“Assad is using chemical weapons in Syria.” Remarks quoted on the army's official Twitter feed. (Twitter screenshot)
Al Arabiya with AFP -
President Bashar al-Assad is using chemical weapons against rebel
forces in Syria, a senior Israeli army officer told a conference on
Tuesday.
“Assad is using chemical weapons in Syria,” said
Brigadier General Itai Brun, head of research and analysis in the army's
military intelligence division, in remarks quoted on the army's
official Twitter feed.
Brigadier-General Itai Brun told a
security conference photos of victims showing foam coming out of their
mouths and contracted pupils were signs deadly gas had been used.
"To the best of our understanding, there was use of lethal chemical
weapons. Which chemical weapons? Probably Sarin,"Brigadier-General Itai
Brun said in remarks broadcast on ArmyRadio.
In a transcript of
Brun's speech provided by the Israeli military, he said forces loyal to
Syrian President Basharal-Assad were behind the attacks on "armed
(rebels) on a number of occasions in the past few months".
Last
week, the Syrian information minister dismissed a recent British report
that a soil sample from Syrian territory has proven the use of chemical
weapons in the war-torn country.
“The testing of Syrian soil, if
not performed by an official and international organization and done
without the consent of the Syrian government, has no political or legal
value,” Omran al-Zoubi said, adding that the report was unfounded.
Zoubi accused Turkey, Britain and France of supplying the Syrian rebels with chemical weapons.
"Where
did those who brought the rockets into Khan al-Assal get them from?
Where did they get the chemical weapons from? They should ask Turkey,
Britain, France and the other states about the source of these chemical
weapons," he said.
The Times newspaper reported last Saturday
that British military scientists discovered forensic evidence that
chemical weapons have been used in the conflict in Syria.
Meanwhile, the army tweet came as U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel met
Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday, at the end of a three-day trip
which saw him touting strong backing for Israel.
Ahead
of their talks, Netanyahu said the values and interests shared by
Israel and the United States were facing a major threat from Iran which
was supplying advanced weaponry to radical militants.
“Nowhere
are these values and interests challenged more than by the arming of the
terrorist groups by Iran with sophisticated weapons, and equally Iran's
attempt to arm itself with nuclear weapons,” he told reporters.
“This is a challenge that Israel cannot accept, and as you and
President Obama have repeatedly said, Israel must be able to defend
itself by itself against any threat.”
His remarks came a day
after Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon implicitly confirmed Israel was
behind a January strike on a weapons convoy in Syria, saying the Jewish
state had “acted” to stop advanced weaponry reaching militants.
Israeli officials believed the advanced Syria weaponry was en route to Lebanon's Hezbollah, a U.S. official told AFP.
The Shiite militia group and the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad are both close allies of Iran and avowed enemies of Israel.
Netanyahu said the U.S.-Israeli defense relationship had been “greatly
advanced” over the last four years and expressed confidence it would
continue with Hagel running the Pentagon.
“This is important
because we face many challenges. And I look forward to discussing how we
overcome these challenges in our continued cooperation,” he said.
Hagel was quick to agree.
“This is a difficult and dangerous time, this is a time when friends
and allies must remain close, closer than ever,” he told the Israeli
leader.
On Monday, Hagel and Yaalon took a 90-minute helicopter
of the Israeli occupied Golan Heights which borders Syria, saying it
had given him a fresh perspective on the situation.
ليبيا: الهجوم على سفارة فرنسا عمل "إرهابي"