Sunday, September 15, 2013
Obama welcomes US-Russia Syria chemical weapons plan
US President Barack Obama has welcomed an
agreement between the US and Russia under
which Syria's chemical weapons must be
destroyed or removed by mid-2014 as an
"important step".
But a White House statement cautioned that the
US expected Syria "to live up to its public
commitments".
The US-Russian framework document stipulates
that Syria must provide details of its stockpile within
a week.
If Syria fails to comply, the deal could be enforced by
a UN resolution.
China, France, the UK, the UN and Nato have all
expressed satisfaction at the agreement.
In Beijing, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said on Sunday
that China "welcomes the general agreement
between the US and Russia".
"This agreement will enable tensions in Syria to be
eased," he said.
However, there has so far been no reaction from
Damascus.
In the White House statement, President Obama said
that the US-Russian deal "represents an important,
concrete step toward the goal of moving Syria's
chemical weapons under international control so that
they may ultimately be destroyed".
However the president warned that while the US
would continue working with Russia, the United
Kingdom, France, the United Nations and others to
ensure that destruction-or-removal process was
verifiable, there would be "consequences should the
Assad regime not comply with the framework".
"If diplomacy fails, the United States remains
prepared to act," he said.
The Pentagon has backed up the president, saying on
Saturday that America was still in position for
military strikes.
Last-ditch option
The US says the Syrian regime killed hundreds in a
gas attack last month.
The government of Bashar al-Assad denies the
allegations and has accused the rebels of carrying
out the attack on 21 August.
Syria recently agreed to join the global Chemical
Weapons Convention, and on Saturday the UN said it
would come under the treaty from 14 October.
In a joint news conference in Geneva with Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, US Secretary of State
John Kerry warned President Assad that there must
be nothing less than full compliance by his
government.
Mr Kerry and Mr Lavrov said if Syria failed to comply,
then a UN resolution would be sought under Chapter
VII of the UN charter, which allows for the use of
force.
However the Russian foreign minister was eager to
make clear that force remained a last-ditch option.
"Naturally, no use of force is mentioned in these
agreed approaches. Nor are any automatic sanctions
mentioned. Any violations must be convincingly and
unambiguously proven in the UN Security Council,"
he said.
Russia and the US have agreed on an assessment
that the Syrian government possesses 1,000 tonnes
of chemical agents and precursors, according to a US
official.
The US believes the materials are located in 45 sites,
all in government hands, half of which have useable
quantities of chemical agents.
But it is thought that Russia does not agree on the
number of sites, nor that they are all under the
government's control.
'Unfettered access'
The agreement says initial on-site inspections must
be completed by November.
It also stipulates that production equipment be
destroyed by then, with "complete elimination of all
chemical weapons material and equipment in the
first half of 2014".
Mr Kerry outlined six points to the agreement which
included Syria placing his chemical weapons under
international control within a week and allowing
weapons inspectors "immediate, unfettered access"
to all sites so that whatever is found can be
destroyed.
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, who is
visiting Beijing, said it was an "important advance"
while British Foreign Secretary William Hague said
in a statement: "The onus is now on the Assad
regime to comply with this agreement in full.
Analysts however remain divided.
Former British ambassador to Syria Sir Andrew Green
said that although there would practical difficulties in
implementing the deal, it was a diplomatic coup for
Russia and "remarkably good news".
"[Firstly] it avoids military action, at least for the
time being. Secondly it effectively removes the risk
of any further use of chemical weapons by the
regime. And thirdly and perhaps more importantly, it
generates a dialogue and a co-operation with
Russia," he said.
Fighting on the ground in Syria has continued
throughout the US-Russian negotiations
But former US Deputy Secretary of Defence Paul
Wolfowitz - along with Republican senators John
McCain and Lindsay Graham - was much more
sceptical about the deal.
"Whatever gains it brings in terms of reducing the
likelihood of additional chemical weapons use, it's
clearly going to come at the price of taking off the
table any serious US or western action against the
Assad regime, which is a great victory for him and for
his Russian and Iranian backers," Mr Wolfowitz said.
The military leader of the anti-Assad Free Syrian
Army has rejected the deal and promised to continue
fighting.
"There is nothing in this agreement that concerns
us," said Gen Salim Idriss, describing it as a Russian
initiative designed to gain time for the Syrian
government.
Mr Kerry is due in Israel on Sunday to meet Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and will then go to
Paris to meet his French, British and Saudi
counterparts.
Meanwhile there has been more fighting on the
ground in Syria with clashes between government
forces and rebels in the suburbs of Damascus,
including some of the same areas affected by the 21
August attack.
More than 100,000 people have died since the
uprising against President Assad began in 2011.
Millions of Syrians have fled the country, mostly to
neighbouring nations. However, on Saturday, Italy's
coastguard said more than 500 people, mostly
Syrians, had been rescued off the Italian coast.
Millions more have been internally displaced within
Syria.
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