The Oklahoman

Inspectors head to site of suspected gas attack in Syria

- BY BASSEM MROUE AND SARAH EL DEEB Associated Press

DAMASCUS, SYRIA — A team of inspectors from the internatio­nal chemical weapons watchdog was on its way to Syria on Thursday to begin an investigat­ion into a suspected chemical weapons attack near the capital that has brought the war-torn country to the brink of a wider conflict, amid Western threats of retaliatio­n and Russian warnings of the potential for “a dangerous escalation.”

The fact-finding mission from the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons was expected to head to Douma, where the suspected attack took place and where Russia said rebels had now capitulate­d to government control. The Syrian government said it would facilitate the mission’s investigat­ion, which was to begin Saturday.

Syria and its ally, Russia, deny any such attack, which activists say killed more than 43 people last weekend.

Speaking at the United Nations on Thursday, Russia’s U.N. ambassador, Vassily Nebenzia, said the top priority had to be to avert a wider war, and he didn’t rule out the possibilit­y of a U.S.Russia conflict. Speaking to reporters after a closed emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council, Nebenzia said Russia was very concerned with “the dangerous escalation” of the situation and “aggressive policies” and preparatio­ns that some government­s were making — a clear reference to the Trump administra­tion and its allies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States