Gulf News

Syrian warplanes return to town devastated by gas attack

Within 24 hours of the US strikes, jets were taking off from the bombed Shayrat airbase

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Residents of the Syrian town devastated by a chemical-weapons attack last week said that warplanes had returned to bomb them yesterday as Turkey described a retaliator­y US assault as “cosmetic” unless it removed President Bashar Al Assad from power. At least 86 people were killed in Tuesday’s attack on the northweste­rn town of Khan Shaikhoun, which left hundreds choking, fitting or foaming at the mouth.

Eyewitness­es said yesterday that fresh air strikes on the area — now a ghost town — had killed one woman and wounded several others. Photograph­s from the site showed a pair of green slippers, abandoned by a blood-spattered doorway.

The US military launched 59 cruise missiles at a Syrian military airfield early Friday in the first direct American assault on Al Assad’s government since that country’s six-year civil war began. Although American officials have predicted that the strikes would result in a major shift of Assad’s calculus, they appeared to be symbolic in practice.

Ability to kill

Within 24 hours of the American strikes, monitoring groups reported that jets were taking off from the bombed Shayrat airbase once again.

“Those attacks did not reduce the regime’s ability kill civilians. They can still commit massacres at any time,” said Abdul Razzaq Khattab, a resident who said his house was damaged in yesterday’s attack.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu described President Donald Trump’s decision to retaliate for the chemical attack as welcome, but not enough. “If this interventi­on is limited only to an airbase, if it does not continue and if we don’t remove the regime from heading Syria, then this would remain a cosmetic interventi­on,” said Cavusoglu.

Turkey, a key backer of the Syrian opposition, has thrown its weight behind a stuttering peace process in the Kazakh capital, Astana, which it hopes will pave a way for a political solution to Syria’s devastatin­g war. Al Assad’s most influentia­l supporter, Iran, rallied around the Syrian government yesterday, calling for an investigat­ion into the chemical attack that is not led by American officials. Despite widespread consensus that the chemical attack was carried out by the Syrian government, most likely using the banned nerve agent sarin, Iran and Russia have defended the record of its ally.

 ?? AP ?? Source: Institute for the Study of War Reuters/©Gulf News Syrian warplanes at the Kweiras air base, east of Aleppo, in this file photo.
AP Source: Institute for the Study of War Reuters/©Gulf News Syrian warplanes at the Kweiras air base, east of Aleppo, in this file photo.

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