THE NEW YORK TIMES: US spy agencies monitor chemical weapons storage sites, fearing use in Syria

Adam Entous
The New York Times
Insurgents have tried to enter Hama since Tuesday and have begun to push through, they say. (AP PHOTO)
Insurgents have tried to enter Hama since Tuesday and have begun to push through, they say. (AP PHOTO) Credit: AAP

US intelligence agencies are closely monitoring suspected chemical weapons storage sites in Syria, looking for indications that forces loyal to President Bashar Assad are preparing to employ them against the collection of rebel groups fighting to depose him, officials said Saturday.

The agencies assess that Assad’s forces have maintained limited stockpiles of chemical weapons, including munitions loaded with the nerve agent sarin, and there is growing concern that the government could employ them as part of a last-ditch effort to prevent rebels from seizing the capital, Damascus, said the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence matters.

Assad’s government has repeatedly used chemical weapons, including nerve agents and chlorine gas, against rebels and his own people during the 13-year civil war, according to assessments by human rights monitors, the United States and others.

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Key Arab allies of the United States want to keep Assad in power because they fear that if the collection of rebel groups topples the government in Damascus, the country could become a more dangerous haven for terrorism. While many of those allies have opposed Assad in the past, they see him as a known quantity and better than the rebel-led alternative, a senior Biden administration official said.

Aides to President Joe Biden have made clear in recent days that the United States has no intention of intervening to affect the war’s outcome, either in support of the rebels or Assad.

That message was echoed Saturday by President-elect Donald Trump, who wrote in a post on his social media platform, Truth Social, “Syria is a mess, but is not our friend, &; THE UNITED STATES SHOULD HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH IT. THIS IS NOT OUR FIGHT. LET IT PLAY OUT. DO NOT GET INVOLVED!”

Syrian President Bashar Assad rule is under threat as rebels close in on key areas. (AP PHOTO)
Syrian President Bashar Assad rule is under threat as rebels close in on key areas. (AP PHOTO) Credit: AAP

U.S. intelligence agencies believe that rebel groups could reach the outskirts of Damascus in the coming days, putting the capital in jeopardy.

If that happens, the government could quickly collapse because many of Assad’s forces appear reluctant to fight.

When US intelligence agencies last thought that rebels threatened the rule of Assad, in 2015, President Vladimir Putin of Russia came to his rescue by deploying warplanes to Syria.

While US intelligence agencies believe that Putin wants to keep Assad in power in Damascus, he appears to have less of an ability to do so now because he has committed such a large percentage of his military’s resources to the war in Ukraine.

It is unclear whether U. intelligence agencies will be able to warn Biden and his top aides in advance if Assad’s forces are planning to launch a major chemical weapons attack.

Before a notorious sarin attack in August 2013, the agencies picked up warning signs, including coded messages to a special Syrian unit to bring in the “big ones” and put on gas masks.

But the agencies did not translate the intercepts into English right away, so top aides to then-President Barack Obama didn’t know what the Syrian unit was planning until the assault began.

Despite subsequent efforts by inspectors from The Hague-based Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons to rid Syria of chemical weapons, U.S. intelligence agencies believe that Assad retained some stocks of the munitions and that his forces keep them at a limited number of storage sites.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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Originally published on The New York Times

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