The State Department signaled that it would not insist that Syrian President Bashar Assad produce the list Saturday, the end of a seven-day period spelled out in the framework deal that Washington and Moscow announced last weekend in Geneva.Marie Harf, a State Department spokeswoman, said Wednesday that “our
goal is to see forward momentum” by Saturday, not the full list. “We’ve
never said it was a hard and fast deadline.”
It wasn’t clear whether Syrian officials needed more time to complete
a formal declaration of their chemical arms, or whether the disarmament
deal itself was in trouble.
Secretary of State John F. Kerry had
described the date as the first of several “specific timelines” that
would indicate whether Syria is committed to the deal that he and
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had worked out.“We agreed that Syria must
submit within a week — not in 30 days, but in one week — a comprehensive
listing,” Kerry said Saturday. He said the U.S. would allow “no games,
no room for avoidance, or anything less than full compliance.”
Senior Obama administration
officials had praised Russia for persuading Assad’s government to
relinquish its lethal chemical arsenal, one of the world’s largest, by
mid-2014 in a deal to avoid U.S. missile strikes in retaliation for the
Aug. 21 poison gas attack that the U.S. says killed more than 1,000
people.
But Moscow’s ability or willingness to push its ally in Damascus to meet the first deadline in the deal now is being questioned.Kerry and Lavrov sought last weekend to portray the two powers as
united. The gap between them, however, has become more apparent and is
threatening to snarl efforts to craft a United Nations Security Council
resolution that lays out how Syria is to meet its obligations.
The resolution needs to be complete before the first steps can be
taken to impound and either remove or destroy Syria’s arsenal. Diplomats
said Western countries split with Russia in a meeting Tuesday over
Western demands for tough enforcement of the agreement.
Diplomats hope to complete the resolution by Friday, but if they fall
short the work may be delayed further next week because of the meeting
of the U.N. General Assembly.
The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, an
international body based in The Hague, is expected to take several days
to complete its analysis of the Syrian “initial declaration,” and then
will submit its report to the United Nations. source – LA Time
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