Security Council OKs Syria resolution, warns of consequences
"Today's resolution will
ensure that the elimination of the Syrian chemical weapons program
happens as soon as possible and with the utmost transparency and
accountability," Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said.
The U.N. resolution was
based on a deal struck this month between the United States and Russia
that averted an American military strike over allegations the Syrian
government used sarin nerve gas in an August 21 attack on a Damascus
suburb that U.S. officials said left at least 1,400 people dead.
The resolution did not
authorize the automatic use of force if Syria is said to be in
violation, as was previously sought by the United States.
The 15-member Security Council met shortly after the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, or OPCW, voted to fast-track Syria's addition to the Chemical Weapons Convention, which bans such weapons.
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For nearly two years, the
U.N. Security Council had been unable to reach a consensus over what to
do to bring about an end to Syria's civil war. Russia and China
repeatedly vetoed resolutions dating back to October 2011 that condemned
President Bashar al-Assad's government and called for him to step down.
The turnaround came this
month, when Russia called for Syria to divest itself of its chemical
weapons arsenal after U.S. President Barack Obama accused Syria of
crossing a "red line" with the use of nerve gas and threatened a strike.
Syria announced this month that it was willing to join the agreement.
A binding obligation
Both the United States
and Russia warned that if Syria failed to adhere to the terms of the
U.N. resolution, it would face consequences.
U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry said the world community was imposing a binding obligation on
the government of al-Assad to get rid of its stockpile.
"This resolution makes clear that those responsible for this heinous act must be held accountable," said Kerry.
If the resolution
succeeds, the world "will have eliminated one of the largest chemical
weapon arsenals on Earth, eliminating it from one of the most volatile
places on Earth," Kerry said.
Russian Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov told the council that his country, long an ally of the
Syrian government, "will stand ready to take action" if the resolution
needs enforcement.
By agreeing to dismantle
its chemical weapons program and provide documentation of its arsenal,
"Damascus has shown its readiness to cooperate," said Lavrov.
Syrian U.N. Ambassador
Bashar Jaafari said the resolution holds all parties in Syria
accountable for the use of chemical weapons.
Inspectors return to Syria
U.N. weapons inspectors
returned to Syria this week to look into at least a half-dozen claims of
chemical weapons use -- some allegedly by the government, others
allegedly by rebels.
U.N. inspectors have
already confirmed the use of chemical warfare in the rural Damascus
suburb of Ateibeh in August, but have not explicitly said who was
responsible.
The al-Assad government
has repeatedly accused rebels of using chemical weapons, an assertion
that has been widely dismissed by most Western leaders.
The United Nations
estimates more than 100,000 people have died since March 2011 when a
brutal government crackdown against protesters devolved into an all-out
civil war.
The Security Council
vote followed action by the executive council of the OPCW, meeting in
the Netherlands. That group adopted its measure by consensus in about 10
minutes.
"We now have a legal mandate to start a verification mission in Syria," OPCW spokesman Michael Luhan.
The OPCW agreed to an
"accelerated program for achieving the complete elimination of Syria's
chemical weapons by mid-2014," it said in a statement. Inspections in
Syria will begin Tuesday.
"The decision also calls
for ambitious milestones for destruction, which will be set by the
council by 15 November," the organization said.
Obama: 'Very hopeful'
Obama, speaking before the votes, said he was "very hopeful" about the developments, but warned much work remains to be done.
"I think, rightly,
people have been concerned about whether Syria will follow through on
the commitments that have been laid forth and I think there are
legitimate concerns as to how technically we are going to be getting
those chemical weapons out while there's still fighting going on the
ground," Obama said.
Obama said the threat of
U.S. military power pushed Syrian leaders to agree to destroy their
chemical weapons and said the resolution "not only deters and prevents
additional chemical use but actually goes beyond what could have been
accomplished through any military action."
The OPCW plans to send
an advance team of inspectors to Damascus, an official with the
organization, who declined to be identified while discussing delicate
operations, told CNN on Friday.
The official said that
in order to meet international deadlines for destruction of Syria's
chemical weapons, the group may opt for a "quick and dirty" program that
would render the weapons unusable but wouldn't destroy them, the
official said.
'Not a license to kill'
Russian Defense Minister
Sergei Shoigu has said his country is willing to transport and destroy
Syrian chemical weapons, although only as part of an international
coalition.
Russian President
Vladimir Putin earlier in September took to The New York Times to argue
against military intervention in Syria.
Striking Syria would
have many negative ramifications, Putin argued in the piece, including
the killing of innocent people, spreading violence around the Middle
East, clouding diplomatic efforts to address Iran's nuclear crisis and
resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and "unleash(ing) a new wave of
terrorism."
In his remarks Friday night, Ban called on both the Syrian government and rebels to stop the fighting.
"As we mark this
important step, we must never forget that the catalog of horrors in
Syria continues with bombs and tanks, grenades and guns," he said. "A
red light for one form of weapons does not mean a green light for
others. This is not a license to kill with conventional weapons."
'No meaningful enforcement mechanisms'
Two Republican U.S. senators criticized the Security Council vote, saying it will do little to end the civil war.
"This resolution is
another triumph of hope over reality," John McCain and Lindsey Graham
said in a statement. "It contains no meaningful or immediate enforcement
mechanisms, let alone a threat of the use of force for the Assad
regime's noncompliance."
The pair said al-Assad's
forces will continue to "use every weapon in their arsenal short of
chemical weapons" on the Syrian people while receiving outside
assistance from Russia, Iran and Hezbollah while doing so.
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