U.S. says Russia is shielding ally Syria

UNITED NATIONS -- The United States accused Syrian President Bashar Assad and his close ally Russia of trying to block all efforts to hold Damascus accountable for using chemical weapons during attacks on civilians.

U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told the U.N. Security Council on Thursday that "the Assad regime has tried to avoid accountability by obstructing independent investigations and undermining the role and work of the OPCW," the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, an international watchdog.

She accused Russia of defending Assad "despite its chemical weapons attacks," obstructing independent investigations and undermining efforts to hold the Syrian government accountable not only for using chemical weapons but for "numerous other atrocities."

The watchdog's investigators in April blamed three chemical attacks in 2017 on Assad's government, and its Executive Council demanded that Syria provide details. When it didn't, France in November submitted a draft measure on behalf of 46 countries to suspend Syria's "rights and privileges" in the global watchdog, which means it would lose its vote. It will be considered at the April meeting of the organization's 193 member states.

Syria joined the Chemical Weapons Convention in September 2013, pressed by Russia after a deadly chemical weapons attack that the West blamed on Damascus. By August 2014, the Assad government declared that the destruction of its chemical weapons was completed. But Syria's initial declaration of its chemical stockpiles and chemical weapons production sites to the watchdog has remained in dispute.

U.N. High Representative for Disarmament Affairs Izumi Nakamitsu told the council that issues related to Syria's declaration "remain outstanding," including a chemical weapons production facility that the Syrian government declared "as never having been used for the production of chemical weapons."

She said, however, that analysis of information and materials gathered by the organization's Declaration Assessment Team since 2014 "indicates that production and/or weaponization of chemical warfare nerve agents did, in fact, take place at this facility."

The team asked Syria "to declare the exact types and quantities of chemical agents produced and/or weaponized at this site," but no response has been received, Nakamitsu said.

Russian U.N. Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia accused some countries, which he didn't name, of repeatedly using the chemical weapons "card" as a tool to pressure the Syrian government, using grave accusations "backed up by unconvincing evidence like video footage on social media or 'testimony' of knowingly biased witnesses, or falsified facts."

At the same time, he said, "they reject the counterarguments provided not only by Russia and Syria, but also by independent experts and organizations, and do not give any coherent explanation as to why they do so."

Nebenzia reiterated Russia's accusations that the watchdog and its technical experts have become the "transmitter of anti-Syrian claims of the Western countries" -- an allegation strongly denied by Nakamitsu, U.S. ambassador Thomas-Greenfield and many other speakers.

Syria's new U.N. ambassador, Bassam al-Sabbagh, who served as his country's envoy to the watchdog for seven years after 2013, stressed the government's condemnation of the use of chemical weapons and denial that it ever used such weapons.

He said Syria has made "tangible progress" in resolving issues in its initial declaration and expressed regrets that some countries "always see the glass half-empty and don't hesitate to criticize rather than applaud progress achieved."

French U.N. Ambassador Nicolas De Riviere countered that "the Syrian regime is still lying, hiding the truth and evading its international obligations." He emphasized "the need to fight impunity."

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