The News (New Glasgow)

May says Syria chemical weapons can’t go unchalleng­ed

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Prime Minister Theresa May moved closer Wednesday to committing Britain to military action against Syria, saying “all the indication­s” are that President Bashar Assad’s forces were behind a chemical weapons attack in Douma.

A day earlier, May had said Britain was still assessing who was responsibl­e.

On Wednesday, May said Britain had been working with allies “to get an understand­ing of what happened on the ground. We are rapidly reaching that understand­ing.”

“All the indication­s are that the Syrian regime was responsibl­e,” she said during a visit to the central England city of Birmingham. “And we will be working with our closest allies on how we can ensure that those who are responsibl­e are held to account and how we can prevent and deter the humanitari­an catastroph­e that comes from the use of chemical weapons in the future.”

The U.S., France and Britain have been consulting about launching a military strike within days, and President Donald Trump tweeted Wednesday that missiles “will be coming.”

May has not confirmed whether Britain will participat­e directly, but moved closer to it Wednesday, saying “the continued use of chemical weapons cannot go unchalleng­ed.”

She condemned Russia for vetoing a UN Security Council resolution calling for a new body to determine responsibi­lity for the attack, saying it meant “there can be no role now for investigat­ions by the United Nations.”

May does not legally require Parliament’s backing for military action, though it is convention­al for lawmakers to be given the chance to vote. Britain’s Parliament is in recess until Monday, though it could be recalled for an emergency debate.

In 2013, Parliament defeated a call by then-Prime Minister David Cameron for air strikes in response to an earlier chemical attack in Syria.

Some lawmakers have expressed reservatio­ns about taking military action now, but others have come to believe the 2013 vote was a mistake.

Labour legislator Emma Reynolds, whose party helped defeat Cameron’s planned 2013 strike, said failing to act then had set a “dangerous precedent.”

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