The Washington
Post is reporting that the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad is
welcoming a Russian proposal to avert U.S. military strikes by having Damascus
turn over control of its chemical weapons to international monitors.
The statement
by Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem in Moscow offered the first indication,
according to the Post, that a diplomatic solution may be possible to the
international standoff created by the
Aug. 21 chemical attacks that killed 1,400 Syrian civilians.
Here is a
portion of what the Post is reporting:
“On Monday,
while meeting with Moualem, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said his
country would ask Syria to relinquish control of its chemical weapons to
international monitors in order to prevent a U.S. strike. Lavrov also called on Syria to
sign and ratify the Convention on Chemical Weapons, which outlaws the
production, stockpiling and use of chemical weapons.
“’If the
establishment of international control over chemical weapons in that country
will avoid strikes, we will immediately begin working with Damascus,” Lavrov
said. “We call on the Syrian leadership not only to agree on a statement of
storage of chemical weapons under international supervision, but also to their
subsequent destruction.’
“Moualem said
Syria ‘welcomes the Russian initiative,’ but did not say whether his country
would agree to what Russia was asking. ‘We also welcome the wisdom of the
Russian leadership, which is trying to prevent American aggression against our
people,’ Moulaem said.
Hours earlier,
in London, Secretary of State John F. Kerry said this when
asked by a reporter whether there was anything that Assad could do to avoid a
U.S. retaliatory attack. ‘Sure, he could turn over every bit of his weapons to
the international community within the next week, without delay,” Kerry said.
“But he isn’t about to.’ A State Department spokeswomen said Kerry was
referring to Assad’s track record as a ‘brutal dictator with a history of playing
fast and loose with the facts.’

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