Syria chemical attack: Key UN findings
UN experts began their inspections a week after the attack
A much-anticipated UN report
has concluded that chemical weapons were used on a relatively large
scale in the Ghouta area of Damascus on 21 August. The US, UK and
France say the report has vindicated their stance that the Syrian
government was to blame - something Damascus denies. BBC diplomatic
correspondent Jonathan Marcus breaks down some of the report's key
findings.
The document is prefaced by a note from the UN Secretary
General himself - Ban Ki-moon - who reiterates the main conclusion of
the UN mission's report and stresses his view that a war crime has been
committed and that the international community has a moral
responsibility to hold those responsible accountable. This is a warning that all the evidence collected could ultimately be used in some kind of legal process. It should be remembered that there is already widespread collecting of evidence on the ground to chronicle a variety of atrocities committed by various parties to the conflict.
The substance concerned was the nerve agent sarin and the delivery system was ground-to-ground rockets. Note that the UN inspectors do not anywhere in the report explicitly lay the blame for carrying out the attack at the door of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
That was beyond the scope of their study, but as we will see a little later, there are strong indicators from their evidence that point the finger at forces loyal to the Assad regime.
However, they state clearly that they were able to collect "the necessary amount of samples". They were also able to interview a number of survivors.
But more importantly the two types of rocket used - a Russian-supplied 140mm system and especially the larger 330mm weapon of unknown origin - are significant since according to both Human Rights Watch and a number of independent arms experts - these are weapons that have only been observed in use by Syrian government forces during this conflict.
There is significantly more detail on these weapons in the Human Rights Watch report Attacks on Ghouta (caution: disturbing images) published earlier this month.
More on the evidence - this time the medical analysis which again shows that victims were exposed to the nerve agent sarin.
Appendix 5 deals in detail with the munitions used in the attacks. There are photos of the fragments and drawings and measurements describing the weapons in detail.
The 140mm system (M14) clearly has Cyrillic engraving suggesting that this is indeed a munition of Russian origin. The larger 330mm calibre munition is, as mentioned above, of a type used by Syrian government forces.
However, in some cases the inspectors were able to make an assessment of the likely trajectory of the rockets and this again seems to corroborate US claims that they came from areas controlled by government forces.
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