The National - News

TRUMP DECLARES US-LED AIR STRIKES IN SYRIA A SUCCESS

▶ Three chemical weapons sites targeted but Washington says no plans for widening involvemen­t in the conflict

- PAUL PEACHEY, JOYCE KARAM, RUSSEL MURRAY, DANA MOUKHALLAT­I AND CLAIRE CORKERY Continued on page 6

President Donald Trump declared mission accomplish­ed last night after air strikes destroyed three Syrian chemical weapons sites in the most significan­t US-led operation against the regime of Bashar Al Assad in the seven-year civil war.

More than 100 missiles were fired at the targets near Damascus and Homs early yesterday in an operation aimed at sending a potent message to the Assad regime but stopping short of securing regime change, western military and political leaders said.

“A perfectly executed strike last night,” said Mr Trump in a tweet after the joint operation by US, British and French forces. “Could not have had a better result. Mission Accomplish­ed.”

Syria and its allies condemned the attack and Russia called a meeting of the UN Security Council last night to discuss what it described as a blatant disregard for internatio­nal law.

Antonio Guterres, the UN Secretary General, urged restraint to avoid escalation in the region.

The Pentagon described the attack as precise, overwhelmi­ng and effective, with two thirds of the missiles targeting and destroying the key research centre of the Syrian chemical weapons programme at Barza near Damascus.

Syrian state TV broadcast images of the destructio­n at the site, with piles of rubble and a burnt vehicle. The Syrian military said it destroyed laboratori­es and an education centre.

Two other chemical weapons facilities near Homs were targeted, the Pentagon said. US officials said that none of the 105 missiles had been intercepte­d by Syrian air defences.

The Pentagon said it was unaware of civilian casualties but said the attack had sparked a 2,000 per cent increase in Russian trolling activity.

The scale of the strikes was less than expected in some quarters with Mr Al Assad saying the attacks would only make Syria more determined to continue its operations.

In a calculated show of defiance, the presidency posted a video showing Mr Assad apparently turning up for work after the attacks. Hundreds of pro-Assad supporters gathered in a Damascus square immediatel­y after the attack to celebrate what they claimed was the successful shooting down of US missiles.

Russia’s Defence Ministry claimed that 71 of the missiles were shot down, a claim denied by the US authoritie­s.

“We are not scared of America’s missiles. We humiliated their missiles,” said Mahmoud Ibrahim, waving a Syrian flag while hanging out of a car window.

Russia, Iran and China all condemned the attacks. There was a mixed reaction from the Arab world to the US-led operation first mooted by Mr Trump a week ago after the chemical weapons attack that killed 75 people in the rebel-held town of Douma last weekend.

Russian defence claimed that the strikes were designed to disrupt an investigat­ion by a team from the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons which was due to start work yesterday in Douma, near Damascus.

The inspectors said they would go ahead with their investigat­ion despite the strikes.

Theresa May, the UK Prime Minister, faced questions over the legality of the operation and was expected to face a political backlash tomorrow when she faces MPs after ordering British aircraft to attack without the backing of parliament.

But European allies lined up to support the “limited” operation as it emerged that the US had warned Moscow about the air strikes to avoid Russian casualties and the possibilit­y of a broader conflict between the major powers.

The Pentagon yesterday that the strikes had set back the Syrian chemical weapons programme back years, even as Mr Trump kept the option open for further attacks on the regime until it stopped its use of prohibited agents.

His view appeared at odds with Defence Secretary James Mattis, who described the attack as a “one-time shot” amid reported difference­s between the two men in previous days over the extent of the response against Syria.

Mrs May said that the strikes delivered a broader message to Russia about the illegal use of chemical weapons after the poisoning of a former spy in the UK, in an attack blamed on Russia.

She called for a renewed diplomatic effort to strengthen the internatio­nal laws against the use of such weapons.

Russian President Vladimir Putin condemned the attacks in the “most serious way”, while Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has called the air strikes a “military crime”, Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency reported.

European allies supported the ‘limited’ operation as it emerged the US warned Moscow about the strikes

 ?? AP ?? Missiles slice through the Damascus skies early yesterday, in retaliatio­n for the Assad regime’s use of chemical weapons
AP Missiles slice through the Damascus skies early yesterday, in retaliatio­n for the Assad regime’s use of chemical weapons

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