Syrian rebels' Damascus chemical cache found by Assad army - State TV
The Syrian army has discovered a storehouse belonging to rebels in the Damascus area of Jobar, where toxic chemical substances - including chlorine - have been produced and kept, State TV reported.
Military sources reported that the militants "were preparing
to fire mortars in the suburbs of the capital and were going to
pack missiles with chemical warheads."
A video shot by RT’s sister channel Russia Al Youm shows an old,
partly ruined building which was set up as a laboratory. After
entering the building, Syrian Army officers found scores of
canisters and bags laid on the floor and tables. According to a
warning sign on the bags, the “corrosive” substance was made in
Saudi Arabia.
On July 7, the Syrian army confiscated“281 barrels filled with
dangerous, hazardous chemical materials” that they found at a
cache belonging to rebels in the city of Banias. The chemicals
included monoethylene glycol and polyethylene glycol.
Syrian UN Ambassador Bashar Ja’afari said that the chemicals were
“capable of destroying a whole city, if not the whole
country."
Chief UN chemical weapons investigator Ake Sellstrom and UN
disarmament chief Angela Kane are expected in Damascus for talks
on Monday, following an invitation from the Syrian government.
It is now crucial to find out where the rebels are getting the
chemicals from, defense consultant Moeen Raouff told RT.
“The Syrian military has been doing an extremely good job of
protecting the nation,” he said. “And if they found this
alleged factory than we need to know what the origins of the
chemicals are, if they came through the Turkish, Jordanian, Iraqi
or Lebanese borders.”
Raouff added that the discovery is unlikely to change the West’s
attitude toward the Syrian rebels.
“The Western allies are intent on toppling Assad," he
stressed. "Again, they’re going for a case like Iraq and
Libya. They’re going after one man and destroying the whole
nation. So, I doubt that there’ll be a major reaction. And the
Security Council hasn’t reacted to this situation prior to
this.”
Earlier this week, Russia submitted to the UN its analysis of
samples taken in Aleppo, where chemical weapons were allegedly
used in March.
Russia’s findings indicated that it was rebels - not the Syrian
army - behind the Khan al-Assal incident, in which more than 30
people died.
“It was determined that on March 19 the rebels fired an
unguided missile Bashair-3 at the town of Khan al-Assal, which
has been under government control. The results of the analysis
clearly show that the shell used in Khan al-Assal was not factory
made and that it contained sarin,” Russia’s UN envoy, Vitaly
Churkin, said.
Syrian rebel groups denied the accusations, in turn blaming
government forces.
The United States cast doubt on the Russian analysis. In
response, Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov underlined that the samples of the chemical
weapons had been taken at the very place where they were used and
were delivered by Russian experts rather than passed through
third-party hands.
“We submitted a full set of documents [to the UN]. That’s over
80 pages, including photographs and precise geographic
coordinates [of places where samples were taken], procedures and
results,” Lavrov pointed out. “We also guarantee that the
samples were taken by experts who did not let go of them till
they were delivered to the laboratory.”
Damascus was the first to accuse opposition fighters of launching
a chemical weapon attack, and the first to request the UN
investigation.
The investigation became stuck after a group of Western nations
insisted on launching an inquiry into a separate case of alleged
chemical weapons use in Homs in December 2012. The investigation
requires access to military objects, which Damascus has been
unwilling to give.
So far, the UN has not found any conclusive evidence proving that
either side of the conflict used chemical weapons.
Meanwhile, the US, UK and France have submitted several reports
in which they claim there is evidence that the Assad government
used chemical weapons.