Lisa Ferdinando at the DoD
News offers the below report:
WASHINGTON, April 7, 2017 —
The Syrian airbase targeted in yesterday’s U.S. missile strike is believed to
be where Syrian President Bashar Assad regime aircraft took off for a deadly
chemical attack against civilians earlier this week, senior military officials
speaking on background told reporters at a Pentagon briefing today.
The U.S. military action is
meant to "deter the regime from using chemical weapons and so the
proportionality is measured against that outcome," an official said.
"We do not believe it's acceptable for the Syrian regime to use chemical
weapons."
According to the Pentagon,
hundreds of civilians were killed or injured in the April 4 chemical attack in
Khan Sheikhoun, Syria.
The two senior military
officials who spoke to reporters at the briefing said the Shayrat Airfield in
Homs governate in Syria that was targeted by the U.S. strike has a
"history" of having chemical weapons stored there.
An official said there is
"high confidence" the airfield is where the Syrian regime’s aircraft took
off for the April 4 attack.
'Proportional Response' to
Deadly Chemical Attack
The United States also
believes that a nerve agent like sarin was used in the chemical attack against
the civilians, an official said.
In response to the attack,
under the orders of President Donald J. Trump, the U.S. military conducted a
cruise missile strike yesterday in Syria, the officials pointed out.
The U.S. strike was a
"proportional response" to the chemical attack, the officials said.
The airfield is in an isolated area and the strike was conducted in the early
morning hours in Syria, to minimize the risk to civilians, according to the
officials.
The U.S. was not tracking the
airfield as an active chemical site, an official said, but the military did
take precautions not to hit anything that could possibly lead to the
inadvertent release of chemical munitions or chemical substances.
Syrian and Russian forces
operate at that airfield, they noted. The United States notified Russia ahead
of the strike, to avoid any possible misinterpretation, the officials
explained.
Fifty-nine Tomahawk missiles
each struck a target on the airfield, they said.
The U.S. military action is
believed to have destroyed approximately 20 aircraft, the officials said. Other
damage includes the destruction of surface-to-air missile systems, and the
destruction or damage of targeted hangars, an official pointed out.
Hospital Struck After
Chemical Attack
Shortly after the regime's
chemical attack, a small, unmanned aerial vehicle -- "either [Syrian]
regime or Russian" -- was seen over the local hospital as victims were
being rushed there for care, an official said.
"About five hours later,
the UAV returned and the hospital was struck by additional munitions," an
official said.
The official pointed out the
site is clearly a hospital. The United States is interested in finding out who
would strike that site and why, the official said.
Russian 'Failure' to Control
Syrian Activities
At a minimum, an official
pointed out, the Russians "failed to control the activities of their
Syrian client." Moscow had pledged after a Syrian chemical attack in 2013
that it would guarantee the removal and elimination of Syria's chemical weapons
capabilities.
"We've seen Russian
failure to stop the regime from barrel bomb campaigns and campaigns against
innocent civilians, especially in Aleppo, but really across the opposition held
areas in the country," the official said.
The official noted the United
States is assessing all the information and could not "clearly say here in
this forum what kind of participation the Russians might have had" in the
chemical attack or associated activities.
Note: The above DoD released battle
damage assessment image is of Shayrat Airfield, Syria, following U.S. missile
strikes delivered by the USS Ross and USS Porter Arleigh Burke-class
guided-missile destroyers on April 6, 2017. The U.S. fired 59 Tomahawk missiles
into Syria in retaliation for Syrian President Bashar Assad regime’s use of
nerve agents to attack his own people.
You can click on the above to
enlarge.
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