Russians: Gas attack meant to destabilize
'There is no doubt that this hysteria will work against' cooperative solutions.
There are increasing indications that Islamic foreign fighters
associated with the Syrian opposition may have unleashed the poison gas
attack Aug. 21 on the outskirts of Damascus, Syria.
The U.S. State Department says the attack killed 1,429 people.
WND has reported on videos
showing captured canisters in the hands of the opposition and foreign
fighters firing artillery rounds of chemical weapons. In addition, the
United Nations has information poison gas had been produced in Iraq by
supporters of the fallen Sunni Iraqi leader, Saddam Hussein, then
shipped to Turkey where it was distributed to the foreign fighters.
There is no word yet on whether the U.N. plans to investigate the information.
U.N. inspectors in Damascus investigating allegations of chemical
weapons use, at the invitation of the Syrian government, entered a
tunnel in the area occupied by the opposition and found it filled with
poison gas precursors. However, they had to leave after some of the
investigators were overcome by fumes.
The development further reinforces an allegation by Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov, who pointed out the chemical weapons attack
occurred at the very time Russian and American officials were meeting to
prepare for the next Geneva conference to discuss Syria.
Lavrov contends the attack was designed to sabotage the meeting,
since the Syrian opposition doesn’t want to have the meeting with
officials of the Syrian government present.
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