the (Syrian) Fourth Armoured Division in al-Saboura but we have been unable to determine what is in that location."

    However, Qassim Saadedine, a commander and spokesman for the rebel Free Syrian Army, told Reuters he did not think the weapons were anti-aircraft. "We have nothing confirmed yet but we are assuming that it is some type of long-range missile that would be capable of carrying chemical materials," he said. 

    In the January attack, Israeli fighter jets struck a convoy of sophisticated anti-aircraft missiles believed on their way to Hezbollah.  

    Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon publicly acknowledged the January airstrike inside Syria in a joint press conference with Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel in Tel Aviv on April 22. Ya’alon said any Syrian delivery of sophisticated weapons to rogue elements like Hezbollah would be a “red line” for Israel and “when they crossed this red line, we operated. We acted.”

    MSNBC - TV

    Syria is in the middle of a civil war pitting rebels against the regime of President Bashir Assad. Tens of thousands have already died, and the possible use of the nation’s stockpile of chemical weapons has been of grave concern to the U.S. and other nations.

    Last week, the White House said there was evidence that Syria’s government may have used chemical weapons against its own people. But President Barack Obama has cautioned against rushing to action against Assad’s government, saying that the U.S. required more evidence before getting involved in the civil war there.  

    The U.S. has long believed that Syria was stockpiling chemical weapons. Intelligence reports indicate that it has sarin and the nerve agent tabun along with traditional chemicals like mustard gas and hydrogen cyanide. A 2011 CIA report said Syria was also developing the potent nerve agent VX, which could render a city uninhabitable for days.

    Syria has said that it hasn’t used and will not use chemical weapons.

    On Tuesday, Hezbollah’s leader warned the rebels that his militia was ready to intervene on Assad’s side in Syria’s civil war. There have been concerns that Syrian SCUD missiles that might be capable of carrying chemical weapons could be transferred to Hezbollah.

    NBC News' Richard Engel, Kristen Welker and Stacey Klein and Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    • Israel to Syria's Assad: Airstrikes not aimed at helping rebels
    • Syrian government used chemical weapons 4 times, rebels say

    This story was originally published on Sun May 5, 2013 10:33 AM EDT

    2106 comments

    This is what I love about Israel. They don't take public opinion polls to see what they should do, or see which way the political winds are blowing. They do not make bellicose statements to the world about a "red line"- they ID the problem, go in and kick ass to protect themselves. Bravo lads!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: israel, syria, airstrikes, featured, chemical-weapons, updated
  • 25
    Apr
    2013
    8:40pm, EDT

    Bush admin's Iraq WMD claims hang over Syria chemical weapons debate

    White House officials strongly suggested Thursday that Bashar al-Assad's regime has used chemical weapons against rebels because of a nerve agent found in victims near Aleppo.

    By Andrea Mitchell, Jim Miklaszewski and Jeff Black, NBC News

    The specter of the bogus claims that former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein was hiding weapons of mass destruction — used to justify war —  hangs over the debate on how world leaders will respond to the possibility that Syria deployed chemical weapons.

    Obama administration officials say they know they have to deal with the Iraq WMD legacy and will need definitive proof to persuade Russia, Syria’s only remaining ally in the U.N. Security Council, that Bashir Assad’s regime used deadly sarin gas against the opposition in the country’s bloody two-year civil war.

    One senior U.S. defense official told reporters Thursday, "We have seen very bad movies before" — referring to previous instances where initial intelligence was proven wrong.

    President Barack Obama has called the use of chemical weapons by Assad, a "red line" that if crossed would be a "game-changer" in the U.S. response to Syrian aggression.

    The White House said Thursday that the U.S. believes "with some degree of varying confidence" that the Syrian government has used chemical weapons — specifically the nerve agent sarin — against its own people.

    A letter from the White House to members of Congress said the assessment was based on "physiological samples" but called for a United Nations probe to corroborate it and nail down when and how they were used.

    "We are continuing to do further work to establish a definitive judgment as to whether or not the red line has been crossed and to inform our decision-making about what we'll do next," a White House official said.

    The White House said Thursday that the U.S. believes the Assad regime has used chemical weapons, an act that President Obama has previously said would be crossing a "red line." NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    "All options are on the table in terms of our response," the official added.

    U.S. intelligence agencies say that blood samples from two attacks last month in Aleppo tested positive for sarin.

    Still, those sources say there is “no absolute proof” deadly agents were deployed by Assad's troops.

    Administration sources tell NBC News they still have not been able to connect all the dots to prove who actually used the chemical weapons, whom they used them against, or when or where they were used. 

    Secretary of State John Kerry discussed Syria with his Russian counterpart in Brussels last week, but the Russians remain unpersuaded to take action against the Syrian government, and the international community is demanding hard evidence to prove Syria is using chemical agents.

    The proof, however, could be difficult to obtain.

    A spokesman for UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who said that the United Nations can't take action based on intelligence from one country, said a team of experts assembled to investigate chemical weapons in Syria remains "grounded" in Cyprus because the Assad regime has blocked it from entering the country.

    After two years of Syria's bloody civil war, the Obama administration inched ever so slightly toward U.S. military intervention on Thursday. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    The U.N. has repeatedly called on Syria to let its inspection team in.

    "The fact-finding team is on standby and ready to deploy in 24-48 hours," the U.N. spokesman said. 

    Syria's information minister, Omran al-Zoubi, said in an interview with Russian TV that the government has not and will not use chemical weapons and blamed potential evidence of their existence on "armed terrorist groups," the state news agency reported.

    The chemical weapons investigation and counterclaims recall the experience in Iraq, where U.N. inspection teams were hampered in their effort to find weapons of mass destruction amid U.S. intelligence reports suggesting they were being hidden by Saddam.

    It was the alleged existence of the so-called WMD the George W. Bush administration used to justify war in Iraq.

    Despite a massive search by U.S. forces, no weapons of mass destruction ever turned up.

    Sen. John McCain, R.-Ariz.,  was swift to react to the latest reports that Syria used chemical weapons, saying, “I think it's pretty obvious that red line has been crossed." He said the administration should now consider a military approach in Syria he has been advocating for two years that falls short of boots on the ground.

    “That is to provide a safe area for the opposition to operate and  to establish a no-fly zone and provide weapons to the people in the resistance who we trust,” McCain said.

    A White House official called for a high level of scrutiny, but also caution.

    "Given our own history with intelligence assessments, including intelligence assessments related to weapons of mass destruction, it's very important that we are able to establish this with certainty and that we are able to present information in a way that is airtight," the official said.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related: White House: US believes Syrian regime used chemical weapons

    322 comments

    Idiot John Kerry already gave al-Qaeda in Syria $250 million of U.S. Taxpayer's money - CIA strikes again with unintelligent lies from the Muslim Arabs.

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    Explore related topics: iraq, white-house, pentagon, syria, wmd, chemical-weapons
  • Updated
    30
    Apr
    2013
    1:49pm, EDT

    Obama: There is 'some evidence' Syria's Assad used chemical weapons

    President Barack Obama expands on what his administration is doing in response to reports that chemical weapons may have been used by the Syrian regime.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    President Barack Obama said Tuesday that the United States has evidence that chemical weapons were used in Syria’s brutal civil war but that it remains unclear who used them.

    In a White House press conference, Obama said there is “some evidence” that the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad used the weapons, but urged against rushing to judgment, saying more facts must be known before any action taken.

    “We don't know how they were used, when they were used, who used them," the president said, adding "we don't have a chain of custody that establishes what exactly happened."

    He reiterated that the administration needs more intelligence before before he’s willing to entertain any kind of escalation in Syria.

    “When I am making decisions about America’s national security and the potential for taking additional action in terms of chemical weapons use, I’ve got to make sure I’ve got the facts,” he said.

    As in the past, Obama referred to chemical weapons use as a “game-changer.” He gave no indication, however, that the United States or its allies would step up action against the Assad regime, adding that as long ago as last year he had asked the Pentagon to prepare options on Syria. Obama declined to elaborate on any plans in the works.

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    /

    A look back at the conflict that has overtaken the country.

    Launch slideshow

    “By ‘game-changer’ I mean that we would have to rethink the range of options that are available to us,” he said.

    “Obviously, there are options … that are on the shelf right now that we have not deployed,” the president added.

    Obama's caution about launching any military action against Syria in the absence of firm evidence of the use of chemical weapons likely stems from his predecessor, President George W. Bush, who has been criticized for starting the Iraq war over claims of weapons of mass destruction that never materialized.

    "If we end up rushing to judgment without hard, effective evidence, then we can find ourselves in the position where we can't mobilize the international community to support what we do," he said.

    The primary incident of alleged chemical weapons use came on March 19, when rebel and government forces were engaged in heavy fighting in a strategically important town near the city of Aleppo.

    Syria’s state news agency SANA said 25 people were killed and dozens more were injured; they blamed the attack on rebels.

    Rebel forces, meanwhile, said government forces had delivered a chemical agent with a Scud missile.

    Both sides described civilians panicking, having breathing difficulties and convulsing, and both sides continue to blame each other.

    Regional reaction
    Countries in the region have been watching with growing concern at the worsening conflict in Syria, none more so than Israel. 

    Slideshow: The lives of Syrian rebels

    NBC News

    People resisting the army of President Bashar al-Assad in northern Syria cope with loss and prepare for fighting.

    Launch slideshow

    "The main risk for Israel is that chemical weapons end up in the hands of the Hezbollah or the hands of any jihadist," said Dr. David Friedman, a chemical and biological weapons expert at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv. "If they do then all the world needs to be afraid of this."

    Nonetheless, he said, Israel wasn't pressuring Obama to intervene in Syria.

    Gamal Abdel Gawad, a political science professor at the American University in Cairo, said that Obama would likely not react with an all-out military intervention.  

    "Its a good idea (not to intervene militarily). The risks are very high," he said.  "Rule number one in military intervention is to know how to get out. There is no answer to this question. You are playing with adversaries that have a lot of potential and resources."

    Obama’s comments came on a day when a bombing in central Damascus killed at least 13 people and injured scores more, according to state media and the Britain-based Human Rights Watch.

    Syria’s two-year civil war has claimed more than 70,000 lives, according to the United Nations.

    The U.S. and other countries have provided aid to rebels but have stopped short of committing to further involvement in the battle to overthrow Assad.

    NBC News's Paul Goldman and Charlene Gubash contributed to this report. 

    Related:

    Obama cautions against rush to action in Syria

    Obama reiterates chemical weapons would be 'game-changer'

    More NBC News coverage of Syria

    This story was originally published on Tue Apr 30, 2013 11:48 AM EDT

    492 comments

    I would like to "see" the evidence please.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: war, syria, obama, featured, chemical-weapons, updated
  • Updated
    26
    Apr
    2013
    11:05pm, EDT

    Obama reiterates chemical weapons would be 'game-changer'

    Although there is evidence of chemical weapons in Syria, Obama said Friday it's still unknown when or how they were used and emphasized the need to obtain strong evidence and work with the  international community. NBC's Chuck Todd reports.

    By Erin McClam and Ian Johnston, NBC News

    President Obama said Friday that the potential use of chemical weapons by the ruling regime of Syria against its people “adds increased urgency” to international concern about the regime.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Speaking to reporters during an Oval Office meeting with King Abdullah of Jordan, Obama noted that reports of the use of chemical weapons by the Syrian government were preliminary. That information, he said, “does not tell us when they were used, how they were used.”

    Still, the president said: “Obviously, horrific as it is when mortars are being fired on civilians and people are being indiscriminately killed, to use potential weapons of mass destruction on civilian populations crosses another line with respect to international norms and international law. And that is going to be a game-changer.”

    On Tuesday, the Israeli military published intelligence findings that President Bashar Assad’s forces had used chemical weapons repeatedly in recent months. Part of Israel’s concern, and Obama’s, is that those weapons could fall into terrorist hands.

    Two days later, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said that the U.S. believes “with some degree of varying confidence” that the Syrian government has used chemical weapons, specifically the nerve agent sarin, against its people.

    A letter from the White House to Congress said the assessment was based on “physiological samples” but called for a United Nations probe to corroborate it and nail down when and how they were used.

    The White House said on Thursday that the U.S. believes the Assad regime has used chemical weapons, an act that President Obama has previously said would be crossing a "red line." NBC's Jim Mikleszewski reports.

    The American response is shadowed by the legacy of flawed intelligence reports of weapons of mass destruction that led to the invasion of Iraq.

    The president spoke after the deputy foreign minister of Israel said world powers may now conclude there was “no avoiding” action to take control of the Assad regime’s chemical stockpile.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron also said there was limited but growing evidence that the Syrian regime had used chemical agents.

    Echoing the administration’s caution, Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger of Maryland, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said Friday that “every option is on the table” but stressed that “we want to do everything we can to avoid putting boots on the ground.”

    Sen. John McCain, R.-Ariz., said on Thursday that the Obama administration should consider a military approach but not commit American troops. He suggested providing weapons to trusted parts of the Syrian resistance.

    The uprising against Assad began in March 2011, and an estimated 70,000 people have been killed in the violence that has followed.

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    /

    A look back at the conflict that has overtaken the country.

    Launch slideshow

    Related:

    No good options for Obama on Syria

    Bush admin's Iraq WMD claims hang over Syria chemical weapons debate

    'Suffocating in the streets': Chemical weapons attack reported in Syria

    This story was originally published on Fri Apr 26, 2013 8:02 AM EDT

    1258 comments

    Israel warned everyone that Iraq's WMD programs went to Syria. Since then, Israel has destroyed a nuclear reactor being built in Syria, and now they have proof that Assad used chemical weapons on his own people. . .

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    Explore related topics: israel, syria, barack-obama, featured, chemical-weapons, updated, sarin
  • Updated
    25
    Apr
    2013
    3:56pm, EDT

    White House: US believes Syrian regime used chemical weapons

    Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel told reporters in Abu Dhabi that the United States has "a reasonable amount of confidence that some amount of chemical weapons was used" by the Syrian government.

    By Kristen Welker, Jim Miklaszewski, Courtney Kube and Tracy Connor, NBC News

    The White House said Thursday that the U.S. believes "with some degree of varying confidence" the Syrian government has used chemical weapons — specifically the nerve agent sarin — against its own people.

    A letter from the White House to members of Congress said the assessment was based on "physiological samples" but called for a United Nations probe to corroborate it and nail down when and how they were used.

    "We are continuing to do further work to establish a definitive judgement as to whether or not the red line has been crossed and to inform our decision-making about what we'll do next," a White House official said. 

    "All options are on the table in terms of our response," the official added.

    Secretary of State John Kerry told reporters at the Capitol that the U.S. believes chemical weapons were used twice, but the letter doesn't specify that.

    "Our intelligence community does assess with varying degrees of confidence that the Syrian regime has used chemical weapons on a small scale in Syria, specifically the chemical agent sarin," the letter said.

    "We do believe that any use of chemical weapons in Syria would very likely have originated with the Assad regime," it added.

    "Thus far, we believe that the Assad regime maintains custody of these weapons, and has demonstrated a willingness to escalate its horrific use of violence against the Syrian people."

    Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said he had not seen the evidence supporting the assessment, but added that use of chemical agents "violates every convention of war."

    Sarin is a man-made nerve agent that has been used in terrorist attacks in Japan and possibly during the Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. In large doses, it can cause convulsions, paralysis and death.

    The U.S. has long believed that Syria was stockpiling chemical weapons. Intelligence reports indicate that it has sarin and the nerve agent tabun along with traditional chemicals like mustard gas and hydrogen cyanide. A 2011 CIA report said Syria was also developing the potent nerve agent VX, which could render a city uninhabitable for days.

    Syria's information minister, Omran al-Zoubi, said in an interview with Russian TV that the government has not and will not use chemical weapons and blamed potential evidence of their existence on "armed terrorist groups," the state news agency reported.

    A spokesman for the rebel Free Syrian Army, Fahd Almasri, claimed Syria has launched chemical attacks in nine places and was poised to do so again at the Lebanon border and in Damascus "when Assad knows he is finished."

    "Now is the moment to find a solution very quickly," Almasri told NBC News in a phone interview.

    President Obama has said the verified use of chemical weapons by the regime would be a "red line" and a "game-changer" for U.S. and international military intervention in the Syrian civil war.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "Precisely because the President takes this issue so seriously, we have an obligation to fully investigate any and all evidence of chemical weapons use within Syria," said the letter, which was signed by Obama's legislative director, Miguel Rodriguez.

    The letter was a response to a request from a bipartisan group of senators who asked the White House for answers after the Israeli military’s top intelligence analyst cited photographs of people "foaming from the mouth” as evidence of chemical weapons use.

    Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, called the development “deeply troubling.”

    “While more work needs to be done to fully verify this assessment…it is becoming increasingly clear that we must step up our efforts,” Corker said.

    “I should make clear, however, that it if it comes to the use of military force, before the president takes any action to commit U.S. forces to any effort in Syria or elsewhere, I expect him to fully consult with the Senate and seek an authorization for the use of military force."

    Sen. Dianne Feinstein, chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the assessment could spark a dangerous reaction from Damascus.

    "I am very concerned that with this public acknowledgement, President Assad may calculate he has nothing more to lose and the likelihood he will further escalate this conflict therefore increases," Feinstein said.

    The White House official called for a high level of scrutiny — but also caution.

    "Given our own history with intelligence assessments, including intelligence assessments related to weapons of mass destruction, it's very important that we are able to establish this with certainty and that we are able to present information in a way that is airtight," the official said.

    NBC News' Kasie Hunt, Kelly O'Donnell, Robert Windrem and Charlene Gubash contributed to this story

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    A look back at the conflict that has overtaken the country.

    Launch slideshow

    Related:

    'Suffocating in the streets': Chemical weapons attack reported in Syria

    Obama warns Syria's Assad not to use chemical weapons

     

    This story was originally published on Thu Apr 25, 2013 11:56 AM EDT

    1057 comments

    UH, OHHHHH! A "Red Line" has been crossed. What will you do about it POSUS?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pentagon, syria, chemical-weapons, chuck-hagel, updated
  • 23
    Apr
    2013
    9:22am, EDT

    Israel: Syria has used chemical weapons, victims seen 'foaming from the mouth'

    By Ian Johnston, Andrea Mitchell and Courtney Kube, NBC News

    Syrian government forces have used chemical weapons in the country’s civil war, the Israeli military’s top intelligence analyst said on Tuesday, citing photographic evidence of people "foaming from the mouth."

    If the claim by Brigadier-General Itai Brun is confirmed, it would mean Syria’s President Bashar Assad has crossed what the State Department has previously described as a red line that would trigger some form of U.S. response. President Barack Obama also warned Assad using chemical weapons would be a "tragic mistake" that would have "consequences."

    Brun told a conference at the Institute of National Security in Tel Aviv that photographs of victims showing foam coming out of their mouths and contracted pupils were signs that a deadly gas had been used.

    "One of the main characteristics of the recent events in Syria is the increasing use of ground-to-ground missiles, rockets and chemical weapons by the Syrian regime. There is a wide-range usage of missile, rockets and more by the Syrian weapons array," he said, according to a translated transcript of his remarks provided by the Israel Defense Forces.

    "According to our professional assessment, the regime has used deadly chemical weapons against armed rebels on a number of occasions in the past few months," he said.

    "For instance, on March 19, 2013, victims suffered from shrunken pupils, foaming from the mouth, and other symptoms which indicate the use of deadly chemical weapons. The type of chemical weapons was likely sarin, as well as neutralizing and non-lethal chemical weapons," he added.

    According to the Centers for Disease Control, sarin, a nerve agent, causes symptoms including loss of consciousness, convulsions, paralysis, and respiratory failure that can be fatal.

    George Ourfalian / Reuters file

    Animal carcasses lie on the ground after what residents, Syrian rebels and Assad's regime all said was a chemical weapon attack in Khan al-Assal near the northern city of Aleppo, on March 23.

    In March, Assad's regime and the rebels blamed each other for what both said was a chemical-weapon attack in Aleppo.

    Responding to Brun’s comments, Pentagon Press Secretary George Little said in a written statement that the United States “continues to assess reports of chemical weapons use in Syria.”

    “The use of such weapons would be entirely unacceptable. We reiterate in the strongest possible terms the obligations of the Syrian regime to safeguard its chemical weapons stockpiles, and not to use or transfer such weapons to terrorist groups like Hezbollah,” he added.

    On Monday, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said the use of chemical weapons by Assad's forces would be a "game changer" and the United States and Israel "have options for all contingencies," Reuters reported.

    Hagel met Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem on Tuesday, the news service said, a day after flying in an Israeli military helicopter over the occupied Golan Heights on the edge of the fighting in Syria that has entered its third year.

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    "This is a difficult and dangerous time, this is a time when friends and allies must remain close, closer than ever," Hagel, in remarks to reporters before his talks with Netanyahu, said about the United States and Israel.

    Secretary of State John Kerry, who was in Belgium for a NATO meeting on Tuesday, that he did not have information that confirmed that the Syrians had used chemical weapons.

    Earlier he said the alliance needed to consider its role in the crisis, Reuters reported. "We should also carefully and collectively consider how NATO is prepared to respond to protect its members from a Syrian threat, including any potential chemical weapons threat," he added.

    Kerry said that the planning the alliance had already done was appropriate. 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Syrian activists say Assad loyalists 'massacre' 85 in Damascus suburb

    'Suffocating in the streets': Chemical weapons attack reported in Syria

    Obama warns Syria's Assad not to use chemical weapons

    473 comments

    Wonder how long it will take the haters to come out and start blaming Israel for responsibility for the alleged gassing? Not long I imagine.

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  • Updated
    25
    Mar
    2013
    9:34am, EDT

    Syria rebels claim Assad forces fired rockets containing 'chemical weapon'

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    Government forces in Syria used chemical weapons against rebels near Damascus, an opposition campaigner told Reuters on Monday. 

    Rebels had surrounded an army base in the town of Adra, on the outskirts of Damascus, when soldiers used rocket launchers to fire the weapons at them, killing two fighters and wounding 23, according to activist Mohammad Doumani. The claim could not immediately be verified by NBC News.

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    "Doctors are describing the chemical weapon used as phosphorus that hits the nervous system and causes imbalance and loss of consciousness,” Doumani told Reuters from the nearby town of Douma, where the wounded were transported for treatment.

    “The two fighters were very close to where the rockets exploded and they died swiftly. The rest are being treated with Atropine," he added.

    There was no independent confirmation of the attack, which follows the death of 26 people in a rocket attack near the city of Aleppo last week. The authorities and rebels accused each other of firing a missile carrying chemicals there.

    On Tuesday, both the rebels and the government claimed a chemical weapon was used during fierce fighting, with each side blaming the other for the attack. 

    One of the major items on the agenda for President Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyhau is the war in Syria - now in its third year. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    Reporting from inside Syria is increasingly difficult, and independent confirmation of the use of chemical weapons was impossible to ascertain.

    U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Thursday announced that the United Nations will launch an investigation into the allegations.

    However, the prospects for a quick conclusion to the probe will depend on cooperation from the warring parties and safety for investigators — problematic conditions in the chaos of the country's civil war, experts say.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    'Suffocating in the streets': Chemical weapons attack reported in Syria

    US defense chief: Intel 'raises serious concerns' about Syria chemical weapons

    Full Syria coverage from NBC News

     

    This story was originally published on Mon Mar 25, 2013 9:23 AM EDT

    71 comments

    Phosphorus? Isn't that what the Israelis used on Lebanon? Oh wait, that was white phosphorus. I would take these reports with a grain of salt. The rebels desperately want the US to step in and so do the Israelis. We didn't say a word about the Israelis use of white phosphorus in Lebanon, so I guess  …

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  • 21
    Mar
    2013
    4:06pm, EDT

    Syria's chaos complicates task for chemical weapons investigators

    What should be the response if Syria deploys chemical weapons? Channel 4's Jonathan Miller reports.

    By Robert Windrem, Senior investigative producer, NBC News

    Prospects for a quick conclusion to a U.N. investigation of a possible chemical weapons attack in Syria will depend on cooperation from the warring parties and safety for investigators — problematic conditions in the chaos of the country's civil war, an expert on weapons control told NBC News on Thursday.


    Follow @openchannelblog

    Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Thursday that he had agreed to conduct an investigation of allegations of an attack in the northern city of Aleppo. The government and the opposition have accused each other of carrying out that attack on Tuesday.


    Ralf Trapp, a German who works on disarmament and non-proliferation issues, specializing on chemical and biological weapons, said the first job of an inspection team would be safely getting to and operating at the site. He said then -- if the Syrian parties cooperated and the inspectors felt safe — they would:

     

    • Interview victims and bystanders on what they felt, smelled, saw, etc.
    • Search for remnants of any weapons used. That is often difficult and unproductive, but the earlier one gets to the scene, the better.
    • Take samples at the site. Pieces of weapons are rarely found, Trapp said, but the chemical agent can be uncovered in soil, plants and, if in an urban environment, bricks and building materials. Beyond the agent, inspectors will look for chemicals left behind as the agents themselves deteriorate.
    • Conduct medical tests on the victims, including taking tissue samples, blood samples and, if the teams arrive quickly enough, urine samples. Samples in some cases can be analyzed on the scene, but if the inspections are delayed, there are labs in Europe and the U.S. that can find evidence in DNA and proteins.

    Trapp said a big question will be how soon the UN and the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons – of which Trapp is a former official -- can get a team into Aleppo. He said the team would have to be large and varied, with security officers and medical officers as well as inspectors.

    But each day lost will influence the speed with which the investigation can be concluded, he said, because as more time elapses before biological sampling occurs, more sophisticated DNA and other toxicological testing is required. 

    With optimum cooperation and conditions on the ground, an investigation led by the OPCW could be under way in days, Trapp said. A determination, including the pinpointing of the agent, could be made within days after arrival, he said -- if there is good access to interviews and environmental and biological samples. He said his former organization has equipment at the ready and could move quickly.

    But if the inspection is conducted by the kind of UN group that investigated the allegations against Iraq after the 1991 Gulf War, with countries nominating experts and then gathering them, getting inspectors in could take weeks, he said. 

    Considering that Aleppo is a war zone, optimum conditions are unlikely.

    Trapp would not speculate on what agents were used, but he said that he has seen no reports of blistering, and without blistering, it is unlikely to have been mustard gas — although he said it’s possible that some victims might have only internal blistering.

    Evidence of a nerve gas attack, for example, would be found in corpses. Victims would show certain telltale signs, like tiny pupils, saliva around the noses and eyes. There might be evidence of convulsions.

    He did not dismiss the use of more common agents that are not on the proscribed list of chemical weapons. Victims said they smelled chlorine, and those felled in the attacks reported suffocating.  Chlorine, of course, is found throughout the industrial world and in large quantities can kill. Moreover, feelings of suffocation could be associated with a chlorine attack.

    The chemical has a long history of use. It was the first chemical used as a weapon in World War I by German troops against French and French colonial forces. There are reports that insurgents in Iraq used chlorine in huge quantities in their attacks.

    Similarly, tear gas, if used in large quantities in a confined space, can suffocate and kill.

    Trapp was careful to note that even though chlorine or tear gas are not listed as prohibited weapons on the Chemical Weapons Convention, each could be considered a chemical weapon if used as a "method of warfare" rather than as being used for law enforcement or crowd control. The convention bars the use of chemicals in general as a "method of warfare." 

    Related stories

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    George Ourfalian / Reuters

    Residents and medics transport a Syrian Army soldier, injured in what they said was a chemical weapon attack near Aleppo, to a hospital on March 19. Syria's government and rebels accused each other of firing a rocket loaded with chemical agents outside the northern city of Aleppo on Tuesday.

    22 comments

    Who cares? It's their fight, not ours. We need to quit sticking our nose in business that doesn't concern us. Now, if they were to use those chemical weapons on U.S. soil or harm American citizens with them, then it's in our court. We gotta stop trying to be the worlds policemen, especially in and t …

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  • 21
    Mar
    2013
    10:06am, EDT

    UN to investigate alleged use of chemical weapons in Syria

    George Ourfalian / Reuters

    Residents and medics transport an injured Syrian army soldier after an alleged chemical weapon attack near Aleppo Tuesday.

    By Michelle Nichols, Reuters

    UNITED NATIONS — U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Thursday announced that the United Nations will launch an investigation as requested by the Syrian government into allegations that chemical weapons were used in Syria.

    "I have decided to conduct a United Nations investigation into the possible use of chemical weapons in Syria," Ban told reporters.


    The Syrian government and rebels are accusing each other of launching a deadly chemical attack. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    He said the investigation will focus on "the specific incident brought to my attention by the Syrian government."

    Syria asked Ban on Wednesday to investigate an alleged chemical weapons attack by "terrorist groups" near the northern city of Aleppo on Tuesday, Syrian U.N. Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari said.

    The Syrian opposition said on Wednesday that there was a second chemical weapons attack on Tuesday in Damascus in addition to the one the government and opposition accuse each other of carrying out in Aleppo on the same day.

    But Ban made clear that the focus of the investigation he announced would be the Aleppo attack.

    Spokesman Jay Carney addresses reports that chemical weapons may have been used in Syria as civil war continues under the rule of President Bashar al-Assad.

    "I am of course aware that there are other allegations of similar cases involving the reported use of chemical weapons," he said, adding that the United Nations would be cooperating with the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons and the World Health Organization.

    "Full cooperation from all parties will be essential. I stress that this includes unfettered access," he said. "I reiterated this point in my communications with the Syrian authorities."

    "There is much work to do and this will not happen overnight. It is obviously a difficult mission," Ban said. "I intend for this investigation to start as soon as is practically possible."

    Related:

    'Suffocating in the streets': Chemical weapons attack reported in Syria

    US defense chief: Intel 'raises serious concerns' about Syria chemical weapons

    Syria chaos looms large over Obama's Israel trip

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    27 comments

    I think the United Nations serves as a communications center for countries, for our leaders, diplomats and intelligence agencies who do not always catch it all, or know it all. Let's give the U.N. a chance.

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  • Updated
    20
    Mar
    2013
    12:21pm, EDT

    'Suffocating in the streets': Chemical weapons attack reported in Syria

    The Syrian government and rebels are accusing each other of launching a deadly chemical attack. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Ian Johnston, Charlene Gubash and Ammar Cheikomar, NBC News

    A chemical weapon was used during fierce fighting in a strategically important Syrian town, rebels and the government claimed Tuesday, with each side blaming the other for the deadly attack.

    If it is confirmed that a banned chemical agent was used, it could significantly change the international response to the ongoing civil war.

    The death toll was put at 25 by Syria’s state-run SANA news agency, which said dozens of other people were injured.

    White House spokesman Jay Carney addresses reports that chemical weapons may have been used in Syria as civil war continues under the rule of President Bashar Assad.

    A photographer for the Reuters news agency visited hospitals in the city of Aleppo, and said a number of patients had breathing difficulties. They told him of people dying and “suffocating in the streets.”

    SANA blamed the rebels for the attack, which happened in Khan al-Asal in Aleppo province.

    “Terrorists on Tuesday launched a rocket containing chemical materials,” it said.

    “Initial information indicated that about 16 citizens were killed, and 86 others were injured, most of them are in critical condition. Later, the death toll due to the firing of the rocket rose up to 25 martyrs,” it added.


    SANA’s website showed photographs of a number of people, including several children, in what appeared to be a hospital.

    'Convulsions, then death'
    Information Minister Omran al-Zoabi said that “the substance in the rocket causes unconsciousness, then convulsions, then death,” Reuters reported.

    George Ourfalian / Reuters

    Residents and medics transport a wounded Syrian army soldier to hospital Tuesday after heavy fighting in Aleppo province during which both rebels and government forces said a chemical weapon was used.

    Mohammad al-Shafae, a member of the Local Coordination Committees in western Aleppo, said the attack happened around 8 a.m.

    Rebel spokesman Fahd al Masry said a Scud missile was fired by the government and that "most probably" chemical weapons had been used. "This is not the first time," he added.

    There was “a state of panic and fear among the civilians and dozens of cases of suffocating and poisoning,” he said.

    George Ourfalian / Reuters

    A man is treated at a hospital after a chemical weapons attack in Syria's Aleppo province. Rebels and Syrian government forces blamed each other for the attack.

    Masry said the attack would not have happened if foreign governments had taken stronger action.

    "They wouldn't have used it if not for the silence of the international community on the crimes and massacres committed in Syria for the past two years," he said.

    Masry said that the rebel forces may "be forced to reevaluate the rules of engagement in the coming days."

    Ahmad al-Ahmad, a media activist near Khan al-Asal, said state media reports blaming the rebels for the attack were "ridiculous."

    "This is ridiculous and cheap and stupid because we do not have these weapons and we do not know how to use them," he said.

    Khan al-Asal is the last town in the area to the west of Aleppo that has not been taken by the rebels, and if it fell that would hamper the flow of supplies to the regime’s forces in the city.

    The town's population has traditionally been split between Sunni Muslims, who tend to be sympathetic toward the rebels, and Shiites, who are more likely to be supporters of President Bashar Assad.

    White House spokesman Jay Carney said Tuesday the U.S. was looking carefully at allegations that both sides are using chemical weapons, but he said he was skeptical of any claims made by the Syrian regime, The Associated Press reported.

    He added there was no evidence to back up the Assad regime's claim that Syrian rebels have used chemical weapons.

    Carney said it was a serious concern for the U.S. that the Assad regime could use such weapons, the AP reported. He said President Barack Obama believed that would be unacceptable and that there would be consequences. 

    UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon spoke Tuesday with Ahmet Üzümcü, director general of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) and expressed his "deep concern" about the alleged use of chemical weapons, according to a statement released by the United Nations.

    "The Secretary-General remains convinced that the use of chemical weapons by any party under any circumstances would constitute an outrageous crime," the statement read.

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    On Dec. 24, there were claims that a number of Syrians were killed after inhaling “poisonous gases” released by government forces in rebel-held areas of the city of Homs.

    OPCW spokesman Michael Louhan said the body was asked by the United Nations to give its assessment of this incident, but it was unable to find any “conclusive information regarding whether they were banned chemical weapon substances or not.”

    According to the international body, the Chemical Weapons Convention says it was created “for the sake of all mankind, to exclude completely the possibility” of their use.

    'Abhorrent'
    The U.K., which recently announced it was sending armored vehicles to the rebel forces, warned Tuesday that if the use of chemical weapons was confirmed it would change its approach.

    “We are aware of today’s press reports alleging that a chemical weapon was fired in the north of Syria and we are looking into this,” a spokesman for the U.K. Foreign Office said.

    “The use of chemical weapons would be abhorrent and would be universally condemned,” he added. “The U.K. is clear that the use or proliferation of chemical weapons would demand a serious response from the international community and force us to revisit our approach so far.”

    Russia – one of Syria’s dwindling number of allies - blamed the opposition, saying it was “seriously concerned” that “weapons of mass destruction are falling into the hands of the rebels,” according to a foreign ministry statement reported by Reuters.

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    People resisting the army of President Bashar al-Assad in northern Syria cope with loss and prepare for fighting.

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    The Reuters photographer said victims he had visited in Aleppo hospitals were "mostly women and children."

    "They said that people were suffocating in the streets and the air smelt strongly of chlorine," said the photographer, who Reuters said cannot be named for his own safety. 

    The photographer quoted victims he met at the University of Aleppo hospital and the al-Rajaa hospital as saying: "People were dying in the streets and in their houses."

    Reuters described footage aired by Syrian state television:

    Men, women and children were rushed inside on stretchers as doctors inserted medical drips into their arms and oxygen tubes into their mouths. None had visible wounds to their bodies, but some interviewed said they had trouble breathing.

    An unidentified doctor interviewed on the channel said the attack was either "phosphorus or poison" but did not elaborate.

    "The Free Syrian Army hit us with a rocket, we smelled something and then everyone got dizzy and fell down. People were falling to the ground, " said a sobbing woman, lying on a stretcher with a drip in her arm.

    A young girl on a stretcher wept as she said: "My chest closed up. I couldn't talk. I couldn't breathe ... We saw people falling dead to the floor. My father fell, he fell and now we don't know where he is. God curse them, I hope they die."

    A man in a green surgical mask, who said he had been helping to evacuate the casualties, said: "It was like a powder, and anyone who breathed it in fell to the ground."

    Reuters, The Associated Press and NBC News' John Newland contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Syria threatens military action in Lebanon

    'Human river' of Syria refugees hits 1 million; UK to send armored vehicles to rebels

    US defense chief: Intel 'raises serious concerns' about Syria chemical weapons

    This story was originally published on Tue Mar 19, 2013 8:10 AM EDT

    549 comments

    There was wide spread speculation that the Iraqi chemical weapons went to Syria in the run up to the war in Iraq, at some point we may know for sure...

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  • 17
    Jan
    2013
    4:46am, EST

    US asks Turkey, Jordan to secure chem weapons if Syria crisis worsens

    Susan Walsh / pool via Reuters file

    U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta is greeted by Brig. Gen Serdar Gulbas, center, and Col. Christopher E. Craige during a stopover to visit U.S. troops in Turkey on Dec. 14.

    By R. Jeffrey Smith, The Center for Public Integrity

    The Obama administration has quietly arranged for thousands of chemical protective suits and related items to be sent to Jordan and Turkey and is pressing the military forces there to take principal responsibility for safeguarding Syrian chemical weapons sites if the country’s lethal nerve agents suddenly become vulnerable to theft and misuse, Western and Middle Eastern officials say.

    As part of their preparations for such an event, Western governments have started training the Jordanians and Turks to use the chemical gear and detection equipment, so they have the capability to protect the Syrian nerve agent depots if needed – at least for a short time, U.S. and Western officials say.

    Washington has decided moreover that the best course of action in the aftermath of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s fall would be to get the nerve agents out of the country as quickly as possible, and so it has begun discussions not only with Jordan and Turkey, but also with Iraq and Russia in an effort to chart the potential withdrawal of the arsenal and its destruction elsewhere.


    Using allied forces from Syria’s periphery as the most likely “first-responders” to a weapons-of-mass-destruction emergency is regarded in Washington as a way to avoid putting substantial U.S. troops into the region if the special Syrian military forces now safeguarding the weapons leave their posts. A Syrian withdrawal might otherwise render the weapons vulnerable to capture and use by Hezbollah or other anti-U.S. or anti-Israeli militant groups, U.S. officials fear.

    This article is based on conversations about international planning for the disposition of the Syrian stockpile with a half dozen U.S. and foreign officials who have direct knowledge of the matter but declined to be named due to the political and security sensitivities surrounding their work.

    They said the Western planning, while not yet complete, is further along than officials have publicly disclosed.

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    But so far, the Turkish and Jordanian governments have not promised to take up the full role that Washington has sought to give them, U.S. and foreign officials said.

    Asked for comment, Jordanian embassy spokeswoman, Dana Zureikat Daoud, said the training under way is “not mission-oriented,” meaning that Jordan does not have a fixed responsibility. But she added that the government is indeed concerned about the possibility of Syrian chemical armaments falling into extremist hands. “Our contingency plans … are discussed and elaborated with like-minded, concerned countries,” she said.

    A spokesman at the Turkish Embassy declined comment. But James F. Jeffrey, the U.S. ambassador to Turkey from 2008-2010, said that although Ankara is eager for the United States to play a larger role in resolving the Syrian crisis, the Turks are “usually reluctant to be our foot-soldiers.” He added: “When Americans come up with a plan to use country x’s soldiers, the plan is often self-fulfilling inside the Beltway,” but sometimes runs into trouble when it is broached in foreign capitals.

    The prospect of lethal nerve agents at any Syrian sites suddenly becoming unprotected is one of many alarming developments that have been war-gamed at the Pentagon over the past year, as the conflict there deepens and president Assad’s grip over his deadly arsenal comes into greater question, U.S. officials say.

    Private messages to Syrian commanders
    Worries about the fate of the chemicals – in a stockpile estimated at 350 to 400 metric tons -- have become so great that Washington and its allies have recently passed messages to some of the Syrian commanders that oversee their security, offering safety and a continued role under a new government if the commanders act responsibly, two knowledgeable officials said on condition they not be named.

    It is unclear what the results of that effort have been. But similar messages, urging restraint and good behavior in handling the chemicals, have also been passed in recent weeks to rebel forces inside the country, according to a Western official.

    One of Washington’s concerns has been that Assad might order the chemicals used against his own citizens, a fear that spiked late last year when chemicals at one base were seen being loaded into artillery shells and bombs. Western and Russian officials issued stiff warnings, and those concerns abated somewhat, although Foreign Policy magazine reported Jan. 15 that some evidence exists that Syria used a generally nonlethal incapacitating gas against rebels in Homs last month.

    “We found no credible evidence to corroborate or to confirm that chemical weapons were used” in that incident, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said on Tuesday.

    The principal U.S. concern in a post-Assad period, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta said at a press briefing on Jan. 10, is “how do we secure the CBW (chemical and biological weapons) sites?...And that is a discussion that we are having, not only with the Israelis, but with other countries in the region, to try to look at … what steps need to be taken in order to make sure that these sites are secured.”

    “We’re not working on options that involve (U.S.) boots on the ground,” Panetta said.

    At one extreme, officials said, special forces now in the region might have to intervene on short notice if it appears that weapons at one of the sites are about to fall into the wrong hands or to be employed on a large scale. They would be tasked with swiftly neutralizing both the agent and any hostile forces present and likely stay on the ground only for a few hours.

    The Obama administration’s preference is to have other nations’ forces undertake such an intervention, and so the United States and Britain have been conducting joint planning and training operations with Jordanian and Turkish commandos for more than a year, to prepare for their possible emergency insertion into Syria, according to U.S. and foreign officials familiar with the plans.

    The protective suits, along with detection equipment and decontamination gear, began arriving in the late fall amid concern that the Syrian government might be considering using the weapons to halt rebel advances. Syria’s arsenal – which was developed for a potential conflict with Israel -- includes mustard gas, which burns and blisters the skin and lungs, More problematically, it also includes sarin and VX, liquids that interfere with the nervous system and produce swift death by paralysis after minute, drop-size exposures, U.S. officials say.

    Syria devised its nerve weapons as binary agents, in which two less toxic chemicals are routinely stored in large, separated canisters and then loaded into separate compartments inside a bomb. For example, sarin uses a formulation of alcohol, plus another chemical. The agents combine to pose their most lethal threat only when launched or during flight, making them relatively easy to handle or transport before then – by the Syrian military or by terrorists and militant groups.

    Syria regime 'reeling, armed to the teeth' with chemical weapons

    But the separation of the basic components also opens the door to at least a partial elimination of the threat onsite, since the alcohol used in sarin could simply be drained onto the ground and allowed to evaporate.

    Jordan and Turkey initially agreed to undertake Western training in dealing with chemical weapons because they might have to deal with panicked refugees and victims if Assad’s forces use such arms against the rebels; some risk also exists in that circumstance of clouds of dangerous gas wafting onto their own territory from Syrian cities near their border. Even medical workers would be at grave risk in dealing with those who became contaminated; as a result, they are being trained now by Western powers, according to foreign officials.

    “Their primary concern is a spillover of these things into their territory,” one U.S. official said. The salience of this worry was demonstrated when a Syrian mortar round crashed into a Turkish field near a refugee camp on Jan. 14. As Daoud, the Jordanian spokeswoman, said, “Naturally, we will do everything that needs to be done to defend our people and our borders.”

    Seeking Assad exit strategy
    Partly because of worries about the stockpile’s security, Washington and its allies still hope that Assad might be persuaded to leave in exchange for a guarantee of his personal security elsewhere. In such a negotiated transition, Western powers would seek to keep the existing Syrian military units responsible for safeguarding the chemical weapons sites in place, officials said.

    “The people in Assad’s regime responsible for security at the chemical sites are among the very best soldiers,” a U.S. official said. “If one could keep those forces in place … that would be the best and probably the cheapest and most efficient outcome.”

    But Assad, in a defiant address on Jan. 6, said he had no intention of stepping aside or negotiating with the rebels engaged in a bitter struggle for national control that so far has claimed at least 60,000 lives.

    “We’re engaged in planning to develop options against alternative futures … (including) collaboration or cooperation, permissiveness, non-permissive, hostile, all of which would have different requirements,” Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey said at the Jan. 10 briefing.

    “The options are not good in any scenario,” said another senior official, adding that Washington is as worried about the chemicals falling into the hands of rebel forces that may seize power, either locally or nationally, as it is about their misuse by terrorists or by rogue Syrian military units and commanders. At least one of the major Syrian rebel groups, Jabhat al-Nasra, has been designated by the United States as a terrorist organization.

    Also, U.S. intelligence agencies have warned policymakers that once Assad is gone, the country’s turmoil will increase, with rival groups potentially seeking to brandish possession of the chemical weapons as symbols of their power. Officials said that as a result, they have pressed the Syrian National Coalition, a rebel group recognized by Western countries, to appoint a coordinator now for all chemical weapons-related policymaking and negotiations.

    Simply blowing up the chemicals inside Syria with bombs or other weapons is not an option, as Panetta made clear in a briefing for reporters during a December visit to Turkey: He said the plumes from such explosions would cause “exactly the kind of damage” that would result from the weapons’ deliberate use.

    Incinerating the chemicals inside Syria would be logistically challenging and pose high security risks, since Western countries have only a few portable destruction kits for chemical weapons, developed primarily to deal with single, leaking shells, not large stocks.

    As a result, U.S. officials said they would likely seek to transport the chemicals out of Syria as quickly as possible once a new government can be formed, preferably under the supervision of the United Nations-affiliated Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, with the new government’s formal approval.

    “We maintain regular communication with States Parties as well as the United Nations on developments in Syria and continue our efforts to prepare for various scenarios which could potentially involve the OPCW in that situation,” said OPCW spokesman Michael Luhan.

    Under one scenario now under discussion between Washington and its allies, the chemicals would be moved to secure military bases in Jordan, Turkey or Iraq, where the United States and others would erect chemical incinerators over a six- to 12-month period that could destroy the bulk agent in a year or so after that. Using similar incinerators to destroy a small stockpile of chemical weapons in Albania more than five years ago cost $48 million.

    But even this task would be logistically awkward, not to mention politically controversial in those states. Undertaking it would first require further consolidation of the stocks inside Syria and then their transport outside the country in hundreds of truckloads.

    Russia said to offer help
    Another option, which officials said has tentatively been explored with senior Russian officials, is to truck the chemical agents to the Syrian port of Tartus, where the Russian Navy keeps a small presence, so that the arsenal could be placed on a ship for transport to Russia, where multiple chemical weapons destruction plants have been constructed with Western help.

    By the accounts of several officials, Russia has expressed some desire to help. And Western officials emphasized that in their view, the country has a special responsibility to do so, because of reports that the head of its chemical weapons program helped Syria obtain key VX components in the early 1990s.

    No final policy choice has been made about these options, senior officials said. And bringing a large weapons stockpile into Turkey or Russia – which are signatories of an international treaty barring use or possession of chemical arms – might require a waiver of the treaty’s rules against importing even the components of such weapons.

    Some consolidation of the Syrian arsenal has already occurred on Assad’s orders, and the bulk of it is now at fewer than a dozen sites, according to a U.S. official familiar with intelligence estimates.

    But U.S. military planners are unsure precisely how many sites might hold deadly chemicals at the point that a foreign intervention would be necessary or feasible. If Assad disperses the arsenal beforehand to the 40 or so military bases with aircraft or missiles that can drop or launch the weapons, as many as 75,000 foreign troops could be needed to contain the threat (several thousand troops at each base, according to this worst-case estimate). A smaller number would be needed if the intervention preceded such a dispersal.

    The shipment of protective gear to Syria’s periphery from U.S. and British stockpiles was an acknowledgement of the enormity of the problem, several officials said. They described thousands of pieces of chemical-protection gear -- from masks and suits to detectors and decontamination kits -- being pre-positioned in Jordan alone.

    Asked for comment, Joint Chiefs of Staff spokesman Scott McIlnay responded that “we have always said that contingency planning is the responsible thing to do, and we are actively consulting with friends, allies and the opposition. But I am not going to get into the specifics of our contingency plans.” Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said he could only say that “we are working with our partners in the region and the broader international community to monitor the situation and discussing contingencies.” 

    The Center for Public Integrity is a nonprofit independent investigative news outlet. To read more of its stories on this topic go to publicintegrity.org

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    Before the invasion of Iraq, Saddam moved some of his air force to Iranian western borders, and their mustard gas and chemical weapons were moved to Syria. Before that event, Iraq and Syria used mustard gas against their Kurdish populations as well as other "unruly" civilians in northern parts their …

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