The Scotsman

Trump warns of ‘big price to pay’ over Syria attack

● US president warns of ‘big price to pay’ as 40 feared dead ● Poison gas survivors taken to hospital ‘foaming at mouth’

- By JONATHAN LEMIRE

US president Donald Trump tweeted yesterday that Russian president Vladimir Putin and Iran “are responsibl­e for backing Animal Assad. Big price to pay” in response to an alleged chemical attack in Syria.

Mr Trump offered no evidence to support the claims made by Syrian activists that poison gas was used. However, he ramped up the rhetoric after it was reported that at least 40 people had died.

US president Donald Trump has condemned what he calls a “mindless chemical attack” in Syria that has killed women and children.

Syrian president Bashar alassad’s government denied the allegation­s of an attack on a rebel-held town near the capital, Damascus.

Mr Trump offered no evidence to support the claim by Syrian opposition activists and rescuers that poison gas was used.

But he said in a tweet yesterday that the “area of atrocity is in lockdown and encircled by Syrian Army, making it completely inaccessib­le to outside world”.

He said Russian president Vladimir Putin and Iran – influentia­l Syrian backers – “are responsibl­e for backing Animal Assad”, adding: “Big price to pay.”

Mr Trump is calling for the area to be opened “immediatel­y for medical help and verificati­on”. He said: “Another humanitari­an disaster for no reason whatsoever. Sick!”

At least 40 people are reported to have died in the rebelheld town of Douma and if it is confirmed that chemical weapons have been used it could risk further escalating the crisis in the region.

The US president authorised missile strikes against Syria after a chemical weapons attack last year and, when asked about the possibilit­y of further action, a White House aide said: “I wouldn’t take anything off the table.”

Both the UK and the US highlighte­d Russian and Iranian support for the Assad regime in their responses to the reported atrocity.

The alleged attack in the Douma occurred late on Saturday amid a resumed offensive by Syrian government forces after the collapse of a truce with the Army of Islam rebels.

Syrian opposition activists and rescuers said poison gas was used on Douma – an allegation strongly denied by the Assad government.

Families were reportedly found suffocated in their homes and shelters, with foam on their mouths.

Reports suggested more than 500 people, mostly women and children, were taken to medical centres with difficulty breathing, foaming at the mouth and with burning sensations in their eyes.

Whitehall sources confirmed the UK was “not ruling anything out nor in” but acknowledg­ed there were “political issues” around securing parliament­ary support for British involvemen­t after MPS voted against strikes following a chemical attack in 2013.

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said in February that Britain should consider joining military action against the Assad regime if there is fresh “incontrove­rtible” evidence he has used chemical weapons against his own people.

It is understood that the UK has been in contact with senior officials in Paris, Washington and at the United Nations in New York as Mr Johnson called for an internatio­nal response to the latest reported use of chemical weapons.

The Foreign Secretary demanded an urgent investigat­ion and warned the Syrian leader’s allies in Moscow not to “obstruct” the inquiry.

Mr Johnson said the reports were “deeply disturbing” and “truly horrific”.

He added: “These latest reports must urgently be investigat­ed and the internatio­nal community must respond.

“Investigat­ors from the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) looking into reports of chemical weapons use in Syria have our full support. Russia must not yet again try to obstruct these investigat­ions. “

The OPCW is at the centre of the diplomatic row between the UK and Vladimir Putin’s Russia over the nerve agent attack in Salisbury, with the organisati­on testing samples of the substance allegedly used in the incident.

Mr Johnson added: “Should it be confirmed that the regime has used chemical weapons again, it would be yet another appalling example of the Assad regime’s brutality and blatant disregard for both the Syrian people and its legal obligation­s not to use chemical weapons.

“We condemn the use of chemical weapons by anyone, anywhere. We are in close touch with our allies following these latest reports.

“Those responsibl­e for the use of chemical weapons have lost all moral integrity and must be held to account.”

The european union said the evidence suggested the Assad regime was responsibl­e.

“Reports from Douma, under the siege and bombardmen­t by regime forces and its allies, indicate that a high number of civilians were killed yesterday evening, including families who perished in the shelters they were hiding in,” a spokesman for the EU external action service said.

“The evidence points towards yet another chemical attack by the regime.”

Labour said that anyone found guilty of using chemical weapons should be brought to justice and called for “concrete steps on all sides to restart meaningful talks on a political solution and lasting peace in Syria”.

The alleged gas attack comes almost exactly a year after a chemical attack in the northern Syrian town of Khan Sheikhoun killed dozens of people.

That attack prompted the US to launch several dozen Tomahawk cruise missiles at a Syrian air base.

Mr Trump said the attack was meant to deter further use of illegal weapons.

“Putin, Russia and Iran are responsibl­e for backing Animal Assad. Big price to pay. Another humanitari­an disaster for no reason whatsoever. SICK!” PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP

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