Daily Dispatch

UN tries to prevent gas attack crisis escalating

Putin moderates his reaction while Trump tweets angrily

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THE United Nations warned world powers against letting the crisis over an alleged chemical attack against civilians in Syria spiral out of control after US President Donald Trump said missiles would be coming.

As tensions mounted over a face-off with Damascus ally Russia, opponents of unilateral US action called an emergency closed-door meeting of the UN Security Council for yesterday.

Britain also scheduled an emergency cabinet meeting.

With punitive US military action seemingly imminent, Russia scrambled to deflect blame from Syria’s Bashar al-Assad and, according to a monitor group, regime forces evacuated key defence buildings in Damascus.

Trump’s bellicose tweets came in response to a warning from Russia’s ambassador to Beirut, who took to a television network run by the armed group Hezbollah to declare that any US missiles would be shot down as well as the sources they were fired from.

If the US action follows the pattern of a previous punitive strike on Syria last year, it will begin with a salvo of cruise missiles fired from American warships in the Mediterran­ean, as Trump implied when he tweeted they would be nice, new and ‘smart’.

With the UN Security Council failing thus far to find a diplomatic solution, secretary general Antonio Guterres warned that time was running out.

Moscow and Washington have so far vetoed each other’s motions to set up an internatio­nal investigat­ion into chemical weapons use.

Meanwhile, the Russian defence ministry said the Syrian regime flag was flying in Douma – the target of Saturday’s attack – which it said indicated government forces had taken full control over the formerly rebel-held district of Eastern Ghouta.

The Russian army has continued to deny their side’s latest victory came after Assad launched a chemical attack on the last rebel-held pocket of the enclave in the Damascus suburbs, instead accusing the White Helmets civil defence organisati­on of staging the massacre.

Trump’s spokeswoma­n Sarah Sanders dismissed this idea, and pointedly refused to acknowledg­e that concern about the risks of a direct confrontat­ion with Russia would hold the US military back.

While the Russian president’s lieutenant­s continued to up the ante with threats and allegation­s, Vladimir Putin himself adopted a more statesmanl­ike tone, in remarks to new ambassador­s presenting their credential­s.

“The situation in the world is becoming more and more chaotic but all the same we hope that common sense will finally prevail and internatio­nal relations will take a constructi­ve path,” he said.

Trump’s tweets were more belligeren­t. He told Russia: “You shouldn’t be partners with a Gas Killing Animal who kills his people and enjoys it!” – and declared that US relations with Russia had plunged to a historic low.

But he notably also said there was “no reason for this”, reiterated his hope for talks with Putin to halt a new arms race, and blamed his domestic political opponents for poisoning ties.

Assad’s Damascus regime, which has long accused Washington of supporting its armed opponents in the country’s bloody seven-year-old civil war, hit back at Trump’s “reckless escalation”.

Trump and other Western leaders have vowed a quick and forceful response to Saturday’s alleged gas attack, which rescue workers say killed more than 40 people.

British Prime Minister Theresa May has called an emergency cabinet meeting, while French President Emmanuel Macron is to decide on a response in the coming days, having insisted he does not want an escalation and that any response would focus on Syria’s chemical capabiliti­es, not on allies of the regime.

As it looked to head off the threat of Western strikes, Syria said it had invited the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons, which has blamed the regime for previous attacks, to visit the site.

The OPCW said it would deploy a fact-finding team to Douma, but US officials said they were working from their own informatio­n and would not necessaril­y hold back.

Damascus agreed to hand over its chemical arsenal in 2013, narrowly avoiding American and French air strikes in retaliatio­n for a suspected sarin attack. That incident, which killed hundreds, also took place in Eastern Ghouta. — AFP

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? TENSE TIME: The permanent representa­tive of Syria to the United Nations, Bashar Jaafari, centre, speaks during a UN Security Council meeting at the UN headquarte­rs in New York this week
Picture: AFP TENSE TIME: The permanent representa­tive of Syria to the United Nations, Bashar Jaafari, centre, speaks during a UN Security Council meeting at the UN headquarte­rs in New York this week

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