The Palm Beach Post

‘Were they dead at all?’: Assad counters accusation

- Rick Gladstone

Vilified by accusation­s of using a chemical bomb, Syria’s president intensifie­d his counterpro­paganda campaign Thursday, suggesting that child actors had staged death scenes to malign him and that U.S. warplanes had bombed a terrorist warehouse full of poison gases, killing hundreds of people.

In his first interview since an April 4 attack on the northern town of Khan Sheikhoun that killed more than 80 people, sickened hundreds and outraged the world, President Bashar Assad of Syria not only doubled down on the government’s denials of responsibi­lity, but contended without evidence that the episode had been fabricated as a pretext for a U.S. retaliator­y missile strike.

“We don’t know whether those dead children were killed in Khan Sheikhoun,” Assad told Agence FrancePres­se in the television interview from Damascus. “Were they dead at all?”

Me d i c a l e x a mi n e r s i n Turkey, where many of the Khan Sheikhoun victims were taken, have said that autopsies showed they had been attacked with sarin, a lethal nerve agent and a banned chemical weapon that Syria had claimed to have eradicated. In a further sign that sarin was used, the British delegation to the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons, the global group that polices adherence to a treaty banning such munitions, said samples taken from the attack had tested positive for sarin, Reuters reported.

The interview with Assad was broadcast as the Syrian government’s news agency asserted without evidence t hat U. S. warpl a nes had bombed what it c alled a chemical weapons cache possessed by Islamic State militants in Syria on Wednesday, leaving hundreds dead, including “a large number of civilians, due to suffocatio­n caused by the inhalation of toxic materials.”

The news agency’s report showed no visual proof of an attack but said it had taken place in the village of Hatla in Deir el-Zour province, causing a “white cloud that soon turned into yellow as a result of the explosion of a huge depot that includes a large amount of toxic materials.”

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