France: No doubt sarin nerve gas used in Syria

French FM Fabius says Syrian regime behind chemical arms use; US wants to gather more evidence before deciding on a response.

Syrian free army gas mask370 (photo credit: REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic)
Syrian free army gas mask370
(photo credit: REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic)
France said on Tuesday that there was no doubt the Syrian government had used nerve agent sarin against rebels and that all options, including military action, were under consideration in reaction to the development.
"There is no doubt that it's the regime and its accomplices" that are responsible for use of the gas, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on France 2 television.
"All options are on the table," he added. "That means either we decide not to react or we decide to react including by armed actions targetting the place where the gas is stored."
As Syria's civil war enters its third year with 80,000 dead, chemical weapons are reported to have been used by the government of President Bashar Assad, and there are also fears they could fall into the hands of militants seeking to destabilize the region.
The United States wants to gather and review more evidence about the use of chemical weapons in Syria before making decisions about how to respond, White House spokesman Jay Carney said on Tuesday.
At a news briefing in Washington, Carney said the United States believes most chemical weapons in Syria remain under the government's control and was "highly skeptical" of claims that the opposition had used them in warfare.
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Earlier on Tuesday, United Nations human rights investigators said they had "reasonable grounds" to believe that limited amounts of chemical weapons had been used in Syria.
In their latest report, they said they had received allegations that Syrian government and its opponents have accused each other of using chemical weapons.
Syria, defeated by Israel in three wars and afraid its arch enemy had gained a nuclear arsenal, began in earnest to build a covert chemical weapons program three decades ago, aided by its neighbors, allies and European chemical wholesalers.
Damascus lacked the technology and scientific capacity to set up a program on its own, but with backing from foreign allies it amassed what is believed to be one of the deadliest stockpiles of nerve agent in the world, Western military experts said.
"Syria was quite heavily reliant on outside help at the outset of its chemical weapons program, but the understanding now is that they have a domestic chemical weapons production capability," said Amy Smithson of the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies in Washington, an expert on nuclear, biological and chemical weapons.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed revulsion on Tuesday over atrocities in Syria's two-year civil war as detailed in a report prepared by UN human rights investigators, a spokesman for the world body said.
"He has seen this report," Ban's spokesman Martin Nesirky told reporters. "Frankly he finds the catalog of atrocities in that report to be both sickening and staggering."
United Nations human rights investigators said in Geneva on Tuesday they had "reasonable grounds" to believe that limited amounts of chemical weapons had been used in Syria and warned that the shattered country was in "free fall."