Showing posts with label sarin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sarin. Show all posts

Sunday, September 8, 2013

UK delivered Syria chemicals needed for sarin production ‘for 6 years’



Published time: September 08, 2013 12:03

AFP Photo / Ricardo Garcia Vilanovoa

AFP Photo / Ricardo Garcia Vilanovoa




British companies sold sodium fluoride, a key ingredient in the manufacture of the deadly nerve gas sarin, to a Syrian firm from 2004-2010, British media reveal, a sale that has been called ‘disturbing’ following the chemical weapons attack in Damascus.


Between July 2004 and May 2010, the British government issued five export licenses to two companies, allowing them to sell Syria sodium fluoride, necessary for the production of sarin, according to a report in the Daily Mail, a British daily.


Sarin, a nerve gas that is hundreds of times deadlier than cyanide, is considered one of the world’s most dangerous chemical warfare agents. It works on the nervous system, over-stimulating muscles and vital organs, and a single drop can be lethal in minutes. The US, France and Germany say the deadly chemical was used in the attacks of August 21 in the Damascus neighborhood of Ghouta that left hundreds of civilians dead or injured.


The Sunday Mail says UK firms did export sodium fluoride to a Syrian cosmetics firm throughout the six years for what they claim were legitimate purposes. The daily quotes British MPs admitting for the first time that the chemical was delivered to Syria which has been condemned as a ‘grossly irresponsible’ move and a clear violation of international protocol on the trade of dangerous substances.


British MPs signaled their extreme displeasure with the shocking revelations.


“These are very disturbing revelations uncovered by The Mail on Sunday regarding the provision of sodium fluoride to Syria. At no time should we have allowed President Assad’s regime to get its hands on this substance,” Thomas Docherty MP, a member of the Commons Arms Export Controls Committee, said on Saturday.


“Previously we thought that while export licenses had been granted, no chemicals were actually delivered. Now we know that in the build-up to the Syrian civil war, UK companies – with the backing of our Government – were supplying this potentially lethal substance,” he added.


While the last export license was issued in May 2010, the licenses are obtained prior to manufacture and the industry standard requires four to five months before the chemicals are delivered.


“We are looking at late 2010 for the British supplies of sodium fluoride reaching Syria,” Docherty said.


The Government has some very serious questions to answer, he concluded.


However, a spokesman for the Department of Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) defended the sale of the chemical to Syria, saying the amount was “commensurate with the stated end use in the production of cosmetics and there was no reason to link them with Syria’s chemical weapons program. This remains the case.”


The BIS refused to release the names of the two UK exporters for reasons of commercial confidentiality.


This comes on top of another sarin-related scandal as earlier British officials were found  to have granted export licenses for sodium fluoride and potassium fluoride exports to Syria on the eve of the Syrian civil conflict breakout. The January 2012 licenses were given in the knowledge that both substances “could also be used as precursor chemicals in the manufacture of chemical weapons,” according to a report published by the House of Commons Committee on Arms Export Controls.


Angus Robertson, a Scottish National Party MP, told RT that the matter was raised in the House of Commons last week following the House of Commons ruling not to participate in military action against the Syrian government.


“Defense ministers had to explain why it was that the UK would even consider granting an export license,” he said, adding that it was “impossible to tell” whether rebels could have got hold of the chemicals once they had passed into the country.


“I’m still concerned, however, as the chemical licenses were issued at a time when the situation in Syria had already deteriorated,” Robertson added.


Meanwhile, in the US, members of Congress are debating whether to give President Barack Obama the green light for a military strike on the Syrian government of President Bashar Assad, who the White House holds responsible for last month’s deadly chemical weapons attack.


The US leader had earlier warned that the use of chemical weapons in Syria was the “red line” that, if crossed, would necessitate US involvement. The White House caveat, however, did not consider the possibility that Syrian rebel forces would jump at the opportunity of bringing US forces over to their side in the event of such an attack.


During the G20 summit, which just wrapped up in St. Petersburg, the White House released a joint statement signed by the leaders and representatives of 11 nations – ten of whom are G20 members. The signees included Australia, Canada, France, Italy, Japan, Republic of Korea, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States.


The signatory nations said they “support efforts undertaken by the United States and other countries to reinforce the prohibition on the use of chemical weapons.”


However, the signatories to the statement were clearly opposed to any military action against Syria.


“Recognizing that Syria’s conflict has no military solution, we reaffirm our commitment to seek a peaceful political settlement through full implementation of the 2012 Geneva Communique.  We are committed to a political solution which will result in a united, inclusive and democratic Syria,” it read.


Russia and China, among other nations, remain highly skeptical of claims that the Assad regime resorted to the use of chemical weapons, saying there is not enough evidence to prove with any certainty the identity of the perpetrators of the attack.


At the G20 summit, President Vladimir Putin called the chemical attack “provocation” carried out by rebels and cautioned strike supporters to act within the UN charter, and only after firm results of the UN probe are published, which may happen as soon as next week.




RT – News



UK delivered Syria chemicals needed for sarin production ‘for 6 years’

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Kerry: Samples From Syria Have Tested Positive For Signatures Of Sarin


JOHN KERRY, SEC. OF STATE: “Let me just add this morning a very important recent development, that in the last 24 hours, we have learned through samples that were provided to the United States and that have now been tested from first responders in East Damascus, and hair samples and blood samples have tested positive for signatures of sarin. So this case is building and this case will build.”




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Kerry: Samples From Syria Have Tested Positive For Signatures Of Sarin

Kerry: Samples From Syria Have Tested Positive For Signatures Of Sarin


JOHN KERRY, SEC. OF STATE: “Let me just add this morning a very important recent development, that in the last 24 hours, we have learned through samples that were provided to the United States and that have now been tested from first responders in East Damascus, and hair samples and blood samples have tested positive for signatures of sarin. So this case is building and this case will build.”




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Kerry: Samples From Syria Have Tested Positive For Signatures Of Sarin

Kerry: US has evidence sarin gas was used in Syria







Secretary of State John Kerry speaks at the State Department in Washington, Monday, Aug. 26, 2013, about the situation in Syria. Kerry said chemical weapons were used in Syria, and accused Assad of destroying evidence. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)





Secretary of State John Kerry speaks at the State Department in Washington, Monday, Aug. 26, 2013, about the situation in Syria. Kerry said chemical weapons were used in Syria, and accused Assad of destroying evidence. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)





Secretary of State John Kerry makes a statement about Syria at the State Department in Washington, Friday, Aug. 30, 2013. Kerry said the U.S. knows, based on intelligence, that the Syrian regime carefully prepared for days to launch a chemical weapons attack. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)













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WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of State John Kerry asserted Sunday that the United States now has evidence of sarin gas use in Syria and said “the case gets stronger by the day” for a military attack.


A day after President Barack Obama stepped back from his threat to launch an attack, Kerry said in a series of interviews on the Sunday news shows that the administration learned of the sarin use within the past 24 hours through samples of hair and blood provided to Washington by first responders in Damascus.


Kerry also said he was confident that Congress will give Obama its backing for an attack against Syria, but the former Massachusetts senator also said the president has authority to act on his own if Congress doesn’t give its approval.


While Kerry stopped short of saying Obama was committed to such a course even if lawmakers refuse to authorize force, he did say that “we are not going to lose this vote.”


Kerry said Obama has the right to take action against Syria, with or without Congress’ approval. But he stopped short of saying Obama was committed to such a course even if lawmakers refuse to authorize force.


Congress is scheduled to return from a summer break on Sept. 9.


GOP Rep. Peter King of New York, who criticized Obama for not proceeding immediately against Assad, said the president may have trouble winning the backing of Congress.


“I think it is going to be difficult,” said King, a member of the House Intelligence Committee, adding that there is an “isolationist” tendency in his GOP caucus.


Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said he thinks the Senate “will rubber-stamp what he wants but I think the House will be a much closer vote.” Paul said he believes “it’s at least 50-50 whether the House will vote down involvement in the Syrian war.”


But Rep. Mike Rogers, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, called the evidence, including the fresh finding on sarin gas, “convincing and getting better.” Rogers, R-Mich., predicted that “at the end of the day, Congress will rise to the occasion,” but he also said “it’s going to take that healthy debate to get there.”


“This isn’t about Barack Obama versus the Congress. This isn’t about Republicans versus Democrats. This has a very important worldwide reach in this decision.”


Obama, who has talked repeatedly of U.S. reprisals against President Bashar Assad for the alleged use of chemical weapons against his own people in Syria’s protracted civil war, announced Saturday that he had decided to defer any immediate action in order to seek a congressional authorization.


“The case hasn’t changed and the case doesn’t change at all. The rationale for a military response is as powerful today” as it has been, Kerry said.


“This case is going to build stronger and stronger,” he said. But he also said he thinks “the people of America should be celebrating that the president is not acting unilaterally.”


Kerry maintained there is no weakness in the U.S. case underscoring Obama’s about-face, saying instead that “the president believes that we are all stronger as a nation when we act together.”


The secretary said that Assad “has now joined the list of Adolf Hitler and Saddam Hussein” in deploying chemical weapons against his population and that “the case remains the same” for a U.S. response. Kerry echoed Obama in saying the world cannot stand by and watch Assad use chemical weapons.


Asked if the U.S. obtained its new information from U.N. weapons inspectors who had visited Syria, Kerry responded, “No, it is independent. … But it is confirmation of the signatures of sarin.”


“In the last 24 hours,” he said, “we have learned through samples that were provided to the United States, that have now been tested, from first responders in east Damascus, and hair samples and blood samples have tested positive for signatures of sarin.”


He was asked repeatedly what Obama would do in the event that Congress refuses to give its consent, Kerry said, “The president has taken his decision.”


“I think this is a smart decision by the president. … He is not trying to create an imperial presidency,” Kerry added. “I believe that in the end, Congress will do what is right.”


Administration officials have said that Obama appeared set on ordering a strike until Friday evening. After a long walk in near 90-degree temperatures around the White House grounds with Chief of Staff Denis McDonough, the president told his aide he had changed his mind.


These officials said Saturday that Obama initially drew pushback in a two-hour session attended by Vice President Joe Biden, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, Director of National Intelligence James Klapper, CIA Director John Brennan, national security adviser Susan Rice and homeland security adviser Lisa Monaco. They declined to say which of the participants had argued against Obama’s proposal.


Kerry appeared on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” CNN’s “State of the Union,” CBS’ “Face the Nation,” ”Fox News Sunday” and ABC’s “This Week.” Paul was on NBC, Rogers was on CNN and King was on Fox.


Associated Press




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Kerry: US has evidence sarin gas was used in Syria

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Complete News Turkey cannot be silent on sarin issue Hisham Jaber



Ignore tags: news bloopers,autotune the news,news,fox news,onion news,funny news bloopers,news reporter bloopers,news anchor fail,cnn news,chocolate,news,blo…



Complete News Turkey cannot be silent on sarin issue Hisham Jaber

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

France says tests confirm sarin gas used in Syria











FILE – This Friday, May 3, 2013, citizen journalism image provided by Edlib News Network, ENN, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, show an anti-Syrian regime protester holding up an Arabic placard reading, “If America does not know who used the chemical weapons, so it could be flying saucers from another planet,” during a demonstration, in Sarmada town, in Idlib province, northern Syria. A U.N. report on Syria said Tuesday, June 4, 2013, that there are “reasonable grounds” to believe that limited quantities of toxic chemicals have been used as weapons in at least four attacks in Syria’s civil war, but said more evidence is needed to determine the precise chemical agents used or who used them. (AP Photo/Edlib News Network ENN, File)






FILE – In this Tuesday, March 19, 2013 file photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, a Syrian victim who suffered an alleged chemical attack at Khan al-Assal village according to SANA, receives treatment by doctors at a hospital in Aleppo, Syria. A U.N. report on Syria said Tuesday, June 4, 2013, there are “reasonable grounds” to believe that limited quantities of toxic chemicals have been used as weapons in at least four attacks in Syria’s civil war, but said more evidence is needed to determine the precise chemical agents used or who used them. (AP Photo/SANA, File)






PARIS (AP) — Samples taken from Syria and tested in France have confirmed that sarin gas has been used there multiple times, France’s foreign minister said Tuesday.


Laurent Fabius said the tests carried out by a French laboratory “prove the presence of sarin in the samples in our possession.” He said France “now is certain that sarin gas was used in Syria multiple times and in a localized way.”


The brief statement concluded: “It would be unacceptable that those guilty of these crimes benefit from impunity.”


Earlier Tuesday, a U.N. report on Syria said there are “reasonable grounds” to believe that limited quantities of toxic chemicals have been used as weapons in at least four attacks in Syria’s civil war, but that more evidence is needed to determine the precise chemical agents used or who used them.


The U.N. Commission of Inquiry said conclusive findings can be reached only after testing samples taken directly from victims or the site of the alleged attacks. It called on Damascus to allow a team of experts into the country, saying lack of access continues to hamper the commission’s ability to fulfill its mandate.


President Barack Obama had previously declared the use of chemical weapons his “red line” for forceful U.S. intervention in Syria. He has since come under pressure to take action amid mounting allegations that President Bashar Assad’s regime has crossed that line.


The U.N. report appeared to strengthen the Obama administration’s argument that that the existing evidence is insufficient.


The commission’s report to the Human Rights Council on violations in Syria’s conflict accused both sides of committing war crimes. In an apparent message to European countries considering arming Syrian rebels, the report warned that the transfer of arms would heighten the risk of violations, leading to more civilian deaths and injuries.


“War crimes and crimes against humanity have become a daily reality in Syria where the harrowing accounts of victims have seared themselves on our conscience,” the report said. “There is a human cost to the increased availability of weapons,” it added.


The commission said it relied for the report on first-hand accounts to corroborate incidents, and carried out 430 interviews in the region and from Geneva, including via Skype and over the telephone, with victims and witnesses inside the country.


It also collected photographs, video recordings, satellite imagery and medical records. Reports from governments and non-government sources, academic analyses, and U.N. reports, including from human rights bodies and humanitarian organizations, also formed part of the investigation.


U.N.-Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has appointed a U.N. team to investigate alleged chemical weapons attacks in Syria after the government in Damascus asked him to investigate a purported attack by rebels on March 19 on Khan al-Assal village near the northern city of Aleppo. But the Syrian government insists that a probe be limited to that incident.


Syrian soldiers were reportedly killed and injured in the incident, which the rebels blame on government forces. Opposition activists have claimed there have been more than six instances when regime forces used chemical weapons.


Ban is insisting on a broader investigation, which would also include a December incident in Homs. He appointed Swedish chemical weapons expert Ake Sellstrom to lead a U.N. investigation. Syria has refused to allow his team into the country.


Last week, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem said Iraq under Saddam Hussein inadvertently paved the way for the 2003 U.S.-led invasion by allowing U.N. inspectors into the country, and suggested Syria is not about to make the same mistake. “We will not allow teams of inspectors to come to Syria to do whatever they want,” he said in a TV interview.


Syria is widely believed to have one of the world’s largest arsenals of chemical weapons, including mustard and nerve gas. The Assad regime has denied using such weapons during the civil war.


The confirmed use of chemical weapons could escalate the international response to the more than two-year-long conflict, which has killed more than 70,000 people, according to the U.N. Obama has said their use would be a “red line,” but the administration says it still looking for solid evidence.


Explaining its position in an April letter to two U.S. senators, the administration referred to intelligence assessments concluding “with varying degrees of confidence” and based in part on physiological samples that the regime has used chemical weapons on a small scale, specifically the nerve agent sarin. The letter said such assessments are not sufficient grounds for action because it is not clear how the exposure occurred and under what circumstances.


Since then, the governments of Britain, France and Turkey have also said there are indications of chemical weapons use, but that more testing is required.


“There are reasonable grounds to believe that chemical agents have been used as weapons,” the report said. “It has not been possible, on the evidence available, to determine the precise chemical agents used, their delivery systems or the perpetrator.”


The report said there are allegations of government forces using chemical weapons in four instances, but also did not rule out rebels using them.


“It is possible that anti-government armed groups may access and use chemical weapons …. though there is no compelling evidence that these groups possess such weapons or their requisite delivery systems,” the report said.


“Conclusive findings — particularly in the absence of a large-scale attack — may be reached only after testing samples taken directly from victims or the site of the alleged attack,” it said.


The report, covering the period from mid-January to mid-May, accused both sides of committing war crimes. On the government side, the report accused government forces and affiliated militia of committing torture, rape, forcible displacement and enforced disappearance. On the rebel side, the report accused armed groups of carrying out sentencing and execution without due process, as well as committing torture, taking hostages and pillaging.


It said violations and abuses by the rebels “did not, however, reach the intensity and scale of those committed by government forces and affiliated militia.”


“A dangerous state of fragmentation and disintegration of authority prevails in areas under anti-government armed groups control, despite attempts to fill the vacuum left by the withdrawal of the state through creating local councils,” it said.


—-


AP correspondent Zeina Karam reported from Beirut.


Associated Press



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France says tests confirm sarin gas used in Syria

France: Tests show sarin used in Syria


Suspected Sarin gas vials are seen in a brief case at a site in Fallujah, Iraq, in 2004.


Suspected Sarin gas vials are seen in a brief case at a site in Fallujah, Iraq, in 2004.



(CNN) — Tests on samples in France’s possession show that sarin gas has been used in Syria “several times and in a localized manner,” France’s Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius announced Tuesday.


Fabius did not mention who used the deadly nerve agent.





What is sarin gas?





What’s next in Syria?


The announcement comes amid conflicting reports on whether chemical weapons have been used — and, if so, who used them — in Syria, where rebels are challenging the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.


Earlier this year, the United States said its intelligence analysts had concluded “with varying degrees of confidence” that chemical weapons had been used in Syria. But President Barack Obama said “intelligence assessments alone are not sufficient” in guiding its assessments on chemical weapon use in Syria.


In early May, the head of the U.N. Independent International Commission of Inquiry for Syria said that evidence points to the use of sarin by Syrian rebel forces. But the commission later issued a news release saying it “has not reached conclusive findings as to the use of chemical weapons in Syria by any parties to the conflict.”


In April, the head of the Israeli military’s intelligence research said the Syrian government is using chemical weapons against rebel forces.


READ: U.S.: Intelligence points to small-scale use of sarin in Syria


OPINION: Obama must act on Syria chemical weapons




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France: Tests show sarin used in Syria