Syrians walk past damaged homes after heavy fighting between Free Syrian Army fighters and government forces in Aleppo, Syria, on Tuesday.(Photo: Narciso Contreras, AP)
The Syrian military is prepared to use chemical weapons against its
own people and is awaiting final orders from President Bashar Assad,
U.S. officials told NBC News on Wednesday.
The military has loaded
the precursor chemicals for sarin, a deadly nerve gas, into aerial
bombs that could be dropped onto the Syrian people from dozens of
fighter-bombers, the officials said.
As recently as Tuesday, officials had said there was as yet no
evidence that the process of mixing the "precursor" chemicals had begun.
But Wednesday, they said their worst fears had been confirmed: The
nerve agents were locked and loaded inside the bombs.
Sarin is an extraordinarily lethal agent. Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein's forces killed 5,000 Kurds with a single sarin attack on
Halabja in 1988.
U.S. officials stressed that as of now, the sarin bombs hadn't been
loaded onto planes and that Assad hadn't issued a final order to use
them. But if he does, one of the officials said, "there's little the
outside world can do to stop it."
Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton reiterated U.S. warnings to Assad not to use chemical
weapons, saying he would be crossing "a red line" if he did so.
Speaking
Wednesday at NATO headquarters in Brussels, Clinton said the Syrian
government was on the brink of collapse, raising the prospect that "an
increasingly desperate Assad regime" might turn to chemical weapons or
that the banned weapons could fall into other hands.
"Ultimately, what we should be thinking about is a political
transition in Syria and one that should start as soon as possible,"
Clinton said. "We believe their fall is inevitable. It is just a
question of how many people have to die before that occurs."
Aides
told NBC News that Clinton was expected next week to officially
recognize the main opposition movement, the National Coalition of Syrian
Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, with which she is scheduled to
meet in Morocco. Britain, France, Turkey and some key Arab leaders have
already recognized the opposition.
Fighting intensified Wednesday
in the 21-month civil war, which has left 40,000 people dead. The U.N.
withdrew its personnel from Damascus, saying conditions were too
dangerous.
The government said this week that it wouldn't use
chemical weapons on its own people after President Barack Obama warned
that doing so would be "totally unacceptable."
But U.S. officials
said this week that the government had ordered its Chemical Weapons
Corps to "be prepared," which Washington interpreted as a directive to
begin bringing together the components needed to weaponize Syria's
chemical stockpiles.
U.S. officials had long believed that the Syrian government was
stockpiling the banned chemical weapons before it acknowledged
possessing them this summer.
NBC News reported in July
that U.S. intelligence agencies believed that in addition to sarin,
Syria had access to tabun, a chemical nerve agent, as well as
traditional chemical weapons like mustard gas and hydrogen cyanide.
Officials
told NBC News at the time that the Syrian government was moving the
outlawed weapons around the country, leaving foreign intelligence
agencies unsure where they might end up.
Syria is one of only
seven nations that hasn't ratified the 1992 Chemical Weapons Convention,
the arms control agreement that outlaws the production, stockpiling and
use of such weapons.
Bombshells filled with chemicals can be carried by Syrian Air Force
fighter-bombers, in particular Sukhoi-22/20, MiG-23 and Sukhoi-24
aircraft. In addition, some reports indicate that unguided short-range
Frog-7 artillery rockets may be capable of carrying chemical payloads.
In
terms of longer-range delivery systems, Syria has a few dozen SS-21
ballistic missiles with a maximum range of 72 miles; 200 Scud-Bs, with a
maximum range of 180 miles; and 60 to 120 Scud-Cs, with a maximum range
of 300 miles, all of which are mobile and are capable of carrying
chemical weapons, according U.S. intelligence officials.
NBC