Los Angeles Times

PUNISHING STRIKE

Trump declares ‘Mission Accomplish­ed’ after allies attack Syria

- By David S. Cloud and Tracy Wilkinson

WASHINGTON — President Trump declared “Mission Accomplish­ed!” Saturday while the Pentagon said its initial assessment was that a powerful predawn missile barrage by the United States, Britain and France had “degraded” but may not have fully destroyed Syria’s chemical weapons stockpiles.

Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, told an emergency session of the U.N. Security Council — the fifth in a week — that Trump was “locked and loaded” to order anoth- er attack if Syrian President Bashar Assad uses chemical weapons again.

The Trump administra­tion thus appeared to draw a new red line, suggesting that using even chlorine, which is not an illegal substance, would spark military reprisals.

The crisis seemed to quickly ease, however. Russia leveled scathing criticism at what it called a “military crime” and “acts of aggression,” but a Russiandra­fted resolution of condemnati­on of the missile attack on Syria failed to pass the Security Council. Neither Moscow, Iran nor their armed proxies moved to retaliate against U.S. forces or interests.

Syrians said the rain of 105 missiles had caused no deaths or toxic chemical clouds, and hit only a few military facilities that the Trump administra­tion said were used to research, produce or stockpile chemical and biological warfare agents.

The one-night show of force was not enough to shake Assad’s grip on power. Despite Trump’s bellicose threats last week, he made no attempt to decapitate the government in Damascus, or even to incapacita­te its war-making ability.

Defense Secretary James N. Mattis had warned all

week that a multi-day air campaign aimed at Syrian military command and control facilities, or its air defense systems, could pull Russia and Iran into a direct conflict with the United States — or pull the U.S. into another quicksand war in the Middle East.

Indeed, Trump’s “Mission Accomplish­ed” tweet was an awkward — or taunting — reminder of the giant banner that famously served as a backdrop when President George W. Bush, wearing an aviator’s flight suit, stood on the deck of an aircraft carrier six weeks after the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 and declared that major combat operations had ended.

America’s war in Iraq dragged on for eight more painful years, and the phrase haunted Bush as a symbol of the misjudgmen­ts and mistakes in a conflict that left 4,500 Americans and tens of thousands of Iraqis dead. The U.S. still has troops deployed in Iraq as well as Syria.

Trump spoke by phone with British Prime Minister Theresa May and French President Emmanuel Macron. They affirmed the joint airstrikes were successful and “necessary to deter Assad from any further use of chemical weapons,” the White House said.

Pentagon officials refused to say how they would respond if another deadly chlorine attack occurred, though they explicitly warned Moscow to restrain Assad and force him to live up to pledges to give up his chemical weapons stockpiles completely.

In this case, every missile launched Saturday struck its target and none was shot down by Syrian or Russian air defense systems, the Pentagon said. Nor were any attacking aircraft struck.

All of the coalition missiles were fired from warplanes or naval vessels in the Red Sea, Persian Gulf and eastern Mediterran­ean Sea, hundreds of miles from their targets and out of range of Syria’s antiaircra­ft batteries. The missile salvo hit almost simultaneo­usly, within minutes of 4 a.m. local time, officials said.

The strategy of avoiding Syrian airspace and firing from multiple directions simultaneo­usly was designed to confuse and overwhelm Syrian and Russian air defense systems.

Syria sent 40 air defense missiles streaking into the night sky, but only after all the U.S., French and British weapons had struck their targets, Marine Lt. Gen. Kenneth McKenzie Jr., director of the Defense Department’s Joint Staff, told reporters at the Pentagon.

“The Syrian response was remarkably ineffectiv­e,” McKenzie said. Russian forces in Syria fired no missiles, he added.

It wasn’t yet clear whether Syria had preemptive­ly trucked away any of its chemical weapons or production equipment from the three facilities targeted by the U.S. — one near the capital, Damascus, and two around the city of Homs — after Trump repeatedly warned in tweets last week that airstrikes were coming.

But McKenzie said Syrian forces could not have moved all the equipment and precursor chemicals necessary to produce nerve gas and other weaponized chemical agents.

“I believe that there was materiel and equipment associated with each of these sites that was not movable, and that’s what really sets them back,” he said. He said the installati­ons that produced chlorine gas and sarin, a deadly nerve agent, were damaged or destroyed.

The goal of the strikes was “to cripple Syria’s ability to use chemical weapons in the future,” Pentagon spokeswoma­n Dana White told reporters.

“It was a deliberate decision to go to the storage facilities, to go to the research facilities,” she added. “We’re confident that we’ve significan­tly degraded his ability ever to use chemical weapons again.”

The largest, most important target was the Barzeh Research and Developmen­t Center near Damascus. U.S. officials called it a key part of the Syrian chemical and biological weapons program.

The center was leveled by 57 cruise missiles fired by U.S. warships and submarines, and 19 long-range air-to-ground attack missiles fired from Air Force B-1 bombers, officials said.

Before-and-after pictures released by the Pentagon show three buildings and a parking garage collapsed and in rubble.

“They had three buildings there and a parking deck, and now they don’t,” McKenzie said.

British Tornado and Typhoon fighters fired longrange missiles at the HimShinsha­r chemical storage facility, west of Homs. The U.S. and French also hit the facility with missiles. “Our initial assessment is that this target was completely destroyed,” McKenzie said.

France targeted a nearby bunker where chemical and biological weapons were kept, hitting it with seven cruise missiles. McKenzie said the facility had been “successful­ly hit and sustained damage.”

Pentagon officials had worried that the airstrikes might release toxic chemical agents. But they said highly accurate Tomahawk missiles mitigated the danger by striking the facilities and incinerati­ng or destroying the contents. There were no reports of poison gas leaks.

The coordinate­d attack was launched in retaliatio­n for a suspected poison gas attack on April 7 that killed at least 43 people during a government-backed offensive on Duma, a rebel-held bastion near the Syrian capital. Government troops later captured the area.

Citing circumstan­tial evidence, the U.S. said that sarin, a banned nerve agent, was probably mixed with chlorine in the Duma attack, although it doesn’t have ironclad evidence of that.

A senior Trump administra­tion official, briefing reporters on condition of anonymity, said high-resolution photograph­s of victims in Duma showed them choking, convulsing and foaming at the mouth, with constricte­d pupils — suggesting chemical poisoning, probably from sarin.

The official also said that U.S. intelligen­ce had tracked Syrian military helicopter­s above Duma before the attack and that they had dropped so-called barrel bombs, which Assad’s forces have used before for chemical agents. Victims and medical personnel reported a strong smell of chlorine and other chemicals.

Trump ordered a missile strike last April after a sarin attack killed dozens of people in Idlib province. U.S. warships fired 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles at a single Syrian airfield, avoiding its suspected sarin stockpiles.

But Assad continued to use chlorine gas against civilians over the last year, the White House said.

Analysts said the latest airstrikes may stop Assad from using chemical weapons again. But he already has survived a civil war that has killed more than 400,000 Syrians, and appears within reach of consolidat­ing his victory.

 ?? Hassan Ammar Associated Press ?? A SYRIAN soldier films what’s left of a research center in Barzeh after U.S., French and British missiles targeted chemical facilities.
Hassan Ammar Associated Press A SYRIAN soldier films what’s left of a research center in Barzeh after U.S., French and British missiles targeted chemical facilities.
 ?? Paul Duginski Los Angeles Times ??
Paul Duginski Los Angeles Times
 ?? Hassan Ammar Associated Press ?? IN DAMASCUS, hundreds demonstrat­ed their support for President Bashar Assad after the missile strikes, waving Syrian, Iranian and Russian f lags.
Hassan Ammar Associated Press IN DAMASCUS, hundreds demonstrat­ed their support for President Bashar Assad after the missile strikes, waving Syrian, Iranian and Russian f lags.
 ?? U.S. Department of Defense ?? THIS CHEMICAL storage site near Homs was apparently destroyed in the allied missile attack.
U.S. Department of Defense THIS CHEMICAL storage site near Homs was apparently destroyed in the allied missile attack.

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