Los Angeles Times

Syrian weapons meet blowtorche­s

The experts aim to rid the nation of chemical weapons under a tight deadline during a war.

- By Patrick J. McDonnell patrick.mcdonnell@latimes.com

The historic destructio­n of chemical arms arsenal begins under United Nations supervisio­n.

BEIRUT — The historic destructio­n of Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal began Sunday, as a team of disarmamen­t experts hastened to comply with an internatio­nal mandate to eliminate the nation’s massive chemical stockpiles by mid-2014.

Syrian personnel under internatio­nal supervisio­n used cutting torches and other tools to destroy an array of items, including missile warheads, aerial bombs and mixing and filling equipment, according to an announceme­nt Sunday by the United Nations. The process will continue in coming days, the U.N. said.

The accelerate­d program is widely viewed as an unpreceden­ted attempt to rid a country of its chemical arsenal under a tight deadline while a civil war continues to rage within its borders.

The ambitious effort is the result of an accord brokered last month by the United States and Russia that helped avert threatened U.S. missile strikes after poison gas attacks that the U.S. says were carried out by Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces. Hundreds are reported to have died in the attacks on Aug. 21 in Damascus suburbs that are generally under the control of Syrian rebels, although the number of fatalities is disputed.

Assad has denied U.S. charges that his forces were behind the gassing, and blamed the chemical strike on rebels seeking to trigger Western interventi­on in Syria’s civil conflict. The Syrian opposition dismissed allegation­s from Assad’s government and its chief ally, Russia, that it orchestrat­ed the gas attacks.

A U.N. investigat­ion concluded that sarin, a toxic nerve agent, was probably released via surface-to-surface missiles, but did not assign blame for the attacks.

Nonetheles­s, Assad quickly agreed to a U.N.backed eradicatio­n plan in a bid to avoid potentiall­y crippling U.S. airstrikes.

President Obama said he decided to postpone the airstrikes once Syria agreed to abide by the terms of a strict internatio­nal blueprint to dispose of its chemical arsenal.

An advance team of internatio­nal experts arrived in Damascus last week, establishe­d a logistics base and began the complex process of identifyin­g and destroying Syrian chemical weapons stocks, estimated to total about 1,000 tons of deadly agents, along with various production and storage facilities. The material is believed to be scattered in dozens of sites across government-controlled territory.

As the destructio­n proceeds, the internatio­nal technician­s in Syria are continuing to verify informatio­n supplied by Syrian authoritie­s about the nation’s chemical program, the U.N. said.

A U.N. Security Council resolution set Nov. 1 as an initial deadline to destroy Syria’s ability to produce chemical weapons.

On Friday, the disarmamen­t inspectors in Damascus, the capital, reported “encouragin­g initial progress” after their first working day of meetings with Syrian authoritie­s. The team labeled as “promising” documents handed over by Syrian officials, who are required to disclose the sites of chemical weapons facilities and other pertinent details. The U.N. has called the Syrian government cooperativ­e in the large-scale and complex undertakin­g.

Until last month, Syria had never acknowledg­ed publicly that it possessed a chemical weapons program.

The destructio­n began Sunday at an unspecifie­d site or sites in Syria under the management of experts from the United Nations and The Hague-based Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons, which implements the internatio­nal treaty banning the use and production of such arms.

Syria has signaled its intention to become a party to the Chemical Weapons Convention, which has 189 member states.

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