A United Nations report released on Monday confirmed that a deadly
chemical arms attack caused a mass killing in Syria last month and for
the first time provided extensive forensic details of the weapons used,
which strongly implicated the Syrian government.
While the report’s authors did not assign blame for the attack on the
outskirts of Damascus, the details it documented included the large size
and particular shape of the munitions and the precise direction from
which two of them had been fired. Taken together, that information
appeared to undercut arguments by President Bashar al-Assad of Syria
that rebel forces, who are not known to possess such weapons or the
training or ability to use them, had been responsible.
The report, commissioned by Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, was the first
independent on-the-ground scientific inquest into the attack, which
left hundreds of civilians gassed to death, including children, early on
Aug. 21.
The repercussions have elevated the 30-month-old Syrian conflict into a
global political crisis that is testing the limits of impunity over the
use of chemical weapons. It could also lead to the first concerted
action on the war at the United Nations Security Council, which up to
now has been paralyzed over Syria policy.
“The report makes for chilling reading,” Mr. Ban told a news conference
after he briefed the Security Council. “The findings are beyond doubt
and beyond the pale. This is a war crime.”
Mr. Ban declined to ascribe blame, saying that responsibility was up to
others, but he expressed hope that the attack would become a catalyst
for a new diplomatic determination at the United Nations to resolve the
Syrian conflict, which has left more than 100,000 people dead and
millions displaced.
There was no immediate reaction to the report from the Syrian
government. But just two days before the report was released, Syria
officially agreed to join the international convention on banning
chemical weapons, and the United States and Russia, which have
repeatedly clashed over Syria, agreed on a plan to identify and purge
those weapons from the country by the middle of next year. Syria has
said it would abide by that plan.
The main point of the report was to establish whether chemical weapons
had been used in the Aug. 21 attack in the Damascus suburb of Ghouta, an
area long infiltrated by rebels. The United Nations inspectors
concluded that “chemical weapons have been used in the ongoing conflict
between the parties in the Syrian Arab Republic, also against civilians,
including children, on a relatively large scale.”
The weapons inspectors, who visited Ghouta and left the country with
large amounts of evidence on Aug. 31, said, “In particular, the
environmental, chemical and medical samples we have collected provide
clear and convincing evidence that surface-to-surface rockets containing
the nerve agent sarin were used.”
But the report’s annexes, detailing what the authors found, were what caught the attention of nonproliferation experts.
In two chilling pieces of information, the inspectors said that the
remnants of a warhead they had found showed its capacity of sarin to be
about 56 liters — far higher than initially thought. They also said that
falling temperatures at the time of the attack ensured that the poison
gas, heavier than air, would hug the ground, penetrating lower levels of
buildings “where many people were seeking shelter.”
The investigators were unable to examine all of the munitions used, but
they were able to find and measure several rockets or their components.
Using standard field techniques for ordnance identification and crater
analysis, they established that at least two types of rockets had been
used, including an M14 artillery rocket bearing Cyrillic markings and a
330-millimeter rocket of unidentified provenance.
These findings, though not presented as evidence of responsibility, were
likely to strengthen the argument of those who claim that the Syrian
government bears the blame, because the weapons in question had not been
previously documented or reported to be in possession of the
insurgency.
Report from Newyork Times.
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