US not ruling out Syria strikes after new chemical attack

Syrian flee their homes following an airstrike in the opposition-controlled besieged town of Arbin, Eastern Ghouta, on the outskirts of Damascus on Friday. (AFP)

JEDDAH: US President Donald Trump has not ruled out military action to stop chemical weapons attacks in Syria, senior administration officials have said, signaling an intensified effort to press the Damascus regime and its Russian patrons.
In the wake of yet more suspected sarin and chlorine attacks blamed on the regime, Washington said it wants to send a message to Bashar Assad and Moscow that enough is enough.
The latest unconfirmed attack came on Thursday, in the opposition-controlled town of Douma. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that three people suffered respiratory problems after a rocket attack.
Yahya Al-Aridi, spokesman for the Syrian opposition, told Arab News that had it not been for Russia, 鈥渢he regime wouldn鈥檛 have dared to continue its activities and brutal action.鈥�
He said: 鈥淭his, of course, is another war crime. Crimes perpetrated by the regime have become countless.鈥�
There have been more than 260 reports of chemical attacks, some of which have been verified by UN-backed inspectors and attributed to the Assad regime.
A senior US official told AFP that military options against Damascus similar to those launched in April 2017 were always on the table and 鈥渁lways feasible.鈥�
Trump 鈥渉asn鈥檛 excluded anything鈥� in the bid to halt the program, the official said. 鈥淯sing military force is something that is still considered.鈥�
Al-Aridi said the only way to stop the regime鈥檚 crimes, in particular the use of chemical weapons, is for Russia, which is responsible for its survival, to behave in a responsible way as a member of the UN Security Council and pressure Assad.
He said the Security Council 鈥渟hould pass legislations or certain laws鈥� that prevent the regime from killing its people with internationally prohibited weapons. 鈥淲e hear talk, but we don鈥檛 see action.鈥�
A second senior US official reported evidence that Assad鈥檚 regime has an 鈥渙ngoing production capability鈥� focused on sarin and chlorine and is developing new ways to deploy the chemicals banned for weapons use.
鈥淚t looks like they are trying to evolve for either military reasons or to escape accountability. It is incredibly important to stop that before it gets off the ground,鈥� the official said.
鈥淲e are convinced that if the international community does not take action now,鈥� the second official said, 鈥渨e will see more chemical weapons use, not just by Syria but by non-state actors. That use will spread to US shores if we cannot stop it,鈥� he said.
Al-Aridi said: 鈥淣o one is doing anything to ease the pains of Syrian people, unfortunately.鈥�
Syrians, he said, are still waiting for the world to act effectively, but there could come a time when the world acts 鈥渂ecause these are crimes perpetrated against humanity on a daily basis.鈥�
US Defense Secretary James Mattis said that chlorine gas has been weaponized and used repeatedly by the regime. He told reporters that the regime would be ill-advised to 鈥済o back to violating the chemical weapons convention.鈥�
Mattis said that he had not seen the evidence of the use of sarin gas by the regime but was looking into reports about it.
The Assad regime appears to have altered course only slightly since the US fired 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles at a Syrian airfield in 2017 after a large chemical attack on opposition-held Khan Sheikhun.
Instead of dropping barrel bombs filled with chemical agents from helicopters, the officials said that mortars and other ground-based delivery systems were now being used.
鈥淲hat they are trying to do as they tip-toe along is testing, and what we are trying to say is that we continue to care about this,鈥� said the second official. The chemical of choice has most often been industrial chlorine, which is easy to produce and legal to possess, rather than sarin, which is banned by the Chemical Weapons Convention.