Daily Mail

MISSILES AT THE READY

May gets green light from Cabinet Ken Clarke demands MPs’ debate Warship moves in to curb threat

- By Larisa Brown and John Stevens

THERESA May last night won Cabinet support for military action in Syria as Britain bolstered its defences against possible Russian retaliatio­n.

After a two-and-a-half hour emergency meeting, ministers

agreed it was ‘ highly likely’ that Bashar al-Assad’s regime was behind last weekend’s chemical attack in Douma.

With Britain on the brink of joining a US-led strike, all 24 ministers present agreed on the ‘need to take action’ and said the use of chemical weapons ‘could not go unchalleng­ed’. Amid fears Russia could retaliate against Western forces in the region, defence chiefs strengthen­ed defences around the RAF base in Akrotiri, Cyprus.

However, the political row over the decision to proceed without a parliament­ary vote escalated as Ken Clarke, the Father of the House, demanded that MPs be consulted. At present, there are no

plans to recall MPs from recess to debate the crisis. As British forces waited for the green light:

Russia’s UN ambassador said the ‘immediate priority’ was ‘to avert the danger’ of all-out war in Syria, adding that he hoped the situation would not reach the ‘point of no return’;

James Mattis, the US defence secretary, said his main concern about a military response was how to stop it ‘escalating out of control’;

US officials said they had obtained urine and blood samples from victims of the chemical attack and confirmed the presence of chlorine and a nerve agent;

The US was believed to be amassing the largest air and naval strike force since the Iraq war in 2003;

Reports from inside Syria suggested the government had started moving its military aircraft to Russian bases on the Mediterran­ean coast, in anticipati­on of US strikes;

French president Emmanuel Macron said his country had proof the Syrian government carried out the attack, which aid groups have said killed dozens of people.

Syria’s regime declared victory in the rebel-held town of Douma as fighters surrendere­d their weapons

‘She went round the table’

to Russian military police in extraordin­ary scenes.

The Mail can reveal that a Royal Navy Type 45 Destroyer HMS Duncan was given a ‘ warning order’ to move south-east of Cyprus to take up station as an ‘air defence’ ship against any threat from Moscow.

Meanwhile, Typhoon fighter jets at RAF Coningsby in Lincolnshi­re were put on notice to move to the region to provide extra firepower.

UK officials were last night waiting for the outcome of a meeting of Donald Trump’s National Security Council in Washington. The meeting, chaired by the US President, was expected to take the final decision about exactly when and how to strike. Action is expected within days.

The White House is said to have provisiona­lly selected eight targets in Syria – including two airfields, a research facility, and a chemical weapons facility.

Mrs May was expected to finalise plans in late-night talks with Mr Trump and Mr Macron last night.

The Prime Minister told the Cabinet that last Saturday’s attack in Douma was a ‘ shocking and barbaric attack’, which killed up to 75 people, including children, ‘in the most appalling and inhuman way’.

Ministers agreed with her that the Assad regime ‘has a track record of the use of chemical weapons and it is highly likely that the regime is responsibl­e for Saturday’s attack’, according to No 10.

The Prime Minister said it was a further example of the erosion of internatio­nal law in relation to the use of chemical weapons, saying it was ‘deeply concerning to us all’. Mrs May went round the table asking every member for their opinion on the next stage and whether to strike at Assad, despite the fears of a dramatic escalation.

Downing Street said: ‘Cabinet agreed it was vital that the use of chemical weapons did not go unchalleng­ed.’

The Cabinet also agreed ‘on the need to take action to alleviate humanitari­an distress and to deter the further use of chemical weapons by the Assad regime’. A spokesman said the PM would work with the US and France ‘to co-ordinate an internatio­nal response’, in a clear sign it would be a three-pronged attack.

The extensive military force which could soon be within striking distance of Syria will have to outfox sophistica­ted Russian air defence radars.

Britain’s contributi­on is likely to include Tomahawk missiles fired from an Astuteclas­s submarine and Tornado jets stationed at Akrotiri.

Earlier in the week Russia’s UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said Moscow had warned the US of ‘grave repercussi­ons’ if it carried out an attack.

And Russia’s ambassador to Lebanon threatened to attack any launch platforms used to fire weapons, raising the prospect of Western ships and planes being hit.

Sources told CNBC that Syria’s military had reposition­ed a significan­t amount of air assets to Russian-controlled airfields in the hope that Washington would be reluctant to strike there.

Mr Nebenzia said yesterday the top priority was to avert war in Syria, and he did not rule out the possibilit­y of a US-Russian conflict.

He said Russia was concerned with ‘ the dangerous escalation’ of the situation and ‘ aggressive policies’ and preparatio­ns that some government­s were making. He added: ‘ We hope that there will be no point of no return.’

Mr Nebenzia told reporters after a closed emergency meeting of the UN Security Council that ‘ the danger of escalation is higher than simply Syria, because our military are there on the invitation of the Syrian government’.

Russia’s foreign ministry warned the US and its allies against assuming the role of a ‘global policeman’. Spokesman Maria Zakharova said Western leaders had no authority to be ‘ investigat­ors, prosecutor­s and executione­rs’.

Mr Trump said yesterday: ‘We’re having a number of meetings today, we’ll see what happens.

‘ Now we have to make some... decisions, so they’ll be made fairly soon.’

Mr Macron said: ‘ We have proof that last week... chemical weapons were used, at least with chlorine, and that they were used by the regime of Bashar al-Assad. We will need to take decisions in due course, when we judge it most useful and effective.’

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