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Trump: ‘Major’ Syria decision looms

As he mulls action, Israel blamed for deadly missile strike

- By Alexandra Zavis, Tracy Wilkinson and Nabih Bulos Los Angeles Times The Times’ Alexandra Zavis reported from Beirut and special correspond­ent Nabih Bulos from Amman, Jordan. alexandra.zavis@latimes.com

BEIRUT — As President Donald Trump weighed his response to a suspected poison gas attack in Syria, that country’s government and its Russian and Iranian allies accused Israel of carrying out a predawn missile strike Monday on a Syrian air base that a war monitor said killed 14 people, including several Iranians.

The timing of the attack on the T4 air base in Syria’s Homs province, hours after Trump warned there would be a “big price to pay” for Saturday’s alleged chemical weapons strike on a rebelheld enclave outside Damascus, revived fears of a potentiall­y dangerous escalation between world powers involved in the country’s multisided civil war.

Just last week, Trump said he wanted to withdraw some 2,000 American troops from Syria as soon as possible, alarming regional allies and some senior advisers who argue that a U.S. presence is still needed to prevent a resurgence by Islamic State militants and to counter expanding Russian and Iranian influence in the country.

Trump said Monday that he would make a “major decision” over the following 24 to 48 hours on a response to the “barbaric” suspected gas attack Saturday, which opposition activists and first responders said killed nearly 50 people, including children.

“It was an atrocious attack. It was horrible,” the president told reporters ahead of his Cabinet meeting at the White House. “This is about humanity… and it can’t be allowed to happen.”

Trump indicated that his administra­tion was still determinin­g whether Syria, Russia, Iran or all three were to blame. Syria and Russia maintain that accusation­s of chemical weapons use are a hoax intended to provoke an internatio­nal response against Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Asked by reporters if he would rule out airstrikes, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said, “I don’t rule out anything right now.”

Almost a year ago, Trump ordered a cruise missile strike on a Syrian air base for its role in an attack with sarin gas, a banned nerve agent, on a northern town. But Syrian government forces are believed to have used chemical weapons — typically chlorine gas — on numerous other occasions without consequenc­e, according to U.N. officials.

Analysts questioned whether another U.S. military strike would be an effective deterrent.

“I think the strike last year hasn’t really changed the calculus of anyone,” said Tobias Schneider, an independen­t security analyst who has been tracking the use of chemical weapons in Syria. “I think it was about making ourselves feel better about what had happened. … It didn’t threaten the Assad regime’s survival, which is really the only thing I think can compel a policy change in Damascus.”

The United States and Russia exchanged bitter recriminat­ions Monday at an emergency session of the United Nations Security Council to debate a U.S.drafted proposal to create an independen­t panel to investigat­e poison gas use in Syria. Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., squarely blamed Russia for the weekend attack in Douma, the last rebel-held town in Syria’s eastern Ghouta region. “Russian hands,” he said, “are all covered in blood.”

Haley scolded Russia for repeatedly refusing to punish Syria and for vetoing Security Council resolution­s that singled out Assad for condemnati­on.

“The day we prayed would never come has come again,” Haley told the council. “Only a monster does this.”

She described photograph­s of victims — suffocated babies and toddlers in their diapers, lying next to their dead parents.

The Russian ambassador to the U.N., Vassily Nebenzia, gave an impassione­d and colorful descriptio­n of the “boorish” behavior of the U.S. and countries that follow it “blindly,” threatenin­g Moscow with sanctions, “blackmail” and antagonism­s that “go beyond the Cold War.”

Nebenzia said the alleged chemical attack in Douma was staged by anti-Assad “terrorists” and that reports on the assault and photograph­s of the victims were “fake news.”

The state-run Syrian Arab News Agency initially suggested that the United States was to blame for Monday’s missile strike on the air base in Homs but later pointed the finger at Israel, after the Pentagon said it was not involved.

Russia’s Defense Ministry said two Israeli F-15 warplanes targeted the T4 base from Lebanese air space. Syria’s air defenses shot down five of the eight guided missiles fired by the aircraft, according to a statement cited by Russian news agencies.

Lebanon’s military issued a statement saying Israeli planes had flown in from over the Mediterran­ean.

An Israeli army spokesman declined to comment.

Israel has grown increasing­ly alarmed about the presence of Iranian military advisers and allied militias in southern Syria.

 ?? DREW ANGERER/GETTY ?? Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., scolded Russia for refusing to punish Syria.
DREW ANGERER/GETTY Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., scolded Russia for refusing to punish Syria.
 ?? DON EMMERT/GETTY-AFP ?? Russia’s Vassily Nebenzia called reports of a gruesome attack “fake news.”
DON EMMERT/GETTY-AFP Russia’s Vassily Nebenzia called reports of a gruesome attack “fake news.”

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