Houston Chronicle Sunday

Bombings resume in Syrian town hit by chemical attack.

Rebel supporter says U.S. strike not enough to dissuade Assad

-

BEIRUT — Residents of the Syrian town devastated by a chemical weapons attack last week said warplanes had returned to bomb them Saturday, despite a U.S. missile barrage and warnings of possible further response.

At least 86 people in the northweste­rn town of Khan Sheikhoun were killed Tuesday in a chemical attack that left hundreds choking, gripped by spasms or foaming at the mouth. Witnesses and a monitoring group, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, said Saturday that fresh attacks on the area — now a virtual ghost town — had killed one woman and wounded several others.

Residents cowered in bedrooms and basements throughout Saturday, underscori­ng the apparently unchanged threat they faced from the Syrian government’s arsenal of rockets, barrel bombs and other weapons that have resulted in a majority of the conflict’s half-million dead.

In retaliatio­n for Tuesday’s chemical assault, President Donald Trump ordered a missile strike on a Syrian air base housing a jet fleet responsibl­e for extensive bombing across northern Syria.

‘Cosmetic interventi­on’

The barrage of 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles fired from two U.S. ships is the first direct military action the United States has taken against the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad in the six-year-long conflict. Although Trump warned of possible further interventi­on, the Pentagon has said no other strikes against government targets are in current plans.

American officials had predicted that the missile strike would result in a major shift in Assad’s calculus, but the U.S. attack appeared to be symbolic in reality. Within 24 hours of the strike, monitoring groups reported that warplanes were again taking off from the bombed Shayrat air base, this time to attack Islamic State positions.

There were also reports of Syrian government and Russian airstrikes across the provinces of Damascus, Aleppo, Idlib and Daraa, all killing civilians. However, there were no reports of further use of chemical weapons.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu described Trump’s decision to retaliate as welcome but not enough.

“If this interventi­on is limited only to an air base, if it does not continue, and if we don’t remove the regime from heading Syria, then this would remain a cosmetic interventi­on,” he said.

A longtime backer of Syria’s armed opposition, Turkey is now overseeing a stuttering peace process in the Kazakh capital, Astana, that it hopes will hasten an end to the war.

Call for military retreat

Elsewhere in the region, a leading Iraqi Shiite cleric and militia leader, Moqtada al-Sadr, called on Assad to step down and “save Syria before it’s too late.”

“President Bashar al Assad should resign and leave power, for the love of Syria, allowing the dear people of Syria to avoid war and the scourge of terrorism,” he said.

Although some of Iraq’s Shiite militias that are more directly linked to Iran have fought in support of Assad in Syria, Sadr’s Peace Brigades have not, and the cleric promotes himself as a nationalis­t.

In a statement, he also criticized U.S. and Russian interventi­on in the country. “I call for a military retreat from Syria by everyone,” he said. “They [Syrians] are the only ones who have the right to decide their fate.”

Meanwhile, Russia and Iran, Assad’s most influentia­l supporters, have rallied around him.

Russia condemned the U.S. missile strike and suspended an agreement that would minimize the risk of in-flight incidents between Russian and U.S. military aircraft over Syria.

And on Saturday, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, in a statement carried by state television, called for the formation of an internatio­nal fact-finding committee that “must not be headed by Americans.”

The Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons, a global watchdog, said Thursday it had contacted the Syrian government and was investigat­ing the attack.

 ?? Mohamad Abazeed / AFP / Getty Images ?? Smoke billows after a reported airstrike Saturday on a rebel-held area in the Syrian city of Daraa. One person was killed.
Mohamad Abazeed / AFP / Getty Images Smoke billows after a reported airstrike Saturday on a rebel-held area in the Syrian city of Daraa. One person was killed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States