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US Says Russia Trying to Complicate Syria Chemical Weapons Investigation

by VOA News

   WASHINGTON --

   The U.S. State Department says Russia has tried to block an
   international watchdog from investigating a suspected chemical attack
   in Syria "by making it more complicated" for the specialists to do
   their work.

   "They probably want to do that because they recognize that the longer
   that a site goes untested the more that the elements, the chemicals,
   can start to disappear," State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert
   told Alhurra television.

   The investigators from the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical
   Weapons arrived in Syria on Saturday, but so far have not been able to
   begin their work in Douma.

   A Russian official says the OPCW team is set to visit the area east of
   Syria's capital on Wednesday.

   Russia has blamed the delays on airstrikes carried out Saturday by the
   United States, France and Britain on three Syrian chemical weapons
   facilities. Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov also said
   the mission was not allowed in because it lacked approval from the
   United Nation's Department for Safety and Security.

   U.N. officials in New York disputed the claim.

   "The United Nations has provided the necessary clearances for the OPCW
   team to go about its work in Douma," said U.N. spokesman Stephane
   Dujarric. "We have not denied the team any request for it to go to
   Douma."

   He added that U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres is very
   supportive of the investigation.

   "The secretary-general wants to see the fact-finding mission have
   access to all the sites it needs to have access to, so that we can have
   the most thorough and full picture of the facts," Dujarric said.

   The U.S. envoy to the OPCW, Ken Ward, said Monday it was his
   understanding Russia had already visited the site and he raised
   concerns of tampering before the OPCW carries out its fact-finding
   mission.

   Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov denied that accusation, telling
   the BBC he guarantees Russia "has not tampered with the site."

   Lavrov said that evidence cited by the United States, Britain and
   France to justify Saturday's missile attack was based "on media reports
   and social media." He denied any chemical weapons attack had occurred,
   accusing Britain of staging the attack.

   The Group of Seven leading industrialized nations issued a joint
   statement Tuesday endorsing the airstrikes.

   "We fully support efforts made by the United States, the U.K. and
   France to decrease the capacity to use chemical weapons by the Assad
   regime and to prevent their future use," the leaders of Canada, France,
   Germany, Italy, Japan, Britain, the United States and European Union
   said.

   Syrian media reported another missile attack early Thursday in Homs
   province, saying government air defenses shot down most of the missiles
   fired at an air base. The reports did not say who was responsible, and
   the U.S. military said neither it nor the coalition it leads was
   operating in that area at the time.

   Nauert told Alhurra the United States is pushing for a renewed focus on
   the so-called Geneva process the United Nations began in 2012 as a
   roadmap for ending the Syrian conflict with a new constitution and
   elections.

   "The only thing that I can hope that is positive that came out of the
   terrible news in Syria last week is to reinvigorate that political
   process," she said. "So it is our hope now that countries will go back
   to the Geneva process and we'll be able to make some progress there."

   EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini made a similar call Monday
   ahead of a ministerial meeting, saying there is a clear need to push
   for re-launching the U.N.-led peace process.

   Margaret Besheer contributed to this report.