Exclusive: Tests link Syrian government
stockpile to largest sarin attack - sources
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[January 30, 2018]
By Anthony Deutsch
THE HAGUE (Reuters) - The Syrian
government's chemical weapons stockpile has been linked for the first
time by laboratory tests to the largest sarin nerve agent attack of the
civil war, diplomats and scientists told Reuters, supporting Western
claims that government forces under President Bashar al-Assad were
behind the atrocity.
Laboratories working for the Organisation for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons compared samples taken by a U.N. mission in the
Damascus suburb of Ghouta after the Aug. 21, 2013 attack, when hundreds
of civilians died of sarin gas poisoning, to chemicals handed over by
Damascus for destruction in 2014.
(For a graphic on chemical attacks click http://tmsnrt.rs/2pKDWOY )
The tests found "markers" in samples taken at Ghouta and at the sites of
two other nerve agent attacks, in the towns of Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib
governorate on April 4, 2017 and Khan al-Assal, Aleppo, in March 2013,
two people involved in the process said.
"We compared Khan Sheikhoun, Khan al-Assal, Ghouta," said one source who
asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the findings. "There
were signatures in all three of them that matched."
The same test results were the basis for a report by the OPCW-United
Nations Joint Investigative Mechanism in October which said the Syrian
government was responsible for the Khan Sheikhoun attack, which killed
dozens.
The findings on Ghouta, whose details were confirmed to Reuters by two
separate diplomatic sources, were not released in the October report to
the U.N. Security Council because they were not part of the team's
mandate.
They will nonetheless bolster claims by the United States, Britain and
other Western powers that Assad's government still possesses and uses
banned munitions in violation of several Security Council resolutions
and the Chemical Weapons Convention.
The OPCW declined to comment. Syria has repeatedly denied using chemical
weapons in the conflict now in its seventh year and has blamed the
chemical attacks in the rebel-held territory of Ghouta on the insurgents
themselves.
Russia has also denied that Syrian government forces have carried out
chemical attacks and has questioned the reliability of the OCPW
inquiries. Officials in Moscow have said the rebels staged the attacks
to discredit the Assad government and whip up international
condemnation.
Under a U.S.-Russian deal after the Ghouta attack in 2013, Damascus
joined the OPCW and agreed to permanently eliminate its chemical weapons
program, including destroying a 1,300-tonne stockpile of industrial
precursors that has now been linked to the Ghouta attack.
But inspectors have found proof of an ongoing chemical weapons program
in Syria, including the systematic use of chlorine barrel bombs and
sarin, which they say was ordered at the highest levels of government.
The sarin attack on Khan Sheikhoun in April last year prompted U.S.
President Donald Trump to order a missile strike against the Shayrat air
base, from which the Syrian operation is said to have been launched.
Diplomatic and scientific sources said efforts by Syria and Russia to
discredit the U.N.-OPCW tests establishing a connection to Ghouta have
so far come up with nothing.
Russia's blocking of resolutions at the Security Council seeking
accountability for war crimes in Syria gained new relevance when Russia
stationed its aircraft at Shayrat in 2015.
Washington fired missiles at Shayrat in April 2017, saying the Syrian
air force used it to stage the Khan Sheikhoun sarin attack on April 4 a
few days earlier, killing more than 80 people.
No Russian military assets are believed to have been hit, but Moscow
warned at the time it could have serious consequences.
In June, the Pentagon said it had seen what appeared to be preparations
for another chemical attack at the same airfield, prompting Russia to
say it would respond proportionately if Washington took pre-emptive
measures against Syrian forces there.
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A U.N. chemical weapons expert, wearing a gas mask, holds a plastic
bag containing samples from one of the sites of an alleged chemical
weapons attack in the Ain Tarma neighbourhood of Damascus, Syria
August 29, 2013. REUTERS/Mohamed Abdullah/File Photo
"SERIOUS LAB WORK"
The chemical tests were carried out at the request of the U.N.-OPCW
inquiry, which was searching for potential links between the
stockpile and samples from Khan Sheikhoun. The analysis results
raised the possibility that they would provide a link to other sarin
attacks, the source said.
Two compounds in the Ghouta sample matched those also found in Khan
Sheikhoun, one formed from sarin and the stabilizer hexamine and
another specific fluorophosphate that appears during sarin
production, the tests showed.
"Like in all science, it should be repeated a couple of times, but
it was serious matching and serious laboratory work," the source
said.
Independent experts, however, said the findings are the strongest
scientific evidence to date that the Syrian government was behind
Ghouta, the deadliest chemical weapons attack since the Halabja
massacres of 1988 during the Iran-Iraq war.
"A match of samples from the 2013 Ghouta attacks to tests of
chemicals in the Syrian stockpile is the equivalent of DNA evidence:
definitive proof," said Amy Smithson, a U.S. nonproliferation
expert.
The hexamine finding "is a particularly significant match," Smithson
said, because it is a chemical identified as a unique hallmark of
the Syrian military's process to make sarin.
"This match adds to the mountain of physical evidence that points
conclusively, without a shadow of doubt, to the Syrian government,"
she said.
NO CHANCE REBELS BEHIND GHOUTA
Smithson and other sources familiar with the matter said it would
have been virtually impossible for the rebels to carry out a
coordinated, large-scale strike with poisonous munitions, even if
they had been able to steal the chemicals from the government's
stockpile.
"I don't think there is a cat in hell's chance that rebels or
Islamic State were responsible for the Aug. 21 Ghouta attack," said
Hamish de Bretton-Gordon, an independent specialist in biological
and chemical weapons.
The U.N.-OPCW inquiry, which was disbanded in November after being
blocked by Syria's ally Russia at the U.N. Security Council, also
found that Islamic State had used the less toxic blistering agent
sulfur mustard gas on a small scale in Syria.
The Ghouta attack, by comparison, was textbook chemical warfare,
Smithson and de Bretton-Gordon said, perfectly executed by forces
trained to handle sarin, a toxin which is more difficult to use
because it must be mixed just before delivery.
Surface-to-surface rockets delivered hundreds of liters of sarin in
perfect weather conditions that made them as lethal as possible: low
temperatures and wind in the early hours of the morning, when the
gas would remain concentrated and kill sleeping victims, many of
them children.
Pre-attack air raids with conventional bombs shattered windows and
doors and drove people into shelters where the heavy poison seeped
down into underground hiding places. Aerial bombing afterwards
sought to destroy the evidence.
The large quantity of chemicals used, along with radar images of
rocket traces showing they originated from Syrian Brigade positions,
are further proof that the rebels could not have carried out the
Ghouta attack, the experts said.
(Reporting by Anthony Deutsch; editing by Giles Elgood)
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