National Post (National Edition)

Russian attacks need to be stopped

- ALISTAIR BURT

Ayear ago this week, in the early hours of the morning, Syrian aircraft dropped bombs on the town of Khan Sheikhoun. The sarin released by this bombing killed approximat­ely 100 people, including several children. We saw media footage of men, women and children convulsing in agony, some foaming at the mouth, as their bodies were poisoned by nerve gas.

As we know, the Khan Sheikhoun attack was not the first time that the Syrian regime used chemical weapons against its own people. In 2013, after hundreds were killed with sarin in an attack on Eastern Ghouta, Russia promised the world that Syria would abandon all of its chemical weapons. But this promise has not been kept. We can say with certainty, based on the findings of the UN’s Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) Joint Investigat­ive Mechanism, that the regime used chlorine in Idlib — at Talmenes in April 2014 as well as in Sarmin and Qmenas in March 2015. And then the massacre a year ago in Khan Sheikhoun.

In the five years since chemical weapons were first used in the region, internatio­nal attempts to halt and bring crimes such as these to account have been consistent­ly undermined and increasing­ly blocked by Russia. Again and again, it has used its power of veto to defend Assad’s brutal regime in the United Nations Security Council. Last November, Russia blocked the renewal of the mandate of the Joint Investigat­ive Mechanism, which the Security Council had set up to ensure those responsibl­e for chemical weapons attacks in Syria were held accountabl­e. Russia’s response to Syria’s continuing violation of the Chemical Weapons Convention has allowed these abhorrent attacks on the Syrian people to continue.

More broadly, Russia’s disdain for the internatio­nal system has grown ever clearer. Its brazen use of a chemical weapon on U.K. soil one month ago is a further case of its blatant disregard for the internatio­nal rulesbased system. The poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal with a military-grade nerve agent endangered anyone who chanced to be in the vicinity, with more than 130 people potentiall­y exposed to the nerve agent, including a police officer who fell into a critical condition.

Russia has offered no explanatio­n whatsoever as to howitsnerv­eagentcame­to be used in this manner. Instead, as in Syria, we have seen the outpouring of disinforma­tion designed to confuse and paralyze the internatio­nal system and prevent the perpetrato­rs of chemical weapons attacks from being held accountabl­e. After Khan Sheikhoun, Russia repeatedly sought to undermine the OPCW — the very organizati­on set up to put an end to the barbarity of chemical weapons attacks. Russia unilateral­ly rejected the findings of the OPCW-UN Joint Investigat­ive Mechanism last year confirming Syrian regime use of sarin at Khan Sheikhoun. And on March 22 a senior Russian Foreign Ministry official rejected the idea that Russia would accept OPCW independen­t conclusion­s in examining the material from the Salisbury attack; only its own investigat­ion would be acceptable.

Consensus already exists as to the abhorrent nature of chemical weapons. Only four states across the globe are not parties to the Chemical Weapons Convention; 192 states have come together to outlaw their usage. These are weapons that have no place in the world today. We must stand together against any attempt to dismantle an integral pillar of the rules-based system. This kind of destructiv­e and dangerous behaviour threatens us all.

Events in Khan Sheikhoun and across Syria have seen the world respond in horror. We call on states worldwide to make it clear that Russia should no longer endanger its fellow states recklessly in pursuit of its aims. There should be no more victims of chemical weapons attacks, whether in the warzone of Syria or in a sleepy English town. The rules-based internatio­nal order and its institutio­ns are too valuable to be put at risk in this way: we must act collective­ly to protect them and ensure no one else dies in this most horrific and inhumane way.

 ?? ALAA ALYOUSEF VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Victims of a suspected chemical weapons attack in Khan Sheikhoun, Syria a year ago this week.
ALAA ALYOUSEF VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Victims of a suspected chemical weapons attack in Khan Sheikhoun, Syria a year ago this week.

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