The nerve agent sarin was used against Syrian civilians in April, according to a report from the international chemical weapons watchdog that confirms the suspicions of experts.
The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
says it confirmed
It stopped short of identifying who was responsible for the attack, saying that was outside its fact-finding mandate.
The White House has said
On Monday,
the White House said in a statement
"I strongly condemn this atrocity, which wholly contradicts the norms enshrined in the Chemical Weapons Convention," the watchdog organization's Director-General Ahmet Uzumcu said in a statement. "The perpetrators of this horrific attack must be held accountable for their crimes."
The U.S. State Department
said
It added that this report will be sent to an "independent international expert mechanism established by the UN Security Council, to determine who is responsible for the attack."
The April 4 airstrike killed scores of people, and experts immediately pointed to the possibility of sarin. Sarin is more lethal than chlorine gas, which has been
documented numerous times
Activist Samer al-Hussein saw the aftermath of the attack and described the scene
to NPR's Alison Meuse
"I saw something I'd never seen in my life. ...Dozens of children, women, men and elderly people lying on the ground, getting hosed down with water, out in the cold. Children trying to breathe a gasp of air, with saliva and foam coming out of their mouths and nostrils."
Hussein told Alison he saw "entire families being pulled from their apartments, lifeless."
The day after the attack,
Doctors Without Borders said
Turkey's health ministry also stated that its autopsies of attack victims
showed evidence of sarin use
As we have reported
NPR's Geoff Brumfiel spoke with
"Kaszeta says ... nerve agents are unstable and are typically stored as two separate chemicals. With sarin, for example, one of those precursor chemicals is highly flammable isopropyl alcohol." 'You drop a bomb on it, the whole thing is going up in a huge fireball,' he says. Even if the nerve agent was pre-mixed, a bomb strike would fail to disperse it in a way that could cause mass casualties."Kaszeta says he thinks the most likely source of chemical was the Syrian regime. Sarin and other nerve agents are hard to make, and it's unlikely that rebel groups would have access to it. ... The Syrian regime is still believed to have experts who could make nerve agent from scratch."
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