Syria’s Chemical Weapons:
Issues for Congress

Mary Beth D. Nikitin
Specialist in Nonproliferation
Paul K. Kerr
Analyst in Nonproliferation
Andrew Feickert
Specialist in Military Ground Forces
August 20, 2013
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R42848
CRS Report for Congress
Pr
epared for Members and Committees of Congress

Syria’s Chemical Weapons: Issues for Congress

Summary
The use or loss of control of chemical weapons stocks in Syria could have unpredictable
consequences for the Syrian population and neighboring countries as well as U.S. allies and
forces in the region. Congress may wish to assess the Administration’s plans to respond to
possible scenarios involving the use, change of hands, or loss of control of Syrian chemical
weapons.
Syria has produced, stored, and weaponized chemical weapons, but it remains dependent on
foreign suppliers for chemical precursors. The regime of President Bashar al Asad reportedly has
stocks of nerve (sarin, VX) and blister (mustard gas) agents, possibly weaponized into bombs,
shells, and missiles, and associated production facilities. Chemical weapons and their agents can
deteriorate depending on age and quality. Little is known from open sources about the current size
and condition of the stockpile. Syria continues to attempt to procure new supplies of chemical
weapons precursors, which are dual-use, through front companies in third countries. Most
countries that have had chemical weapons arsenals in the past have destroyed these weapons
under the Chemical Weapons Convention, or are in the process of destroying them. The U.S.
intelligence community cites Iran, North Korea, and Syria as having active chemical weapons
programs.
While the United States and other governments have said they believe the Asad regime has kept
its chemical weapons stocks secure, policymakers are concerned about what could happen to
these weapons in the course of the civil war, such as diversion to terrorist groups or loss of
control during a regime collapse.
Reports in early December 2012 quoted unnamed officials as saying intelligence showed possible
preparations for use, but this was denied by the Syrian government. Since then, press reports have
discussed several alleged incidents of chemical weapons use in Syria by both the government and
opposition forces. A United Nations chemical weapons inspection team is negotiating with Syria
on access to the sites to investigate. On June 13, 2013, the White House released a statement
saying that following its investigation, “our intelligence community assesses that the Assad
regime has used chemical weapons, including the nerve agent sarin, on a small scale against the
opposition multiple times in the last year. Our intelligence community has high confidence in that
assessment given multiple, independent streams of information.” The June 13 statement said that
chemical weapons use had resulted in an estimated 100-150 deaths in Syria.
President Obama and other world leaders have said that the use of chemical weapons against the
civilian population would be met with consequences, which could include the use of military
force. There is also concern that Syria could transfer its chemical weapons to Hezbollah in
Lebanon. Administration officials have stated that the United States has been working with
regional allies to detect the movement of chemical weapons, prepare interdiction scenarios, and
mitigate possible use against military or civilian populations. The June 13 White House statement
said that in response to the Asad regime’s use of chemical weapons, the President has authorized
the expansion of military assistance to the opposition forces in Syria.
During conflict, the intelligence community and Special Forces units would likely play a major
role in locating and securing such weapons in a combat environment. The nature and recent
course of the conflict in Syria suggests that rapid changes in control over critical military
facilities may occur. U.S. government programs established to secure or remove chemical or other
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Syria’s Chemical Weapons: Issues for Congress

weapons of mass destruction through threat reduction or nonproliferation programs have focused
on destruction or scientist redirection in an atmosphere of cooperation. At present, such programs
are providing border security assistance to neighboring states. U.S. policymakers and Congress
may wish to review and discuss authorities, funding, forces, and scenarios in advance.
For additional information on chemical weapons agents, see CRS Report R42862, Chemical
Weapons: A Summary Report of Characteristics and Effects
, by Dana A. Shea. For a broader
discussion of U.S. policy options, see CRS Report RL33487, Armed Conflict in Syria: U.S. and
International Response
, by Jeremy M. Sharp and Christopher M. Blanchard.


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Syria’s Chemical Weapons: Issues for Congress

Contents
Policy Issues .................................................................................................................................... 1
Brief History of the Chemical Weapons Program in Syria .............................................................. 2
Current Chemical Weapons Program ............................................................................................... 3
Syrian Statements on Chemical and Biological Weapons ......................................................... 6
Chemical Weapons Security ...................................................................................................... 7
Chemical Weapons Use and Potential Responses ..................................................................... 8
U.N. Investigation ............................................................................................................. 11
Possible Responses ............................................................................................................ 12
Biological Weapons ....................................................................................................................... 14
DIA Director Flynn testified during the same hearing that “[w]e do not believe Syria has
achieved a capability to use biological agents as effective mass-casualty weapons.” ................ 15
Cooperative Threat Reduction Programs ....................................................................................... 15
Legislation ..................................................................................................................................... 17

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 19

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Syria’s Chemical Weapons: Issues for Congress

Policy Issues
The Syrian case may be the first time the international community has faced a civil war in a state
with a known stockpile of chemical weapons. This contingency raises two major policy concerns:
whether the Asad regime would use chemical weapons; and whether it could lose control over
these weapons.
U.S. officials have expressed confidence that chemical weapons stocks in Syria are secured by the
Asad regime, which dispatched elite Special Forces for that purpose. Due to the urgency of
preventing access to these weapons by unauthorized groups, including terrorists, the United States
government has been preparing for scenarios to secure the weapons in the event of the Asad
regime’s loss of control. However, this presents unique challenges. In testimony before the Senate
Armed Services Committee on March 7, 2012, then-Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta said, “It’s
100 times worse than what we dealt with in Libya. And for that reason, that’s why it’s raised even
greater concerns about our ability to address how we can secure those sites.” The Pentagon has
estimated that it would take over 75,000 troops to neutralize the chemical weapons.1
Specific scenarios have not been discussed in open testimony, but some analysts have proposed
that advanced planning for international teams may be required. Press reports say that a joint
exercise in Jordan in the spring of 2012 included scenarios for securing chemical weapons stocks.
The United States and the Czech Republic, which leads NATO chemical defense preparation, are
also cooperating to prepare for various scenarios. Israeli President Shimon Peres has appealed to
Russian President Putin to urge Asad to ensure chemical weapons’ security. Senator Richard
Lugar has proposed that the United States and Russia cooperate to ensure chemical weapons
security in Syria and eventually dismantle them.
Possible scenarios of highest concern include Syrian government use of chemical weapons—
authorized or unauthorized by local commanders; or Syrian government loss of control through
either defections by local commanders in charge of chemical weapons sites or a facility turnover
in the course of battle. The United States and other governments have warned Syria that use of
chemical weapons could prompt unspecified response, presumed to be military intervention. At
the same time, the United States has been urging Russia, historically a patron of Syria, to
encourage Asad to maintain control over chemical weapons.2 Some have suggested that the
United States should communicate to Syrian government commanders at the sites that they will
be rewarded for maintaining control of these weapons and protecting these facilities from
extremist elements. Other possible options include training or assisting the Free Syrian Army in
securing chemical weapons, should that army capture such facilities. Preventing chemical
weapons from falling into the hands of extremist elements is the ultimate goal of such policies.
There will continue to be limits, however, to the United States’ ability to monitor the security of
these stockpiles and limits to intelligence about where, how well, and by whom they are being
secured.

1 Barbara Starr, “Military: Thousands of Troops Needed to Secure Syrian Chemical Sites,” CNN.com, February 22,
2012.
2 Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov stated during a June 15, 2013, press conference that Russia has asked for and
received assurances from the Asad regime that Damascus would maintain such control.
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In addition to concerns over loss of control, there has been widespread concern that Asad could
decide to use chemical weapons. In a speech at the National Defense University on December 3,
2012, President Obama stated, perhaps in reaction to recent reports of chemical weapon
preparations: “I want to make it absolutely clear to Asad and those under his command: The
world is watching. The use of chemical weapons is and would be totally unacceptable. And if you
make the tragic mistake of using these weapons, there where be consequences, and you will be
held accountable.” Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that use would be a “red line”
and that the United States was “planning to take action” should it occur. NATO Secretary General
Anders Fogh Rasmussen has made similar statements.
Brief History of the Chemical Weapons Program
in Syria

Syria has had a chemical weapons program “for many years,” according to an Office of the
Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) report to Congress covering 2011.3 However, U.S.
official assessments regarding the origin of Syria’s chemical weapons program have varied over
the years. A 1995 intelligence assessment states that “Syria has had a chemical warfare program
since the mid-1980s.”4 However, a 1997 Department of Defense report states that the program
began in the 1970s.5 Damascus probably developed its chemical weapons program in response to
a perceived threat from Israel, according to a 1988 U.S. intelligence assessment and the 1997
Defense Department report.6 Some analysts point out that Egypt provided Syria with a small
number of chemical weapons and delivery systems in the lead-up to the Yom Kippur War in
1973.7 An expanded Syrian effort began in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Declassified U.S.
documents indicate that the Soviet Union supplied Syria with chemical agents, delivery systems,
and training related to chemical weapons use.8 Syria is likely to have procured equipment and
precursor chemicals from private companies in Western Europe.
U.S. government documents indicate that Damascus has sought a self-sufficient chemical
weapons program since the mid-1980s. A 1983 Special National Intelligence Estimate indicated
that Syria did not have an “indigenous capability to produce [chemical weapon] agents or
material,”9 but a 1985 State Department telegram suggested that the country was attempting to

3 Unclassified Report to Congress on the Acquisition of Technology Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and
Advanced Conventional Munitions, Covering 1 January to 31 December 2011.

4 The Weapons Proliferation Threat, Nonproliferation Center, March 1995.
5 Department of Defense, Proliferation: Threat and Response, 1997.
6 Central Intelligence Agency, Chemical and Biological Weapons: The Poor Man’s Atomic Bomb, An Intelligence
Assessment, 1988.
7 Jonathan B. Tucker, War of Nerves, Pantheon Books, New York, 2006.
8 Central Intelligence Agency, Use of Toxins and Other Lethal Chemicals in Southeast Asia and Afghanistan, Special
National Intelligence Estimate, Volume I, Key Judgments, February 2, 1982; Director of Central Intelligence,
Implications of Soviet Use of Chemical and Toxin Weapons for U.S. Security Interests, Special National Intelligence
Estimate, September 15, 1983. The1983 document also identified Czechoslovakia as a supplier of “chemical agents,
delivery systems, and training” to Syria. Nevertheless, a Russian official involved in chemical weapons destruction
stated in August 2012 that neither Russia nor the Soviet Union had supplied Syria with chemical weapons. “Russia
Never Supplied Chemical Weapons to Syria—Official,” Interfax, August 21, 2012.
9 Implications of Soviet Use of Chemical and Toxin Weapons for U.S. Security Interests, 1983.
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develop its own chemical weapons.10 Stating that “Damascus is enhancing its chemical weapon
capability,” the cable explains that the United States was imposing export controls on eight dual-
use chemicals that “can be used … in the manufacture of chemical weapons.” Twelve years later,
Syria was seeking an “independent chemical warfare capability,” according to the Defense
Department. Damascus has apparently not yet achieved this goal.
Like Egypt, Syria has never signed the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC), which prohibits
the development, production, stockpiling, transfer, and use of chemical weapons. However, in
1968, Syria acceded to the 1925 Geneva Protocol for the Prohibition of the Use in War of
Asphyxiating, Poisonous or Other Gases, and of Bacteriological Methods of Warfare, which bans
the use of chemical or biological agents in warfare.11 Therefore, “Syria has formally renounced
both first and retaliatory use of chemical or biological weapons against any State,” according to
the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, which implements the CWC.12 Syria
has said that its ratification of the CWC (and BWC) is contingent on establishment of a zone free
of weapons of mass destruction in the Middle East. Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al Mu'allim
stated during a July 29, 2012, press conference that Damascus supports the establishment of such
a zone.13
Current Chemical Weapons Program
“There is no doubt amongst the UK intelligence community that the Syrian regime possesses vast
stockpiles” of chemical weapon, according to a British Parliamentary report published in July
2013.14 Israel Defense Forces Deputy Chief of Staff Major-General Ya’ir Nave described Syria’s
chemical weapons arsenal as “the largest in the world” during a June 2012 interview.15 Damascus
possesses mustard blister agent, sarin nerve agent, and VX nerve agent, according to official U.S.
assessments.16 The size of the stockpile is unknown from open sources. The country’s chemical

10 Telegram from Secretary of State to American Embassy Damascus, Foreign Policy Export Controls on Chemical
Weapon Precursors
, July 1985.
11 Syria acceded with the reservation that accession did not represent recognition of the state of Israel, also a party.
12 Damascus has signed, but not ratified, the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (BWC), which bans the
development, production, and stockpiling of biological agents or toxins “of types and in quantities that have no
justification for peaceful purposes.” Unlike Israel, Syria is party to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT),
although an Israeli military raid in 2007 is believed to have targeted a clandestine Syrian nuclear facility. The
International Atomic Energy Agency continues to seek Syrian cooperation in answering questions related to nuclear
activities in the country.
13 “Syrian Foreign Minister Speaks Of Chemical Weapons, Iranian Support,” Syrian TV Satellite Service, July 29,
2012.
14 Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament Annual Report 2012–2013, July 10, 2013.
15 “Israeli Army General Says Syria Has Largest Chemical Weapon Arsenal,” Voice of Israel Network B, June 11,
2012. Most of the world’s chemical weapons arsenals have been destroyed or are awaiting destruction under the
Chemical Weapons Convention. The United States, Russia, Iraq and Libya are in the process of destroying chemical
weapons. India, South Korea and Albania have completed destruction. Israel and Myanmar have signed but not ratified
the CWC. The following countries are not party to the CWC: Angola, Egypt, North Korea, Somalia, South Sudan,
Syria. Unclassified Report to Congress on the Acquisition of Technology Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and
Advanced Conventional Munitions, Covering 1 January to 31 December 2011
cites Iran, North Korea and Syria as
having active chemical weapons programs.
16 For effects of chemical agents, CRS Report R42862, Chemical Weapons: A Summary Report of Characteristics and
Effects
, by Dana A. Shea. Hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Worldwide Threats to U.S. National
Security
, February 28, 2006, and State Department News Briefing, August 30, 2011. U.S. government officials and
reports have stated that Syria was developing VX. (See then-Under Secretary of State Bolton, “Remarks on the
(continued...)
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weapons and related facilities appear to be distributed throughout the country. U.S. Defense
Department Press Secretary George Little told reporters on July 24, 2012, that Syria has “a really
distributed network of [chemical weapons] stockpiles.” Similarly, Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper told the Senate Armed Services Committee on February 16, 2012, that
Damascus has “an extensive network” of chemical weapons installations.
As noted, Syria has sought an independent chemical weapons production capability for some
time. However, according to the ODNI report covering 2011, “Syria remains dependent on
foreign sources for key elements” of its chemical weapons program, “including precursor
chemicals.”17 Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) Director Michael Flynn made a similar
statement in April 2013 congressional testimony.18 Precursor chemicals are generally dual-use
chemicals with legitimate industrial uses that can be combined as feedstock to produce blister or
nerve agents. Syria appears to lack the capacity to independently produce key precursors.
Additionally, the potency and effectiveness of Syrian chemical agents are unknown since
precursor chemicals may degrade over time.
According to the ODNI report covering 2011, Syria’s chemical weapons agents “can be delivered
by aerial bombs, ballistic missiles, and artillery rockets.”19 Of these delivery vehicles, public
official U.S. assessments apparently only provide detailed information about Syria’s ballistic
missiles, although a 1991 national intelligence estimate stated that Syria had 500-kilogram aerial
bombs containing sarin.20 According to Flynn’s testimony and a State Department report covering
2008, Syria possesses “several hundred” Scud B, Scud C, Scud D, and SS-21 short-range ballistic
missiles (SRBMs),21 all of which are mobile.22 Past U.S. official reports have not been entirely
clear regarding the composition of Syria’s Scud missile inventory; a 2006 report from the
National Air and Space Intelligence Center (NASIC) includes the Scud B, Scud C, Scud D, and
SS-21 in Syria’s SRBM inventory, but NASIC reports from 2009 and 2013 omit the Scud B and
Scud C.23

(...continued)
Continuing Threat of Weapons of Mass Destruction,” November 12, 2003; Unclassified Report to Congress on the
Acquisition of Technology Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and Advanced Conventional Munitions, Covering
1 January to 31 December 2006;
and Michael Flynn, Director, Defense Intelligence Agency, Current and Future
Worldwide Threats,
Senate Armed Services Committee Hearing, April 18, 2013.).
17 Then-Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Bolton told the House Committee on
International Relations in June 2003 that Syria was “dependent on foreign sources” for “key production equipment,”
but whether that is still the case is unclear. See also Australia Group Plenary press release, June 2012,
http://www.australiagroup.net/en/media_june2012.html.
18 Michael Flynn, April 18, 2013.
19 Unclassified Report to Congress Covering 2011.
20 Director of Central Intelligence, Prospects for Special Weapons Proliferation and Control, National Intelligence
Estimate: Volume II Annexes
, July 1991.
21 Defined as missiles having ranges under 1,000 kilometers.
22 Flynn, April 18, 2013; Report on the Proliferation of Missiles and Essential Components of Nuclear, Biological,
Chemical and Radiological Weapons, January 1 – December 31, 2008
, Department of State, April 22, 2009. See also,
Ballistic and Cruise Missile Threat, National Air and Space Intelligence Center, March 2006; Ballistic and Cruise
Missile Threat
, National Air and Space Intelligence Center, April 2009; Ballistic and Cruise Missile Threat, National
Air and Space Intelligence Center, 2013; Unclassified Report to Congress Covering 2011. A 1991 National Intelligence
Estimate stated that Syria had “about 300 Soviet-made Scuds with about a 300-km range” (Director of Central
Intelligence, Prospects for Special Weapons Proliferation and Control, 1991).
23 Ballistic and Cruise Missile Threat, 2006; Ballistic and Cruise Missile Threat, April 2009; Ballistic and Cruise
Missile Threat
, 2013.
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An ODNI report to Congress covering 2006 indicates that Syria’s Scud B, Scud C, and Scud D
missiles, as well as its SS-21 missiles, “can employ” chemical warheads. But exactly which of
these missiles are tasked with delivering chemical weapons is unclear. A 1988 U.S. assessment
identifies Syria’s Scud B missiles as delivery vehicles for chemical weapons. However, more
recent U.S. government statements have been somewhat less precise. In June 2003, then-Under
Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security John Bolton told a House
Committee on International Relations hearing that Syria “is believed to have chemical warheads
available for a portion of its Scud missile force,” but he did not specify which types of Scud
missiles were assigned this mission. DIA Director Flynn made a similar statement in his April
2013 testimony.24 While missile warheads can deliver non-persistent chemical agents such as
sarin, persistent agents such as VX and blister are viewed by many chemical weapons experts as
being more effectively employed by missile warheads than non-persistent agents.
Another possibility is that Syria would use its batteries of BM-21 multiple rocket launchers,
which can more reliably deliver ordnance to a targeted area.25 Rocket launchers, when massed,
can be used to rapidly achieve lethal doses of non-persistent agents in a concentrated area. While
Scuds might be used for targeting a neighboring country, it is more likely that artillery rockets
would be used on the battlefield against rebel forces. However, other well-known difficulties in
the employment of chemical weapons include inability to control the gas cloud resulting from an
attack, putting one’s own troops at risk without proper protection; contaminating the area attacked
for days and weeks, depending on the chemical agent and weather conditions; and uncertain
delivery of a lethal dose of the agent (due to dissipation of agents into the atmosphere or volatility
of the agent).26
Storage and munitions design could impact the length of time Syrian forces or other forces would
have to deploy chemical weapons. Chemical munitions are either unitary or binary in design.27
Unitary munitions are filled with the chemical agent at a central facility, while binary munitions
include two separate canisters of precursor chemicals that combine either manually or
automatically inside the weapon when launched. The exact composition of Syria’s chemical
munitions stockpile is not known from open sources, but a 1991 National Intelligence Estimate
stated that Damascus had developed binary Scud missile warheads and aerial bombs.28 More
recently, DIA Director Flynn testified in April 2013 that Syria’s chemical weapons stockpile
“includes either complete or binary components of sarin, mustard, and VX.”29 If unitary
munitions are employed, it is not known whether chemical agent is stored in bulk, or warheads
are filled in advance. This process could take weeks to months for battlefield quantities and is
considered a hazardous undertaking for troops involved in filling unitary chemical munitions, as
well as those troops handling, transporting, and delivering them. If Syria used binary munitions,
then the warheads could potentially be deployed immediately.30 Press reports in early December

24 Michael Flynn, April 18, 2013.
25 Scott Steward, “The Specter of Syrian Chemical Weapons,” Stratfor, August 2, 2012.
26 Technologies Underlying Weapons of Mass Destruction, Office of Technology Assessment, December 1993.
27 Ibid.
28 Prospects for Special Weapons Proliferation and Control, 1991.
29 Flynn, April 18, 2013.
30 “NBC Capabilities- Chemical, Syria: Key Facts,” Jane’s Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Defense, July 24, 2012.
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2012 quoted unnamed officials as saying that Syria had combined the precursor chemicals for
sarin into warheads, but no officials have publicly confirmed that information.31
Syrian Statements on Chemical and Biological Weapons
In July, a Syrian official indicated that the government possesses chemical and biological
weapons and may use them if attacked. During a July 23, 2012, press conference, Syrian Foreign
Ministry Spokesperson Jihad Maqdisi stated that “[a]ny chemical or biological weapons will
never be used … in the Syrian crisis, no matter what the internal developments in this crisis are.”
He explained that “[a]ll varieties of these weapons are stored and secured by the Syrian armed
forces and under its direct supervision, and will not be used unless Syria is subjected to external
aggression.”32
Subsequent statements from Syrian officials have tried to walk back this statement, indicating that
the country does not have chemical or biological weapons. Information Minister Imran al-Zubi
said in a July 23, 2012, interview that Maqdisi’s statement described above did not constitute an
admission of chemical weapons possession, arguing that the statement was a response to
accusations that Syria possesses such weapons.33 Asked during a July 29, 2012, press conference
whether Syria possesses chemical weapons, Syrian Foreign Minister al-Mu'allim observed that
Israel possesses nuclear weapons, “regardless of whether we have or do not have” chemical
weapons.34 He was similarly ambiguous during a television interview broadcast on October 1,
2012.35 Syria’s Information Minister Umran Ahid al-Zabi denied in an April 26, 2013, interview
that Syria had used chemical weapons and repeated the regime’s claim that Damascus does not
possesses such weapons.36 He also stated that Syria does not possess biological weapons.
President Asad stated in a newspaper interview published June 17, 2013, by the state-run Syrian
news agency that “we have never confirmed or denied the possession” of chemical weapons.37
On December 3, 2012, the Syrian Foreign Ministry stated that “Syria has stressed repeatedly that
it will not use these types of weapons, if they were available, under any circumstances against its
people.”38 Information Minister al-Zabi stated in late April 2013 that Syria would not use
chemical weapons against Israel, even in the case of armed conflict between the two countries.39

31 “Exclusive: U.S. Sees Syria Prepping Chemical Weapons for Possible Attack,” Danger Room, Wired.com,
December 3, 2012; “NATO Expected to Clear Turkey Missile Deployment,” Agence France Presse, December 4,
2012.
32 “Syrian Spokesman Says No Chemical Weapons to be Used During Crisis,” Syrian TV Satellite Service, July 23,
2012.
33 “Information Minister: Foreign Media and Diplomatic Misconstrued Foreign Ministry Statement and Put ...” SANA
News Agency
, July 24, 2012.
34 Syrian TV Satellite Service, July 29, 2012.
35 “Syria: Foreign Minister Al-Mu’allim Says ‘Security Solution Was Imposed on Us’,” Al-Mayadin Satellite Channel,
October 1, 2012.
36 “Syrian Minister Says Army Did Not Use Chemical Weapons, Warns of Iraqi Scenario,” Interfax, April 26, 2013.
37 “Al-Asad Says Chemical Weapons Accusations “Pretext” For Intervention in Syria,” SANA News Agency, June 17,
2013.
38 “Obama Warns Syria Amid Rising Concern Over Chemical Weapons,” The Washington Post, December 3, 2012.
39 “Syrian Troops Won't Use Chemicals For Moral Reasons—Information Minister,” Interfax, April 24, 2013.
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President Asad denied the allegations of Syrian chemical weapons use (discussed below) in the
June 2013 interview.40
Chemical Weapons Security
In the past, the United States has discussed chemical weapons security with Damascus; State
Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland told reporters February 10, 2012, that “for many years
we've had a dialogue with Syria about the importance of security and safety of these weapons.”
Officials from the Obama Administration and other governments have expressed concern
regarding the security of Syria’s chemical weapons, but U.S. officials have unanimously stated
that the weapons stockpiles are secure. For example, former White House spokesperson Tommy
Vietor stated on July 21, 2012, that the Obama Administration is “very concerned” about Syria’s
chemical weapons, but also noted that “[w]e believe Syria’s chemical weapons stockpile remains
under Syrian government control.”41 The United States is monitoring Syrian chemical weapons
stockpiles, Vietor added. Then-Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta stated during a September 28,
2012, press briefing that Damascus has moved some chemicals in order to secure them better,
adding that the country’s “main sites … still remain secure.” Press reports of the movement of
chemical weapons again appeared in early December 2012. According to Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper’s March 12, 2013, testimony before the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence, “groups or individuals in Syria could gain access to [chemical weapons]-related
materials.” The United States continues to assess that the “Assad [sic] regime maintains control”
of the government’s chemical weapons, according to a June 13, 2013, statement from Deputy
National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications Ben Rhodes.
Officials from other governments have expressed concern about Syria’s chemical weapons
security while acknowledging that, for the time being, the weapons are secure. Israeli Vice Prime
Minister and Strategic Affairs Minister Moshe Ya’alon stated in June 2012 that “[at] this stage,
the Syrian regime has firm control over the chemical weapons arsenal.”42 Russian Deputy Foreign
Minister Sergey Ryabkov stated in an interview published September 6, 2012, that “[w]e are fully
sure—and we have official confirmation from Damascus on this—that the government of this
country is taking all necessary measures to ensure the security of its chemical stockpile.”43 More
recently, British Defense Secretary Philip Hammond told reporters on May 2, 2013, that the
Syrian government “is largely in control of its chemical weapons, principal chemical weapons
sites ... there is no evidence that the regime has lost control of significant chemical weapon sites
yet.”
Obama Administration officials have indicated that the United States has been working with other
regional governments, including Israel, to ensure the security of Syria’s chemical weapons.44
During a July 29, 2012, press briefing, then-Secretary of Defense Panetta identified Jordan,
Turkey, and “other allies in the region” as partners in this effort.

40 SANA News Agency, June 17, 2013.
41 “U.S. Says Closely Monitoring Syria Chemical Weapons,” Reuters, July 21, 2012.
42 “Asad Retains Control of Syria Chemical Arms—Israel,” Reuters, June 12, 2012.
43 “Russia Sure That Syria Will Not Use Chemical Weapons—Senior Diplomat,” Interfax, September 6, 2012.
44 Carol E. Lee and Adam Entous, “Obama Warns Syria on Chemical Weapons—President Threatens Military
Response Against Any Use of the Banned Arms,” The Wall Street Journal, August 21, 2012.
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U.S. and British officials have claimed that their governments generally know the locations of
Syria’s chemical weapons. British Defense Secretary Hammond stated on May 2, 2013, that “I
think we have a great deal of knowledge of location of chemical weapons,” although he added
that “[t]hat is not the same as saying that I can put my hand on my heart and say we know where
every last item is.” Deputy National Security Advisor Rhodes stated during a June 17, 2013, press
briefing that
while we can't say with certainty that we are aware of where every chemical weapons
munitions [sic] is in the country, this is something we devote a lot of attention and resources
to and we feel like we have a sense of both the fact of the regime controlling these chemical
weapons stockpiles and some sense of where they are generally.
Chemical Weapons Use and Potential Responses
According to officials from France, Israel, the United Kingdom, and the United States, there is
evidence that the Syrian government has used sarin nerve agent against opposition forces in the
country. Over time, official statements on this issue have expressed increasing certainty that
chemical weapons have been used. White House Press Secretary Jay Carney stated on December
3, 2012, that the Obama Administration has “increased concern about the possibility of the [Asad]
regime taking the desperate act of using its chemical weapons.” Major General Aviv Kochavi, the
head of Israeli military intelligence, has stated that Syria is preparing to use its chemical weapons,
according to press reports.45 British intelligence has indicated in January 2013 that Syria may
have a low threshold for using chemical weapons.46 Director of National Intelligence James
Clapper told the Senate Armed Services Committee on April 18, 2013, that the “increasingly
beleaguered regime, having found that its escalation of violence through conventional means is
not working, appears quite willing to use chemical weapons against its own people.”
Allegations that chemical weapons have been used in the conflict again surfaced on March 19,
2013. Both sides of the conflict claim that chemical weapons were used by the other side against
civilians in the village of Khan al-Assal (near Aleppo). Some press reports have said they were
delivered with rockets and may have carried chlorine.47 The Syrian government officially
requested that the United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon investigate its allegations that
opposition forces used chemical weapons at Khan al-Assal (Aleppo area) on March 19. The
opposition claims that the Asad regime also used chemical weapons in other recent attacks
(including near Damascus). The United Kingdom and France sent letters to the U.N. Secretary
General in late March that reportedly provided evidence based on witness interviews and soil
samples that chemical weapons were used on multiple occasions, but the letters have not been
made public. Press reports said the letters claimed that chemical weapons had been used on three
occasions: March 19 in Khal al-Assal and in Ataybah, as well as December 23 in Homs.48
According to letters sent April 25, 2013, to Senators John McCain and Carl Levin by Miguel
Rodriguez, Assistant to the President and Director of the Office of Legislative Affairs, the U.S.
intelligence community assessed “with varying degrees of confidence that the Syrian regime has
used chemical weapons on a small scale in Syria, specifically the chemical agent sarin.” The Asad

45 Gili Cohen, “Assad Preparing to Use Chemical Arms, Says Israel’s Military Intel Chief,” Haaretz, March 14, 2013.
46 Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament Annual Report 2012–2013.
47 Aryn Baker, “Syria’s Civil War: The Mystery Behind a Deadly Chemical Attack,” Time.com, April 1, 2013.
48 Edith Lederer, “Evidence of Chemical Weapons Use Reported,” Associated Press, April 18, 2013.
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regime, rather than opposition forces, would “very likely” have initiated any chemical weapons
use, Rodriguez wrote. A White House official explained during an April 25, 2013, background
briefing that U.S. intelligence on Syrian chemical weapons use is “based on a mosaic of
information,” which needs to be corroborated via further investigation. “[W]e are continuing to
do further work to establish a definitive judgment as to whether or not the red line has been
crossed and to inform our decision-making about what to do next,” the official added. The April
25 letters explained that physical evidence has contributed to the intelligence assessment
described above. But uncertainty concerning the “chain of custody” of this evidence precluded
the intelligence community from confirming “how the exposure occurred and under what
conditions,” Rodriguez wrote. Secretary of State John Kerry stated May 28, 2013, that the United
States has “evidence” of Syrian chemical weapons use,” but added that “it’s an intelligence
community assessment. Assessments are not evidence that you're prepared to take to the world.”
However, on June 13, 2013, the White House released a statement by Deputy National Security
Advisor Rhodes saying that, after further investigation,
our intelligence community assesses that the Assad regime has used chemical weapons,
including the nerve agent sarin, on a small scale against the opposition multiple times in the
last year. Our intelligence community has high confidence in that assessment given multiple,
independent streams of information.
The statement said these sources of information included reporting about Syrian military attack
planning and execution, descriptions of attacks, physiological symptoms consistent with exposure
to chemical weapons agents, and analysis of physiological samples “which revealed exposure to
sarin.” Positive results from such samples, however, do not indicate “how or where the
individuals were exposed or who was responsible for the dissemination,” Rhodes added.
Chemical weapons use had resulted in an estimated 100-150 deaths in Syria, the statement said.
Rhodes explained the evolution in the U.S. assessment during a June 17, 2013, press briefing:
In terms of the time from April, essentially what we had in April was an initial intelligence
assessment, and the President’s direction was to continue to investigate additional
corroborating facts and information so that we could raise our confidence level. Because that
was not a high-confidence assessment and we didn’t feel like we had enough corroborated
information to reach that high degree of confidence that this red line had been crossed.
What’s been done in the course of the last several weeks is we've been able to piece together
a broader information picture—so you're able to take, for instance, an assessed incident of
chemical weapons use, you're able to receive reporting from individuals who were there on
the ground. We were able to review physiological samples that have been collected at the
site. We were able to review open source reporting from social media and other things that
speak to the use of chemical weapons in an area. And we were able to review our own
intelligence reporting, which obviously covers a range of different means.
In piecing together that information picture, the intelligence community is able to increase its
confidence level. And so that’s what led to the announcement yesterday. It was driven by the
firming up of this assessment over the course of the last several weeks, which the President
had asked for after the announcement we made in April.
None of the U.S. statements concerning the June 13 assessment appear to address the chain of
custody issue cited above.
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The United Kingdom and France have also argued that Syria has used chemical weapons. A
British Foreign Office spokesperson stated April 25, 2013, that the United Kingdom has “limited
but persuasive information from various sources showing chemical weapon use in Syria,
including sarin.”49 More recently, British Foreign Secretary William Hague stated on June 14,
2013, that the United Kingdom “agree[s] with the US assessment that chemical weapons,
including sarin, have been used in Syria by the Assad regime.” Regarding the possible use of
chemical weapons by opposition groups in Syria, a British government spokesperson stated on
June 5, 2013, that “chemical weapons use in Syria is very likely to have been by the regime ... we
have no evidence to date of opposition use.”50
A French Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson stated on April 26, 2013, that “there were
indications” that the Syrian government has used chemical weapons, but added that the
government lacks “irrefutable evidence” of such use. However, French Foreign Minister Laurent
Fabius stated June 4, 2013, that “France is now certain that sarin gas has been used in Syria
several times and in a localized manner.” Elaborating on this claim during a June 14, 2013, press
briefing, a French Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson told reporters that the Syrian
government had “sprayed sarin by helicopter.” The spokesperson also commented on possible use
of chemical weapons by opposition groups in Syria, explaining that “[n]ot only is there nothing to
indicate that the opposition might have used such weapons, everything leads us to think that that
isn’t the case.” Regarding the chain of custody issue, a French Foreign Ministry spokesperson
told reporters on June 7, 2013, that, for one set of blood and urine samples taken from Syria, the
French government “know[s] where and how it was taken; how it was transported; and how it
was analyzed. In other words, we are certain about the soundness of the entire test chain: from
when the sample was taken to the analysis.” The other set of samples “made it possible to
conclude that sarin was used, however, not to attribute it to the Syrian regime and it was not
transported in optimal conditions,” the spokesperson explained.
Michael Oren, Israel’s ambassador to the United States, stated during an April 28, 2013,
television interview that an Israeli military “assessment looks like there’s a high probability of
usage,” but added that the assessment is not “definitive proof.”51
For its part, Russia has expressed skepticism regarding the assessments described above. Russian
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov explained during a June 20, 2013, television interview that “we
have found nothing which would hold water” in the evidence of Syrian chemical weapons use
presented to Moscow by representatives of France, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
Lavrov had previously argued during a June 15 press conference that using chemical weapons “in
such small amounts ... is senseless from a military point of view.”
Moscow, however, has asserted that opposition fighters in Syria have used chemical weapons.
Russian ambassador to the United Nations Vitaliy Churkin told reporters on July 9, 2013, that,
according to Russian experts’ analysis, only “fighters of the armed opposition” used chemical
weapons at the Khal al-Assal site, explaining that the weapons used an explosive that is “not
usually used in the production of standard [chemical] munitions.”52 Lavrov provided additional

49 “UK Has Evidence of Chemical Weapon Use in Syria: Foreign Office,” Agence France Presse, April 25, 2013.
50 “Britain Says Samples from Syria Test Positive for Sarin,” Agence France Presse, June 5, 2013.
51 Interview with Michael Oren, Fox News Sunday, April 28, 2013.
52 “Russian Envoy Says Damascus, Not UN, Must Decide on Syria Chemical Arms Mission,” Interfax News Agency,
July 11, 2013.
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details of this assessment during a July 10, 2013, press briefing, explaining that “characteristics of
the missile and sarin gas” used at the site “do not meet standards used in industrial production”
and adding that “the missile and the mentioned substance were made in February in the territory
of Syria,” which at the time was under control of a group affiliated with the Free Syrian Army.
Lavrov also indicated that Russia has avoided the chain of custody issue because Russian experts
took samples from the Syrian site and analyzed them. U.S. and British officials responded that
there is no evidence that any opposition groups possess chemical weapons or have used such
weapons.53 A Free Syrian Army spokesperson denied the Russian charges.54
Other governmental statements have also expressed uncertainty regarding claims of Syrian
chemical weapons use. For example, the G8 did not confirm the use of chemical weapons, but
instead condemned “any use of chemical weapons in Syria” in a June 18, 2013, statement.
Moreover, a June 22, 2013, statement from the Friends of Syria Core Group referred to the
“reported use” of chemical weapons by the regime.55
U.N. Investigation
The United Nations has continued to exhort the Syrian government, which, as noted, called for a
U.N. investigation of chemical weapons use by opposition forces, to admit chemical weapons
inspectors. The U.N. would like the ability to investigate beyond the Khal al-Assal site, but
according to press reports, the Syrian government wants to limit the investigation to the March 19
incident and select the members of the inspection team.56 The U.N. Secretary General appointed
Ake Sellstrom to lead the inspection team, which will try to determine whether chemical weapons
were used, but not who used them. The U.N. will also cooperate with the Organization for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons in the investigation. During an April 26, 2013, press briefing,
U.N. spokesperson Martin Nesirky explained that the U.N. investigators need “swift access and
unfettered access” to the relevant Syrian sites, noting the “risk that the evidence can deteriorate
over time when you are talking about possible chemical weapons.” UN spokesperson John Ennis
stated in June 2013 that, despite the possible deterioration of chemical agents, “[t]here are a range
of possible on-site activities extending beyond the collection of environmental samples, which
still could provide information on whether or not chemical weapons were used.”57
France, the United Kingdom, and the United States have all expressed support for the
investigation in the past and have reiterated support for the investigation since the June 13, 2013,
U.S. assessment. According to Rhodes’s June 13 statement, the United States intended to send a
letter to the U.N. Secretary General describing “our updated intelligence assessment and specific
incidents of alleged chemical weapons use.” Secretary General Ban confirmed on June 14, 2013,

53 “Russia Claims Syria Rebels Used Sarin at Khan al-Assal ,” BBC News, July 9, 2013; Daily Briefing by Press
Secretary Jay Carney, July 9, 2013.
54 Louis Charbonneau, “UPDATE 2-Syria Opposition Denies Russian Chemical Attack Allegation,” Reuters, July 10,
2013.
55 Available at https://www.gov.uk/government/news/friends-of-syria-core-group-final-communique. The statement
was issued by the Foreign Ministers of Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Egypt, Turkey, the
United Kingdom, Germany, France, Italy, and the United States.
56 “Syria Yet to Accept U.N. Demand for Full Access in Chemical Attack Inquiry,” Global Security Newswire, April 5,
2013.
57 Kelsey Davenport and Daniel Horner, “U.S. Says Chemical Weapons Used in Syria,” Arms Control Today,
July/August 2013.
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that his office had received the letter. As noted, the United Kingdom and France have sent similar
letters to the Secretary General. The Russian government has also submitted a “technical
analysis” regarding the possible use of chemical weapons in Syria, Nesirky stated on July 12,
2013.
The June 18, 2013, G8 statement called on
all parties to the conflict to allow access to the UN investigating team mandated by the UN
Secretary-General, and drawing on the expertise of the Organisation for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons (OPCW) and World Health Organisation (WHO), in order to conduct an
objective investigation into reports of use of chemical weapons. The UN team should make
their report and deliver it to the UN Security Council for their assessment.58
Sellestrom and U.N. High Representative for Disarmament Affairs Angela Kane met with Syrian
officials in Damascus at the government’s invitation on July 24 and 25, 2013. According to a joint
statement, the two sides had “thorough and productive” discussions regarding the U.N.
investigation, which “led to an agreement on the way forward.” The statement provided no
additional detail, but Nesirky stated August 1, 2013, that the inspection team “will depart for
Syria as soon as practical.” The inspectors began working in Syria on August 19.
In addition to Sellestrom, the team “will consist of about 10 experts from the Organisation for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons and the World Health Organization,” Nesirky stated August 1.
The team is to visit the Khal al-Assal site, as well as two other locations that the UN is keeping
confidential “as a safety and security precaution.” A spokesperson for UN Secretary-General
Moon stated August 14, 2013, that the inspection team “will remain in the country to conduct its
activities, including on-site visits, for a period of up to 14 days, extendable upon mutual consent.”
Moon stated August 19, 2013, that the inspectors “must have ... access to the reported sites to
undertake the necessary analyses and to collect samples. It also includes interviews and
examination of witnesses, victims, attending medical personnel as well as the conduct of post-
mortem examinations.” Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad stated that the
government would “fully cooperate” with the inspection team and “provide it will all information
we have and all facilities to reach a rational conclusion,” the Associated Press reported.59
Possible Responses
The allegations of use raise the question of the U.S. “red line.” The White House has suggested
that the United States might respond to the Syrian government’s use or loss of control of chemical
weapons with military force. Carney told reporters on July 22, 2012, that “the international
community will hold accountable any Syrian officials” who fail to keep the country’s chemical
weapons under governmental control, but he would not specify possible actions to ensure
accountability. President Barack Obama, after noting during an August 20, 2012, press briefing
that he had not yet “ordered military engagement” in Syria, suggested that he may do so if
Damascus used or lost control of its chemical weapons:

58 Available at https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/207771/
Lough_Erne_2013_G8_Leaders_Communique.pdf.
59 Albert Aji , “UN Chemical Arms Experts Arrive in Syrian Capital,” The Associated Press, August 18, 2013.
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We cannot have a situation where chemical or biological weapons are falling into the hands
of the wrong people. We have been very clear to the Asad regime, but also to other players
on the ground, that a red line for us is we start seeing a whole bunch of chemical weapons
moving around or being utilized. That would change my calculus.
Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel reiterated this policy to the Senate Armed Services Committee
on April 18, 2013, that, “President Obama has made clear that if Assad and those under his
command use chemical weapons or fail to meet their obligations to secure them, there will be
consequences and they will be held accountable.” Secretary Hagel also said there were “plans in
place to respond to the full range of chemical weapon scenarios.”
Reiterating previous statements on the matter, President Obama told reporters on April 26, 2013,
that Syrian use of chemical weapons “crosses a line that will change my calculus and how the
United States approaches these issues.” According to the April 25, 2013, letters to Congress,
the administration is prepared for all contingencies so that we can respond appropriately to
any confirmed use of chemical weapons, consistent with our national interests. The United
States and the international community have a number of potential responses available, and
no option is off the table.
Asked during the April 25, 2013, background briefing cited above about the range of potential
U.S. responses to Syrian use of chemical weapons, the White House official stated that such a
response “could run a broad spectrum of activity across our various lines of effort in Syria,”
citing U.S. diplomatic initiatives, nonlethal assistance to opposition groups in Syria, and
humanitarian assistance.
The June 13, 2013, White House statement said, “[t]he President has said that the use of chemical
weapons would change his calculus, and it has.” The statement announced a qualitative change in
assistance to the opposition:
Following on the credible evidence that the regime has used chemical weapons against the
Syrian people, the President has augmented the provision of non-lethal assistance to the
civilian opposition, and also authorized the expansion of our assistance to the Supreme
Military Council (SMC).
The Administration stated that the use of chemical weapons by Syria had led to an increase in
“the scope and scale of assistance” that it will provide to the opposition.
A July 19, 2013, letter from General Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to
Senator Carl Levin described an option for using military force “to prevent the use or
proliferation” of Syrian chemical weapons. Such an operation would include “destroying portions
of Syria’s massive stockpile, interdicting its movement and delivery, or ... seizing and securing
program components.” This option “would call for a no-fly zone as well as air and missile strikes
involving hundreds of aircraft, ships, submarines, and other enablers,” Dempsey wrote, adding
that “[t]housands of special operations forces and other ground forces would be needed to assault
and secure critical sites.” The operation would result in the “control of some, but not all chemical
weapons” and “would also help prevent their further proliferation into the hands of extremist
groups,” the letter said. Dempsey concluded his description of this option by noting that the
“inability” of the United States “to fully control Syria’s storage and delivery systems could allow
extremists to gain better access.”
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Other governments have also said the use of military force would be justified if chemical
weapons were used. For example, French President François Hollande stated in an August 27,
2012, speech that Syrian use of chemical weapons “would be a legitimate reason for direct
intervention” by the “international community.”60 Additionally, William Hague, the UK secretary
of state for foreign and commonwealth affairs, told the House of Commons on September 3,
2012, that Syria’s use of chemical weapons “would be an extremely serious matter, and it might
change some of the international calculations about this crisis.”61 Hague did not specify any
potential actions, but did say in an opening statement to the House that “we have not ruled out
any options as this crisis deepens.” President Obama and NATO Secretary General Rasmussen
stated in early December 2012 that the Asad regime would be “held accountable” for any use of
chemical weapons. Ambassador Oren stated during an April 28, 2013, interview on Fox News
that Israel “will react” if “the Syrian regime tries to transfer chemical weapons, or what we call
game changing weapons, could be anti-aircraft systems, to terrorists in Lebanon.”
Biological Weapons
The question of a Syrian biological weapons program has also been raised in discussions of loss
of sensitive military sites. Syria’s biological weapons activities appear to be considerably less
advanced than the country’s chemical weapons program. Past U.S. assessments have stated that
Damascus was pursuing biological weapons. According to a 1988 intelligence estimate, Syria was
“conducting research and development” on a biological weapons program.62 A 1991 intelligence
estimate assessed that the government had “a mature offensive [biological weapons] program”
and that some agents “could be weaponized in the next three to five years.”63 However, a 1997
Defense Department was similar to the 1988 estimate and added that Damascus had not “begun
any major weaponization or testing related to biological warfare.”64 Several years later, Syria was
“not believed to have progressed much beyond the research and development phase and may have
produced only pilot quantities of usable agent,” according to an October 2001 Defense
Department report.65
Some U.S. assessments issued during the past decade have indicated that Damascus has
continued to pursue biological weapons. For example, a report from the Director of Central
Intelligence to Congress covering the second half of 2002 states that “[i]t is highly probable that
Syria also continued to develop an offensive [biological weapons] capability.”66 More recently,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Vann Van Diepen stated in April 2012 that Syria
“has been researching biological weapons.”67 Nevertheless, it appears that Syria is still not
capable of producing biological weapons. An ODNI report to Congress covering 2009 states that

60 “France Warns Syria Over Chemical Weapons Use,” Reuters, August 27, 2012.
61 Commons Debates, Daily Hansard, September 3, 2012.
62 Chemical and Biological Weapons: The Poor Man’s Atomic Bomb, 1988.
63 Director of Central Intelligence, Prospects for Special Weapons Proliferation and Control, National Intelligence
Estimate
, July 1991.
64 Proliferation: Threat and Response, 1997.
65 Deputy Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Chemical and Biological Defense, Chemical and Biological
Defense Primer
, October 2001.
66 Unclassified Report to Congress on the Acquisition of Technology Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and
Advanced Conventional Munitions, Covering 1 July Through 31 December 2002
.
67 Vann Van Diepen, “Key Note Address, U.S. Gulf Cooperation Council Workshop,” April 12, 2012.
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Damascus is “not believed to have achieved a capability to put [biological weapons] agents into
effective weapons.”68 The ODNI report covering 2011 states only that “Syria’s biotechnological
infrastructure is capable of supporting BW agent development.”69
According to the 2012 State Department report regarding compliance with arms control and
disarmament agreements, “the United States is concerned that Syria ... may be engaged in
activities that would violate its obligations under the BWC,” if Damascus were a party to the
agreement. “It remained unclear during the reporting period whether Syria would consider the use
of biological weapons as a military option,” the report adds.70 The 2013 version of the report
reiterates this analysis.71
According to April 18, 2013, testimony from Director of National Intelligence Clapper before the
Senate Armed Services Committee, Syria’s biological weapons program may be somewhat more
advanced than suggested by the assessments described above. Clapper stated that
[b]ased on the duration of Syria’s longstanding biological warfare (BW) program, we judge
that some elements of the program may have advanced beyond the research and development
stage and may be capable of limited agent production. Syria is not known to have
successfully weaponized biological agents in an effective delivery system, but it possesses
conventional and chemical weapon systems that could be modified for biological agent
delivery.72
DIA Director Flynn testified during the same hearing that “[w]e do not believe Syria has achieved
a capability to use biological agents as effective mass-casualty weapons.”73
Cooperative Threat Reduction Programs
U.S. government programs could be used to address or fund efforts to secure or dismantle Syrian
weapons of mass destruction or advanced conventional weapons following a regime collapse
scenario. There are two most likely sources of such funding. The State Department’s
Nonproliferation and Disarmament Fund (NDF) has authority to spend funds “notwithstanding
any other provision of law” and is authorized to work in states outside the former Soviet Union.
The Department of Defense’s Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR) has authorization to use funds
in the Middle East region as a whole.

68 Unclassified Report to Congress on the Acquisition of Technology Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and
Advanced Conventional Munitions, Covering 1 January to 31 December 2009
.
69 Unclassified Report to Congress covering 2011.
70 Adherence to and Compliance with Arms Control, Nonproliferation, and Disarmament Agreements and
Commitments
, Department of State, August 2012.
71 Adherence to and Compliance with Arms Control, Nonproliferation, and Disarmament Agreements and
Commitments, Department of State, July, 2013.
72 James R. Clapper, Director of National Intelligence, Statement for the Record, Worldwide Threat Assessment of the
U.S. Intelligence Community
, Senate Committee on Armed Services, April 18, 2013.
73 Flynn, April 18, 2013.
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Secretary of Defense Hagel told the Senate Armed Services Committee on April 18, 2013, that
CTR funds are being used to assist Syria’s neighbors to bolster border defenses and prevent
WMD proliferation from Syria:
Through our cooperative threat reduction program, the Department of Defense personnel and
our interagency partners are also working closely with Syria’s neighbors, including Jordan,
Turkey and Iraq to help them counter the threat from Syria’s chemical weapons.
As part of this effort, the Department of Defense is funding over $70 million for activities in
Jordan including providing training and equipment to detect and stop any chemical weapons
transfers along its border with Syria and developing Jordanian capacity to identify and secure
chemical weapons assets.
The program will continue to train and equip border security staff in Jordan, Iraq, and Turkey in
FY2014 to prevent proliferation of WMD across borders shared with Syria. Prior to this, CTR
programs were used most recently in the Middle East in Libya and Iraq. The estimated scope of
the chemical (and potential biological) weapons stocks and facilities in Syria is far greater than
those in those countries. In Libya, the dismantlement process was initially undertaken with the
agreement of the government. In 2011, when unrest toppled the Qaddafi regime, the chemical
stocks were secured by forces aligned with the United States. However, additional stocks were
hidden by the Qaddafi regime and only identified after the conflict, showing the limits of U.S.
and other intelligence.74 In the case of Iraq, the United States undertook similar work in 2003
after Operation Iraqi Freedom. However, United Nations inspectors had completed much of the
dismantlement work after the 1991 Persian Gulf War, and stockpiles and capacity turned out to
have been overestimated in 2003. A continued focus of nonproliferation programs in both Iraq
and Libya has been engaging former WMD weapons scientists in civilian projects to prevent the
exploitation of their expertise for weapons proliferation purposes. International partners under the
G-8 Global Partnership have experience cooperating in dismantling former Soviet chemical
weapons stockpiles. In general, CTR and NDF programs are not designed to work in a non-
cooperative environment and require the agreement of the host country. Therefore, the focus to
date for the Syria challenge has been to bolster capacity of neighboring states to interdict any
transfers.
Civil war and possible loss of control or regime collapse by a state in possession of weapons of
mass destruction poses a distinct change from the way these nonproliferation programs have been
implemented in the past. The Syrian case may be the first time the international community faces
the possibility of a civil war in a state with a known stockpile of chemical weapons. Due to the
urgency of preventing access to these weapons by unauthorized groups including terrorists, the
United States government has been preparing to secure the weapons in the event of the Asad
regime’s loss of control.
However, a successor regime may not agree to renounce and eventually dismantle Syrian
chemical weapons. A new government in Syria may believe that chemical weapons continue to
serve as a military deterrent to Israel or others. Some experts and policy makers have suggested
that the United States and other countries make joining the Chemical Weapons Convention (and
therefore chemical weapons dismantlement) a condition for recognition and support of a new

74 See “Chemical Weapons Destruction and Nuclear Material” in CRS Report RL33142, Libya: Transition and U.S.
Policy
, by Christopher M. Blanchard.
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government in Syria.75 The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons may play a
key role in dismantling the chemical weapons in Syria, if permitted by a new Syrian government.
If the stocks remain secure after a transition to a new government in Syria, or if the present
government agrees to rid itself of these weapons as part of a negotiated agreement, then
cooperative threat reduction programs could have a prominent role to play. In other scenarios, it
may take a combination of military and intelligence operations in a hostile environment, followed
by more traditional NDF or CTR activities undertaken with the agreement of a new government.
Legislation
Syria’s chemical weapons stocks have been addressed in recent legislation.
• The Free Syria Act of 2013 (H.R. 1327), Section 204 has a provision giving the
President the authority to establish a program to facilitate Syrian chemical and
biological weapons destruction in cooperation with a “Syrian entity” to “secure,
safeguard, disable, dismantle, transport out of Syria, or destroy chemical and
biological weapons, their precursor and constituent parts and associated
equipment.” It includes congressional reporting requirements and funding
authorities.
• The Syria Democratic Transition Act of 2013 (S. 617), Section 10 proposes that
the United States work with regional partners to develop a plan to secure
conventional and unconventional weapons stockpiles in Syria; recover and
dispose of all unconventional weapons stockpiled in Syria “with particular
attention to chemical weapons”; and prevent the illicit transfer of these weapons.
It gives the President notwithstanding authority to conduct these activities. It also
includes the sense of Congress that the State Department’s FY2014 budget
request should include an increase in NADR funding for these goals.
• The House FY2013 Foreign Operations Appropriations Bill (H.R. 5857) said
NADR funds “may also be used for such countries other than the Independent
States of the former Soviet Union and international organizations when it is in the
national security interest of the United States to do so.” This could include Syria.
• The Syria Freedom Support Act (H.R. 2106) as passed by the House Committee
on Foreign Affairs in March 2012 included a provision that would authorize the
President to assist a future democratic Syrian government with securing and
dismantling its inherited weapons of mass destruction and related facilities.
Section 106 of the bill provides $250 million in drawdown authority and transfer
authority from any other appropriated funds “notwithstanding any other
provision of law.”

75 Chairman Ed Royce, Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade, Opening Statement for the hearing,
When Regimes Fall: The Challenge of Securing Lethal Weapons, July 18, 2012; Leonard S. Spector, “Minimizing
Dangers Posed by Syria’s Military Assets During and After the Current Civil Turmoil,” Testimony before the
Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation and Trade, Committee on Foreign Affairs, U.S. House of
Representatives, July 19, 2012.
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• The Senate FY2012 Foreign Operations Appropriations Committee report
(S.Rept. 112-85) said in regard to the Nonproliferation, Demining, and Anti-
terrorism funding, “The Committee recognizes that dynamic change in the Near
East and ongoing threats and humanitarian needs in other regions afford
opportunities to conduct and expand nonproliferation, demining, and anti-
terrorism programs, including in Syria should the current regime fall. The
Committee recommends additional funding above the budget request to
accelerate the U.S. response to such opportunities, which is in the security
interests of the United States and regional allies.”
• The National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 1960) as reported by the House
includes Section 1205, which gives authority to the “Secretary of Defense, with
the concurrence of the Secretary of State, to provide assistance to the military and
civilian response organizations of Jordan, Kuwait, Bahrain, the United Arab
Emirates, Iraq, Turkey, and other countries in the region of Syria in order for
such countries to respond effectively to incidents involving weapons of mass
destruction in Syria and the region.” It authorizes up to $4 million for this
purpose. Section 1251(b) of this bill gives the sense of Congress that “the
President should fully consider all courses of action to reinforce his stated
‘redline’ regarding the use of weapons of mass destruction by the Assad regime
in Syria.”
• The Chemical and Biological Weapons Control and Warfare Elimination Act of
1991 (P.L. 102-182) requires that the President, following the receipt by the
executive branch of “persuasive information ... indicating the substantial
possibility that, on or after October 28, 1991, the government of a foreign
country has made substantial preparation to use or has used chemical or
biological weapons,” determine within 60 days “whether that government, on or
after October 28, 1991, has used chemical or biological weapons in violation of
international law or has used lethal chemical or biological weapons against its
own nationals.” The law also requires the President to report such a
determination to Congress “promptly.” The report is to specify sanctions to be
imposed on the government pursuant to the law.
The law also contains a provision that enables the Chairs of the Senate
Committee on Foreign Relations and the House Foreign Affairs Committee (in
consultation with the ranking members) to request at any time a report within 60
days “on the information held by the executive branch which is pertinent to”
whether a specified foreign government “on or after December 4, 1991, has used
chemical or biological weapons in violation of international law or has used
lethal chemical or biological weapons against its own nationals.”
The use, change of hands, or loss of control of chemical weapons stocks in Syria could have
unpredictable consequences for the Syrian population as well as for U.S. allies and forces in the
region. Congress may wish to assess the Administration’s plans to respond to possible scenarios
involving the use, change of hands, or loss of control of Syrian chemical weapons. Forces,
funding, and authorization by Congress may be required to address potential contingencies.

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Syria’s Chemical Weapons: Issues for Congress

Author Contact Information

Mary Beth D. Nikitin
Andrew Feickert
Specialist in Nonproliferation
Specialist in Military Ground Forces
mnikitin@crs.loc.gov, 7-7745
afeickert@crs.loc.gov, 7-7673
Paul K. Kerr

Analyst in Nonproliferation
pkerr@crs.loc.gov, 7-8693


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