Experts: Don't bomb chemical weapon sites in Syria
Experts: Don't bomb chemical weapon sites in Syria
WASHINGTON (AP) - You simply can't safely bomb a chemical weapon
storehouse into oblivion, experts say. That's why they say the United
States is probably targeting something other than Syria's nerve agents.
But now there is concern that bombing other sites could accidentally
release dangerous chemical weapons that the U.S. military didn't know
were there because they've lost track of some of the suspected nerve
agents.
Bombing stockpiles of chemical weapons - purposely or accidentally -
would likely kill nearby civilians in an accidental nerve agent release,
create a long-lasting environmental catastrophe or both, five experts
told The Associated Press. That's because under ideal conditions - and
conditions wouldn't be ideal in Syria - explosives would leave at least
20 to 30 percent of the poison in lethal form.
"If you drop a conventional munition on a storage facility containing
unknown chemical agents - and we don't know exactly what is where in the
Syrian arsenal - some of those agents will be neutralized and some will
be spread," said Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control
Association, a nonprofit that focuses on all types of weaponry. "You
are not going to destroy all of them."
"It's
a classic case of the cure being worse than the disease," Kimball said.
He said some of the suspected storage sites are in or near major Syrian
cities like Damascus, Homs and Hama. Those cities have a combined
population of well over 2 million people.
When asked if there is any way to ensure complete destruction of the
nerve agents without going in with soldiers, seizing the chemicals and
burning them in a special processing plant, Ralf Trapp, a French
chemical weapons consultant and longtime expert in the field, said
simply: "Not really."
Trapp said to incinerate the chemicals properly, temperatures have to
get as hot as 2,100 degrees Fahrenheit. Experts also say weather factors
- especially wind and heat - even time of day, what chemicals are
stored, how much of it is around and how strong the building is all are
factors in what kind of inadvertent damage could come from a bombing.
There is one precedent for bombing a chemical weapons storehouse. In
1991, during the first Persian Gulf War, the U.S. bombed Bunker 13 in Al
Muthanna, Iraq. Officials figured it contained 2,500 artillery rockets
filled with sarin, the same nerve gas suspected in Syria. More than two
decades later the site is so contaminated no one goes near it even now.
That bunker is a special problem for inspectors because "an entry into
the bunker would expose personnel to explosive, chemical and physical
hazards," says a 2012 report by the Organisation for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons, which implements the international chemical weapons
convention.
Pentagon planners are also worried about accidentally triggering a nerve
agent attack by hitting weapons stores that have been moved by the
government to new locations.
Over the past six months, with shifting front lines and sketchy
satellite and human intelligence coming out of Syria, the U.S.
intelligence community has lost track of who controls some of the
government's chemical weapons supplies, according to one senior U.S.
intelligence official and three other U.S. officials briefed on the
information presented by the White House as reason to strike Syria's
military complex. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were
not authorized to discuss the briefings publicly.
That's a very real risk, said Susannah Sirkin, international policy
director for the Physicians for Human Rights, which has been monitoring
weapons of mass destruction for more than two decades.
"You would risk dispersing agents into the environment," she said. "Given that sarin is not seen or smelled, that's terror."
Another issue is that by bombing storage sites that are near contested
areas in the civil war, the chemical weapons can fall into others'
hands, including extremist rebels or pro-Assad militia, Kimball said.
"What we're looking at in Syria is an unprecedented situation," Kimball said.
---
AP Intelligence Writer Kimberly Dozier contributed to this report.
Source: --- http://apnews.myway.com/article/20130830/DA8G7HS00.html
Online:
Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons: http://www.opcw.org
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