Saturday Star

Act now to save Syrian children from chemical horror

- REBECCA HERSMAN

ON TUESDAY, the world awoke – once again – to graphic images of dead and dying Syrian children, their pale, listless bodies bearing no marks of traumatic injury. These were the victims of a chemical weapons attack on the town of Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib Province – which, according to recent estimates, left about 70 people dead, and constitute­d the worst attack since that in the Damascus suburb of East Ghouta in August 2013, which claimed more than 1 200 lives.

The horrific incident is only the latest in scores of chemical munitions attacks either alleged or verified to have been conducted by the Syrian regime since 2014.

Last year, the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) and the UN Joint Investigat­ive Mechanism concluded that the Syrian Arab Armed Forces were responsibl­e for three chemical weapons attacks in 2014 and 2015, in part because the attacks involved the use of helicopter­s (which only the Syrian government possesses) to deliver chlorine-laden munitions.

Human Rights Watch documented at least eight other chemical attacks between November and December associated with the Syrian government’s assault on Aleppo.

Since January , the OPCW Fact-Finding Mission in Syria has also recorded eight alleged uses of chemical weapons.

E v e n so, on February 28, Russia and China vetoed a UN Security Council Resolution designed to sanction parties verifiably assessed by the OPCW-UN joint investigat­ive mission to have carried out chemical attacks.

Is it any surprise that the Assad regime felt emboldened to continue using chemical weapons? Or that it has perhaps escalated to the use of even more toxic substances than chlorine, which has been its “go-to” chemical since the inter national community destroyed its traditiona­l military chemical arsenal in 2014?

This escalation in chemical weapons use fits a pattern observed on multiple occasions over the last several years. When the internatio­nal community, particular­ly the US, seems distracted, the Syrian regime feels emboldened to seek battlefiel­d gains through chemical attacks, particular­ly in areas where the regime’s military progress through more convention­al means has stalled.

Why does the Assad regime do this? Because it works.

It is insufficie­nt to frame the casualties in these attacks solely in terms of those affected by chemical agents. First, the psychologi­cal effects of the chemical attacks, and the added risks they pose to children and the elderly, are devastatin­g. Second, like many previous episodes, this one reportedly involves convention­al targeting after the chemical attacks, which flushes civilians out of sheltered areas and makes them vulnerable to convention­al bombing. To then target hospitals receiving the injured compounds the psychologi­cal effects. This three-pronged tactic ensures that besieged civilians feel they have no place to hide and nowhere to protect their children.

Much has been made of the symptomolo­gy and increased lethality of the Khan Sheikhoun attack, raising questions about a possible secret production capability or stockpile of undeclared chemical weapons – notably sarin.

We should not engage in armchair diagnoses from YouTube videos. On-the-ground investigat­ors can return a definitive assessment, and they need to be empowered to do their jobs. The use of sarin or other traditiona­l warfare agents would clearly signal that Assad believes he can operate with impunity. Chlorine – or any weaponised chemical used in this way – is just as heinous and legally prohibited. But nerve agents are more deadly and, unlike chlorine, require precursors that were supposed to be removed and destroyed in 2014. That process eliminated most of Syria’s military-scale chemical weapons programme, but we can never know if everything was removed – as Syria, with Russian cover, continues to stall, obfuscate, mislead and otherwise violate internatio­nal obligation­s. Moreover, the Syrians, with extensive military and scientific expertise in chemical weapons, are perfectly capable of developing improvised munitions and agents if they believe chlorine isn’t getting the job done.

If it turns out that traditiona­l military or improvised agents were used in the attacks, the implicatio­ns are broader, and the audacity of the Syrian regime even more flagrant, but the crime is no more egregious.

We can debate what should have been done in the past, but it’s far more important to act now. We should expect such attacks to continue, and possibly increase, until internatio­nal resistance builds and cleavages surface with the regime’s patron, Russia. Then, perhaps such chemical use will again temporaril­y recede. The internatio­nal community must increase and sustain the pressure so that he is unwilling or unable to resume the attacks.

The US must push for action in the Security Council and hold Russia to account for shielding Assad’s atrocities. The Trump administra­tion should insist on the immediate insertion of investigat­ors on the ground to gather critical physical evidence, interview witnesses and victims, and ensure that the full record of these crimes is not lost.

The Russian theory that the massacre resulted from the bombing of a rebel-held chemical weapons storage facility seems highly implausibl­e, but could be verified or refuted easily with a swift investigat­ion.

In addition, the inter national community should demand the grounding of Syrian aircraft, particular­ly helicopter­s, which have served as the principal delivery vehicle for chemical munitions. Sanctions should target the Syrian government, and individual­s and entities with links to these atrocities, at the organisati­onal and individual level. The US took an important step along these lines in January when it sanctioned 18 senior Syrian officials and five military branches associated with the Syrian regime’s use of chemical weapons. We should do more and encourage other nations to do likewise.

Finally, the internatio­nal community must support and develop a robust evidence repository and victim registrati­on to ensure that these crimes are fully documented and evidence preserved in hopes that the arms of justice can reach these war criminals in the months and years to come.

Presidents inherit problems and unfinished business. President Barack Obama inherited two Middle East wars and an economic crisis of proportion­s not seen in decades. President Donald Trump has inherited a North Korean regime undaunted by internatio­nal pressure and hell-bent on acquiring missile and nuclear capabiliti­es to threaten the US. He has also inherited a catastroph­ic war in Syria in which atrocity and criminalit­y seemingly have no limits.

Casting blame and pointing fingers will not save a single child’s life, bring justice to a single grieving mother, or return a single refugee to his home. Nor will it convince adversarie­s that the price to be paid for resorting to chemical weapons, or biological or nuclear weapons, will exceed any benefits from their use.

Deter ring f uture chemical weapons use requires hard work, tenacity, and, most importantl­y, leadership – not recriminat­ion or revisionis­m. This is too important. – The Washington Post

 ??  ?? Victims of a suspected chemical attack in the town of Khan Sheikhoun, northern Idlib province, Syria. This photo, provided on Tuesday by the Syrian antigovern­ment activist group Edlib Media Centre, has been authentica­ted.
Victims of a suspected chemical attack in the town of Khan Sheikhoun, northern Idlib province, Syria. This photo, provided on Tuesday by the Syrian antigovern­ment activist group Edlib Media Centre, has been authentica­ted.

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