Friday, January 10, 2014
Middle East
Friday, January 10, 2014 by DXTR corporation
Syria Reports 2 Attacks on Chemical Arms Sites
By NICK CUMMING-BRUCE and RICK GLADSTONE
GENEVA
— Syria’s government said Wednesday that insurgents had assaulted two
storage sites for some of the deadly chemical weapons components it has
pledged to eliminate. It was the first time the Syrian authorities had
reported such attacks in the three months since an international effort
began to sequester and purge the country of the banned munitions.
Bassam Sabbagh, the Syrian representative to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons,
the Hague-based group that is helping oversee the destruction of the
Syrian arsenal, reported the attacks at the group’s executive council
meeting, according to a European diplomat who was present. The diplomat
spoke on the condition of anonymity because the meeting’s deliberations
were private and the Syrian’s account was not publicly disclosed.
The
attacks, if confirmed, underscore the difficulties in securing and
destroying the chemical weapons in the midst of a civil war, a point
that the organization’s officials have repeatedly made since an
ambitious joint mission with the United Nations to eliminate them began
in early October with the Syrian government’s consent.
The
Syrian government is facing increased pressure to accelerate the
process for ridding the country of the most dangerous materials among
the 1,200 tons of toxic agents it has amassed over the years. It missed
the deadline for exporting them by Dec. 31. The entire arsenal must be
destroyed by June 30, under a Security Council resolution approved in
September.
The
first cargo of the most dangerous materials bound for export was loaded
onto a Danish vessel on Tuesday in the Syrian port of Latakia, a step
that the United Nations and the Organization for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons called an important sign of progress.
Officials
declined to comment on the account by Mr. Sabbagh, who told the
executive council that insurgents had assaulted a storage site near the
city of Homs and a second site outside Damascus, according to the
European diplomat. Mr. Sabbagh did not specify when the attacks took
place, the identities of the attackers or what damage, if any, had
resulted, but said that the attacks “would have been disastrous if the
terrorist plans had worked,” the European diplomat said.
“It was unexpected,” the diplomat said. “I was surprised that this was the first we had heard of them.”
On
Wednesday, the top United Nations official coordinating the joint
mission in Syria briefed the Security Council privately on the progress
and told
reporters at United Nations headquarters afterward that Syria was eager
to get rid of the stockpile “within the shortest possible delay.”
The
official, Sigrid Kaag, said nothing about attacks on Syrian storage
facilities. But she said that “security is a big factor in all that
takes place” and that the mid-2014 deadline for the complete destruction
of the Syrian arsenal could still be met despite the civil war raging
in Syria.
Ms.
Kaag said the public should not worry about the deadliest compounds,
known as Priority 1 chemicals, aboard the Danish vessel, which will
remain at sea with the cargo, then dock at Latakia again to collect the
remainder when it is ready to be loaded.
Once
the entire stockpile of the deadliest compounds, estimated to total 500
tons, is on the ship, it will go to Italy, where the chemicals will be
transferred to an American naval vessel equipped to render them
harmless.
“They’re
safe and secure, they’re properly guarded, and all efforts have been
made to keep them in that way,” Ms. Kaag told reporters. “Everything has
been done to make sure that this is properly handled.”
She
declined to specify how many tons were in the initial cargo, how long
the Danish ship would wait offshore or how many times it would have to
return to Latakia to load the remainder. Such details, she said, are
part of a “very tightly held, and I think rightly so, operation.”
Asked
to rate the level of cooperation from the Syrian authorities, Ms. Kaag
described it as constructive, but said “I’m not in the rating business.”
The
transportation and export of the most dangerous chemicals, which
include mustard gas, VX nerve agent and the agents needed to create
sarin gas, have always been considered the most hazardous steps of the
operation. Yet an unusually collaborative international effort is
underway, including maritime security provided by Russia, China, Norway
and Denmark.
Syria’s
pledge to renounce chemical weapons and join the treaty that bans them
was a product of intensive diplomacy by the United States and Russia.
The agreement averted an American military response to a chemical
weapons attack outside Damascus on Aug. 21 that killed hundreds of
civilians. The United States blamed the government of President Bashar
al-Assad; Mr. Assad and rebels seeking to depose him blamed each other.
While
the Syrian authorities made rapid progress destroying the facilities
for making chemical weapons and the munitions for delivering them, the
process for getting the chemicals out of the country has been much
slower.
The
Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons and diplomats
following the proceedings in The Hague have carefully avoided accusing
Mr. Assad of any backsliding, but the tone of their comments has taken
on a firmer edge.
“We
want to make it clear that any additional delays could really imperil
the ability to meet the overall deadlines,” Michael Luhan, a spokesman
for the organization, said in a telephone interview. “What also needs to
be made clear is that we need to see activity pick up now.”
Source:The New York Times
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Conflict
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