WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States has largely
ruled out sending in ground troops to secure Syrian chemical weapons
under hostile circumstances, but the Pentagon could provide some forces
if the Assad regime ever agrees to a peaceful transition, Defense
Secretary Leon Panetta said Thursday.
Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, acknowledged that it will be nearly impossible to
prevent the Syrian government from using its chemical weapons, so the US
must rely on deterrence and continue warning Syria that using them
would be unacceptable.
“The act of preventing the use of chemical
weapons would be almost unachievable,” Dempsey said during a Pentagon
press conference. “You would have to have such clarity of intelligence,
you know, persistent surveillance, you’d have to actually see it before
it happened, and that’s — that’s unlikely, to be sure.”
Speaking to Pentagon reporters, Panetta says
his biggest concern is how the US and allies would secure the chemical
and biological weapons sites scattered across Syria and ensure the
components don’t end up in the wrong hands if the regime falls,
particularly under violent conditions. He said the US is preparing no
options for having US ground troops in that country if the regime falls
while under attack.
But, he added, “you always have to keep the
possibility that, if there is a peaceful transition and international
organizations get involved, that they might ask for assistance in that
situation.”
There are widespread worries among allies and
countries in the region that if Syrian President Bashar Assad is
toppled, Islamic extremists could gain control of Syria’s stockpile of
chemical weapons, which includes sarin and mustard gas.
And there are
lingering worries that Assad might use his chemical weapons, perhaps on
his own people, in a last-ditch effort to save his regime.
President Barack Obama has said the regime’s
use of chemical weapons against the rebels would be a “red line” and
change his “calculus” about possible military intervention there.
Fears escalated early last month when US
officials said there was evidence that Syrian forces had begun preparing
sarin, a nerve agent, for possible use in bombs. But Panetta later said
that it appeared the Syrian government had slowed its preparations for
the possible use of the weapons.
The Pentagon has put together a variety of
options for securing the weapons under a range of circumstances, Dempsey
said. And he acknowledged the US has been in contact with NATO allies,
such as the Czech Republic, who have developed capabilities for handling
chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
But Dempsey said no specific
request has been made of the Czech Republic.
At least 60,000 people have died during
Assad’s two-year crackdown on rebels, according to a recent UN estimate.
Opposition fighters have seized large swaths of territory in northern Syria, and on Thursday activists said they now control parts of a strategic air base. But despite significant rebel advances on the battlefield, the opposition remains outgunned by government forces and has been unable to break a stalemate on the ground.
Opposition fighters have seized large swaths of territory in northern Syria, and on Thursday activists said they now control parts of a strategic air base. But despite significant rebel advances on the battlefield, the opposition remains outgunned by government forces and has been unable to break a stalemate on the ground.
Panetta on Thursday said he believes there is a strong likelihood that Assad will ultimately leave power.
No comments:
Post a Comment