Tuesday, 11 April 2017

Doubts over Syria attack as regard the Chemical weapon used

uncertainty over chemical weapon used in Syria

suspicion increases over the chemical weapon used in Syria


In defence of  President Barack Obama's resolution not to use his chemical weapons “red line” against Syria in 2013, Obama and other former officials frequently pointed to a U.S.-Russia accord to remove Syrian stockpiles as proof that the president got results without resorting to a military attack.

While it's true that some 1,300 tons of Syria's declared chemical weapons and precursors were removed under the agreement, serious concerns always subsisted that not all such armaments or production facilities were declared and destroyed .

Those concerns, expressed publicly and privately by United Nations and other officials almost since the deal was struck in September 2013 in Geneva, gained acceptance last week when President Donald Trump ordered missile strikes on a Syrian air base in retaliation for the most recent chemical weapons attack blamed on the Syrian government.

Obama administration officials, starting with the president himself, often used nuanced words in declaring the 2013 deal a success. At times, they qualified their proclamations by referring only to the removal of Syria's  stocks. Other times they have been less careful, as was Obama in a “60 Minutes” interview just five days before he left office earlier this year.

Obama: “I think it was important for me as president of the United States to send a message that in fact there is something unusual about chemical weapons,” he disclosed this in CBS program when asked about criticism of his decision not to follow through with attacks he had threatened

 Obama's comments shined over doubts expressed by his own national security team and the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons that Syria had truly abandoned its stocks or ability to produce more. When that group declared in June 2014 that the program to eliminate the stockpiles had been completed, Secretary of State John Kerry praised the result

Kerry also noted the continued attacks with chlorine gas, which is not an internationally banned substance but isn't supposed to be used in weapons. Chlorine was not numbered in the 2013 agreement. He added that “the international community has questions with regard to Syria's declaration that must be adequately answered.”

Those questions were never addressed and Kerry's caution was well founded. Less than three months later, Kerry gave another statement in response to chlorine attacks that pointed again to “deep concerns regarding the accuracy and completeness of Syria's declaration.” This, he said, “raises especially troubling concerns that continued chemical attacks on the Syrian people by the regime could occur.”


In an April 2016 report to Congress, the State Department went further, saying Syria was “in breach” of the Chemical Weapons Convention and  may retain chemical weapons as defined by the treaty.
More so, in a January 16 National Public Radio interview, Obama's former national security adviser, Susan Rice, presented the 2013 agreement as a success. She said the Obama administration had found a solution that actually removed the chemical weapons that were known from Syria, in a way that the use of force would never have accomplished.

Between June 2014, when the destruction and removal program was accomplished and January 30 of this year, the U.N. Human Rights Council's commission on Syria documented at least 13 occasions of chemical weapons attacks in Syria, all believed to have used chlorine. Western experts say sarin, a nerve agent, was used in the attack last week that killed more than 80 people.

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