Al-Assad: We didn't agree because of threat
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- U.N. Security Council trying to get resolution on eliminating Syria's chemical weapons
- Officials says Russia would help destroy weapons as part of an international coalition
- U.N. inspectors will follow up on more allegations of chemical weapons use in Syria
- Russia slams a U.N. report on chemical weapons use, calling it "distorted"
Shoigu's comments at the
Valdai forum in Russia's Novgorod region -- an annual meeting where
experts, pundits and diplomatic personnel gather for discussions with
senior Russian officials -- come as United Nations Security Council
members are trying to hammer out a resolution to get Syria to give up
its chemical weapons.
Russia and the United
States earlier agreed on a plan to eliminate Syria's chemical weapons
stockpile, but the exact makeup of the teams that would participate
wasn't immediately known.
Security Council members met Wednesday on the resolution; it wasn't clear Wednesday night how much progress they'd made.
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The plan came after an
August 21 chemical weapons attack outside Damascus. Western countries
have claimed that evidence -- including a Monday U.N. report that
confirmed chemical weapons were used -- indicates that the Syrian
government launched the attack against rebels. But Syria says
anti-regime forces used the weapons, and Russia has not accepted the
West's conclusions about who used them.
Syria agreed to the
Russia-U.S. plan, and U.S. President Barack Obama has held back on
possible military action while diplomatic options play out.
But reaching a final deal
at the U.N. will be tough. U.S. and French officials want to include
the threat of military action in the event Syria doesn't comply, but
Russian officials don't want any wording that could countenance the use
of force.
"The threat of using
force is far from being the way to solve all international problems,"
Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday at the Valdai forum,
adding that the U.S. Congress should be going through the U.N. Security
Council rather than debating the use of force against Syria.
He said Western military
intervention hasn't worked elsewhere, citing Libya. "Good motives, good
intentions, led to these military interventions in Libya," Putin said.
"But did it bring about democracy? The country has been divided up into
countries like tribes fighting each other."
Syria's al-Assad says he welcomes return of U.N. inspectors
Meanwhile, Syria's president says he'll welcome the return of U.N. investigators to follow up on more allegations of chemical weapons use in his country.
"We've been asking them
to come back to Syria to continue their investigations," President
Bashar al-Assad told Fox News in an interview broadcast Wednesday.
Al-Assad said he hadn't
had time yet to analyze the U.N. investigators' findings so far, but he
stressed that they have more work to do.
"They haven't finished
it yet," he said, adding that it's clear that rebels, not his
government, were behind chemical weapons attacks.
Ake Sellstrom, the head
of the inspection team that visited after the August 21 attack, told CNN
that the next visit could take place as early as next week.
While some Western
countries say Monday's U.N. findings implicated the Syrian regime in
using sarin gas, Russia has fired back, calling the report "distorted."
Putin on Thursday
stressed the point that the August 21 chemical weapons attack could have
been a provocation by Syrian rebels. He said that materiel had been
taken from the Syrian army.
Deputy Foreign Minister
Sergey Ryabkov also told Russia Today that the report was built on
insufficient information. He said Russia has its own evidence from the
site of the August 21 attack that, according to U.S. estimates, killed
more than 1,400 people.
In the same interview,
he said Syria has given Russia evidence that implicates rebels in the
attack, and that Russia is studying the evidence.
Russia has been a strong ally of al-Assad's regime, and Russian defense contracts with Syria have probably exceeded $4 billion.
The United Nations
official in charge of weapons inspectors said the report alleging
chemical weapons use in Syria "stands for itself," shooting back at
Russian allegations that the report was "biased" and "distorted."
"It is a very sound,
scientific report," Angela Kane, the U.N. high representative for
disarmament affairs, told CNN's Christiane Amanpour on Wednesday.
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