Bashar Al-Assad launched the chemical
attack which killed hundreds of people because he 'lost his nerve' in a
moment of panic and worried that Damascus would fall to rebel troops,
according to new intelligence.
In
a telephone call which was tapped by German spy chiefs, a senior
Hezbollah commander told the Iranian embassy in Lebanon that Syria's
president intended to tilt the balance of power towards the regime in
the battle for control of the country's capital.
However,
it appears that the chemical attack backfired, as it looks set to
prompt a major intervention from American and French troops aimed at
crippling Assad's military capabilities.
Barack
Obama today spoke out to demand that the world take action against
Syria, saying that the international community 'cannot be silent' over
the use of chemical weapons.
Attack: Bashar Al-Assad is said to have launched a barrage of chemical weapons after he 'lost his nerve'
Promise: Barack Obama said that the 'credibility' of the West was in question if it did not intervene
The German intelligence
came as Vladimir Putin warned the West not to take unilateral action
against Syria, and repeated his claim that the regime was not
responsible for the chemical weapons strike in the suburbs of Damascus
two weeks ago.
Russia
today announced that it is sending a missile cruiser to the eastern
Mediterranean to enforce the country's interests in the volatile region.
Pope Francis also entered the fray, attempting to slow the march to war by summoning ambassadors from all over the world.
The call from a Hezbollah leader
about the chemical attack, in which he described the move as 'a big
mistake', was intercepted by Germany's BNC intelligence service and
reported by Der Spiegel magazine.
The
revelation has led the country's top spies to agree with the U.S.
intelligence assessment that Assad was indeed responsible for using
chemical weapons in the attack on August 21.
BND
president Gerhard Schindler said that following a 'thorough analysis',
the regime must have been the perpetrator, and the government is the
only actor which possesses chemical agents such as sarin.
Vote: Mr Obama, pictured with Sweden's prime minister Fredrik Reinfeldt, is facing a debate in Congress
Meeting: Mr Obama with his national security team at a breakfast summit with Swedish officials
The BND believes that the use of
sarin may have been meant as a deterrent against rebel forces, but that
the military used too much of it by mistake.
'The
new information from the BND could become important in the coming
days,' Der Spiegel said. 'Thus far the U.S. has only noted that after
the attack, intelligence agencies had intercepted internal government
communications indicating concern about a possible UN inspection of the
site.
'The telephone
conversation intercepted by the BND could be an important piece in the
puzzle currently being assembled by Western intelligence experts.'
Despite
the findings, Germany is unlikely to join any military action by the
West after both Angela Merkel and her main election rival ruled out an
attack.
Britain also
seems certain to stay away from the front line of any conflict after
David Cameron's Government was defeated in a vote in the House of
Commons last week.
By contrast, Mr Obama is expected to
win the support of the U.S. Congress after leading figures from both the
Democratic and Republican parties came out in support of intervention.
Speaking
in Stockholm as he travelled to the G20 summit in St Petersburg, Mr
Obama insisted that it was essential to strike against Assad over the
chemical attacks.
'In
the face of such barbarism the international community cannot be
silent,' he said at a press conference. 'Failing to respond to this
attack would only increase the risk of more attacks and that possibility
that other countries would use these weapons, as well.'
The
President defended his decision to intervene once Assad crossed the
'red line' of using chemical weapons, saying that it was vital to uphold
'international norms'.
'That wasn't something I made up,' he said. 'I didn't pluck it out of thin air. There's a reason for it.
'The
international community's credibility is on the line. America and
Congress' credibility is on the line, because we give lip service to the
notion that these international norms are important.'
He also suggested that Putin might be persuaded to change his mind on supporting Assad's government.
'I'm
always hopeful, and I will continue to engage him,' Mr Obama said.
'Ultimately, we can end deaths much more rapidly if Russia takes a
different approach to these problems.'
Speaking
alongside Swedish prime minister Fredrik Reinfeldt, he concluded: 'The
moral thing to do is not to stand by and do nothing.'
The French parliament is today set to
debate a possible military response, although the vote is considered
much less important than in Britain or the U.S. because of president
Francois Hollande's large majority and relative freedom of action.
'If
you want a political solution you have to move the situation,' foreign
minister Lauren Fabius said this morning. 'If there's no sanction,
Bashar Assad will say, "That's fine, I'll continue what I'm doing."'
Adding
to the tension in the eastern Mediterranean, where Israel and the U.S.
test-fired a missile yesterday, Russia today ordered a missile cruiser
to take over its operations in the region.
The ship, named Moskva, will be joined by a destroyer from Russia's Baltic Fleet and a frigate from the Black Sea Fleet.
'The
Cruiser Moskva is heading to the Gibraltar Straits,' a military source
told the state news agency. 'In approximately 10 days it will enter the
east Mediterranean, where it will take over as the flagship of the naval
task force.'
Russia is
Assad's most powerful global ally, and has consistently opposed Western
intervention in Syria's long-running civil war, calling instead for
negotiations to reach a diplomatic solution.
Attack: A boy who survived the chemical attack on the eastern suburbs of Damascus two weeks ago
Mr Putin suggested in
an interview yesterday that Russia would support a UN resolution on
military strikes if Assad is proven to have carried out the chemical
attack.
However, he
insisted that it would have been 'ludicrous' for the regime to draw the
opposition of the international community by using banned substances
such as sarin.
'From
our viewpoint, it seems absolutely absurd that the armed forces, which
are on the offensive today and in some areas have encircled the
so-called rebels and are finishing them off, that in these conditions
they would start using forbidden chemical weapons while realising quite
well that it could serve as a pretext for applying sanctions against
them,' he said.
'If
there are data that the chemical weapons have been used, and used
specifically by the regular army, this evidence should be submitted to
the UN Security Council.
'And
it ought to be convincing. It shouldn't be based on some rumours and
information obtained by special services through some kind of
eavesdropping, some conversations and things like that.'
Votes: Presidents Barack Obama and Francois Hollande have both submitted to lawmakers' debates on Syria
The Russian president said he
was sorry that Mr Obama had cancelled a one-on-one meeting which was
due to precede the G20 summit.
'President
Obama hasn't been elected by the American people in order to be
pleasant to Russia,' he said. 'And your humble servant hasn't been
elected by the people of Russia to be pleasant to someone either.
'We
work, we argue about some issues. We are human. Sometimes one of us
gets vexed. But I would like to repeat once again that global mutual
interests form a good basis for finding a joint solution to our
problems.'
One country
which is likely to support any Western action is Turkey, one of the
leading regional powers, whose prime minister said today that he would
join an international coalition designed at reining in Assad.
Authorities
at the Vatican, which has been outspoken about attempting to avoid war
in Syria, have asked all ambassadors in the city-state to attend an
audience with the Secretary of State tomorrow.
It
is the first time that the whole diplomatic corps has been summoned
since 2003, when John Paul II attempted to prevent the invasion of Iraq.
Vatican
spokesman Padre Federico Lombardi said the Secretariat of State would
put the Pope's position on Syria clearly. The summons was 'a very
infrequent and significant even', he added.
Francis
has already announced a day of peace for Syria on Saturday, 'the
meanings and purpose' of which will be explained at the conference of
ambassadors, the official Vatican newspaper the Osservatore Romano
explained.
In an
impassioned plea for peace during his Angelus prayer on Sunday Francis
said his heart was 'deeply wounded by what is happening in Syria and
anguished by the dramatic developments which are looming'.
Syria's
civil war has been raging for two and a half years, since Assad started
cracking down on protests inspired by the revolutions in Tunisia and
Egypt, and has killed more than 100,000 people.
It
was revealed this week that more than 2million Syrians had been forced
out of their homeland by the fighting, with the vast majority ending up
in Lebanon, Turkey or Jordan.
dailymail.co.uk
No comments:
Post a Comment