The spokesperson for the
United States administration has accused Syria of preparing to stage a
chemical attack in the Arab country, threatening that the US would make
Damascus pay “a heavy price.”
White House Press Secretary
Sean Spicer claimed in a Monday statement that the US had “identified
potential preparations” for an attack “that would likely result in the
mass murder of civilians, including innocent children.”
Spicer
said Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and the Syrian military would “pay
a heavy price” if they went ahead with the alleged plan. A familiar manner of ratcheting up tensions
The
Associated Press, meanwhile, cited anonymous US State Department
officials who would “typically” be consulted before such statements are
made as saying that they had been caught “completely off guard” by
Spicer’s statement and that they had come to know about it only after it
was released.
The AP report also said that the content of
Spicer’s statement “didn’t appear to be discussed in advance with other
national security agencies.”
On April 4, over 80 people died in an
incident involving chemicals in the town of Khan Shaykhun in the
western Idlib Province of Syria. Western countries blamed the Syrian
government for what they said was a chemical attack, and days later, the
US used it as a pretext to fire 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles at a Syrian
airfield in the central province of Homs. US officials claimed that the
alleged Khan Shaykhun gas attack had been launched from that airfield. In
this image released by the US Navy, the USS Ross is seen firing a
tomahawk land attack missile at a Syrian airfield on April 7, 2017. (Via
AFP)This is while Syria and its ally Russia
said the Syrian government had conducted a conventional airstrike on
militant positions in Khan Shaykhun, which also targeted a chemical arms
depot held and run by anti-Damascus militants, causing a leakage of the
toxic substance and the deaths.
Veteran American investigative
journalist Seymour M. Hersh recently confirmed the Syrian narrative. He
said that US President Donald Trump had ignored important intelligence
reports before issuing the order for the missile attack against the
Syrian airfield in reaction to the Khan Shaykhun incident.
According
to Hersh, Trump turned a blind eye to reports by the US intelligence
community which warned that there was no evidence suggesting the Syrians
had used a chemical weapon. The US intelligence had found that the
Syrians had on April 4 targeted a meeting site of militants, using a
Russian-supplied guided bomb equipped with conventional explosives. Read more:
Following
the US missile strike, Russia said the US could have prompted an
all-out war as the projectiles could have hit Russian forces in the Arab
country. Another US official threatens Iran, Russia, too
Also
on Monday, US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley issued
similar remarks on Twitter, saying, “Any further attacks done to the
people of Syria will be blamed on Assad, but also on Russia & Iran.”
Russia
has been lending its airpower to Syria’s counterterrorism operations
since September 2015. Iran has also been providing the Syrian military
with advisory military support. The collective support has helped Syria
rid considerable territory of Takfiri presence and helped establish an
all-out ceasefire in the Arab country in late 2016.
Russia has
already suspended a military hotline with the US over another
provocative incident that saw US forces shoot down a Syrian fighter jet.
The
ratcheting up of tensions by the US, including with the latest
statement, now risks sparking a major confrontation between parties to
the Syrian conflict and complicating efforts aimed at resolving it.
The US has unsanctioned presence in Syria.
Just
hours earlier on Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had
called on the US to prevent “provocations” against Syrian government
forces.
In a phone call initiated by US Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson, Lavrov “called on Washington to take steps to prevent
provocations against Syrian government forces carrying out operations
against terrorists,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said.
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