Syria has said it will not use chemical and biological weapons against Syrians but would use them against foreign “aggression”.
Syria has said it will not use chemical and biological weapons against Syrians but would use them against foreign "aggression”.At a news conference in Damascus on Monday, foreign ministry spokesman Jihad Makdissi said that Syria was in "self-defence” mode but ruled out use of the weapons even against rebels fighting President Bashar al-Assad’s regime."Any stocks of WMD or any unconventional weapons that the Syrian Arab Republic possesses would never, would never be used against civilians or against the Syrian people during this crisis at any circumstances, no matter how the crisis would evolve, no matter how,” Makdissi said.Debate on Syria’s chemical weapons and whether it could use them in the ongoing military campaign to crush the rebellion started after a daring rebel attack that killed four members of Assad’s inner circle, including the defence minister and his deputy.Syria had never publicly come out to talk about its chemical weapons, although it is widely believed to have them. Makdissi stressed later in an email that Syria would "never use chemical and biological weapons during the crisis... and that such weapons, if they exist, it is natural for them to be stored and secured”, the AFP news agency reported.‘Imminent threats’Al Jazeera’s Rula Amin, reporting from Beirut, said there were "more immediate [and] imminent threats” for Syrians to worry about than chemical weapons."People on the ground are very anxious from everyday shelling and [the] crackdown. They don’t even have time to think about chemical weapons,” she said.She added that for many Syrians, finding a safe place to live with their families was a bigger concern. Makdissi’s comments drew swift international reaction, with Barack Obama, the US president, warning that Assad would be held "accountable if he made the tragic mistake” of using the weapons.George Little, the Pentagon press secretary, told reporters: "They should not think one iota about using chemical weapons.”In Belgrade, Serbia, Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, expressed concern about the risk of Syria using the weapons."It would be incomprehensible if anyone in Syria would use weapons of mass destruction,” Ban told reporters during a visit to Serbia.European Union foreign ministers also weighed in, branding Syria’s threat as "monstrous” and "unacceptable”."Threatening to use chemical weapons is monstrous,” Guido Westerwelle, the German foreign minister, said in a statement.His British counterpart, William Hague, said: "It is unacceptable to say they would use chemical weapons under any circumstances.”