by Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
U.S. House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers: The international community should not accept any assurances from Syrian officials that they will not be used • Assad's forces have fired Scud-style ballistic missiles against rebels in recent days.
A Syrian Scud missile.  [Archive] Scud missiles gained notoriety in 1991 when Iraqi despot  Saddam Hussein fired them at Israel.                                                                                                   
Photo credit: Reuters.  |                          
Syria's chemical weapons could be used at "a  moment's notice" and the international community should not accept any  assurances from Syrian officials that they will not be used, U.S. House  Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers said on Wednesday.
U.S. and other Western officials recently  issued sharp warnings to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad not to deploy  chemical weapons. Syria called those warnings a "pretext for  intervention" in the civil war.
Rogers, a Republican, told Reuters in an  interview that the Syrian government's activities related to chemical  weapons were a shift in posture and a major concern.
"I believe that they have put elements of  their chemical weapons program in a condition of which they could be  used at a moment's notice, which is very different from before," Rogers  said.
"And some notion that they have promised not  to use them, I don't think the international community ... should take  that on face value," he said.
"This is a regime that's getting more  desperate by the day. They have affirmatively put elements of their  chemical weapon program in a position for use, that is something that we  should all be concerned about."
His comments came amid reports that Assad's  forces had fired Soviet-era Scud ballistic missiles against rebels in a  significant escalation of the nearly two-year-old conflict that has  already killed more than 40,000 civilians.
Rogers said more information was needed before he could say for sure whether the Scuds had been used.
"Some of the sourcing I've seen on the  material just doesn't make me feel comfortable. We've seen a lot of  mistakes based on social media, we're going to need more than that," he  said.
But reports about the use of Scud-style  weapons and the changed posture on chemical weapons suggested  desperation on the part of Assad's government, Rogers said.
But he added: "It would not be unusual for a  regime that possesses some fairly sophisticated weapons systems in these  last, I argue days and months, or days and weeks, of a pretty desperate  regime to use the weapons at its disposal.
"So Scuds, and I make the next leap of chemical weapons, I think is of real concern."
Rogers has just returned from a visit to  Bahrain and Saudi Arabia where he discussed Syria and other security  issues with officials. Arab League officials want to see the United  States step up its role on Syria, he said, adding that he was not  referring to military action.
"The United States has a unique capability to  deal with these," Rogers said, referring to Syria's chemical weapons. He  would not describe the capability.
"I sensed a real frustration from our Arab  League partners, frustration with the United States. I believe that we  need to step up our role, and I am not talking about military, I'm just  talking about U.S. influence and leadership and bringing unique  capabilities that only the United States has to the table in these  discussions," Rogers said.
Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=6714
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
No comments:
Post a Comment