Arab News

Pentagon suspects chemical weapons still at Syrian air base

-

WASHINGTON: The Pentagon believes the Syrian regime likely has additional chemical weapons stocks at the airfield struck by US missiles last week, but these were deliberate­ly left untouched, an official said Monday.

US intelligen­ce experts assess Syrian President Bashar Assad’s military is probably hoarding the weapons in munitions depots at Shayrat airfield near Homs in central Syria, the US military’s Central Command spokesman Col. John Thomas said.

President Donald Trump ordered a massive military strike on the air base last week, in retaliatio­n for a “barbaric” chemical attack he blamed on Assad.

“We suspected there was a significan­t probabilit­y there could be other chemical weapons which would be ready to go, weaponized in those facilities, and so we didn’t strike those,” Thomas told reporters.

The chemical stocks were left untouched because the Pentagon did not want to risk unintentio­nally sending a plume of toxic gas across parts of Syria.

Though the United States is confident Assad is stockpilin­g chemical weapons, intelligen­ce analysts are not certain what these are.

Under a 2013 Moscow-brokered deal, Assad was supposed to have dismantled Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal and ship it to Russia.

The Pentagon has said it is sure Assad unleashed a chemical attack on April 4 that killed at least 87 civilians in the rebel-held Syrian town of Khan Sheikhun.

“Our advice was to make sure we didn’t inflict any greater damage by touching any of the chemical weapons in the area,” Thomas added.

“We were trying to degrade their capability to launch aircraft and to load them up with chemical weapons.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia