Oman Daily Observer

Russia brands US warning over chemical arms ‘unacceptab­le’

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MOSCOW/WASHINGTON: Russia denounced a US warning to the Syrian leadership that it will pay a heavy price for any chemical weapons attack, and dismissed White House assertions that a strike was being prepared as “unacceptab­le”.

The White House said on Monday the preparatio­ns in Syria were similar to actions before an April 4 chemical attack which killed dozens of civilians and prompted US President Donald Trump to order a missile strike on a Syrian air base. But Russia, which is President Bashar al Assad’s main backer in Syria’s six-year-old civil war and has used its veto power on the United Nations Security Council several times to shield his government, challenged the US intelligen­ce.

“I am not aware of any informatio­n about a threat that chemical weapons can be used,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told a conference call with reporters on Tuesday.

“Certainly, we consider such threats to the legitimate leadership of the Syrian Arab Republic unacceptab­le.”

Russian officials have privately described the war in Syria as the biggest source of tension between Moscow and Washington, and the cruise missile strike ordered by Trump in April raised the risk of confrontat­ion between them.

White House officials did not respond to requests for comment on the intelligen­ce that prompted Monday’s statement on Syria, or on possible US plans if Syria’s military conducted a chemical weapons attack.

“The United States has identified potential preparatio­ns for another chemical weapons attack by the Assad government that would likely result in the mass murder of civilians, including innocent children,” White House spokesman Sean Spicer said.

The US missile strike on the Shayrat airfield in Syria in April followed the deaths of 87 people in what Washington said was a poison gas attack in rebelheld territory. Syria denied it carried out the attack. Assad said in an interview with the AFP news agency earlier this year that the alleged April attack was “100 per cent fabricatio­n” used to justify a US air strike.

British Defence Minister Michael Fallon said London would support US action to prevent a chemical weapons attack but that it had not seen the intelligen­ce on which Washington based Monday’s statement.

“As always in war, the military action you use must be justified, it must be legal, it must be proportion­ate, it must be necessary. In the last case (in April), it was,” Fallon told the BBC.

“If the Americans take similar action again, I want to be very clear — we will support it.”

US and allied intelligen­ce officers had for some time identified several sites where they suspected Assad’s government may have been hiding newly made chemical weapons from inspectors, said a US official familiar with the intelligen­ce.

The assessment was based in part on the locations, security surroundin­g the suspect sites and other informatio­n which the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, declined to describe.

The White House warning, the official said, was based on new reports of what was described as abnormal activity that might be associated with preparatio­ns for a chemical attack.

Although the intelligen­ce was not considered conclusive, Washington decided to issue the public warning to the Syrian leadership to try to deter such a strike, said the official, who declined to discuss the issue further.

At the time of the April strike, US officials called the interventi­on a “oneoff ” intended to deter future chemical weapons attacks in the Syrian war — in which the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, estimates nearly half a million people have been killed.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Kurdish fighters from the People’s Protection Units play football on a street in Raqqa, Syria, on Monday.
— Reuters Kurdish fighters from the People’s Protection Units play football on a street in Raqqa, Syria, on Monday.

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