UK scientists have found new evidence that poison gas was used last month outside the Syrian capital of Damascus, British Prime Minister David Cameron said today.
In an interview with BBC television today, Cameron said the evidence being examined by experts at England’s Porton Down Laboratory “further shows the use of chemical weapons in that Damascus suburb.”
The BBC’s account of the interview did not make clear whether the British tests had determined who was responsible for the chemical strike, a critical question facing world leaders as they gather in St Petersburg to debate an international response to the August 21 attacks.
Some Western leaders, including President Barack Obama and his chief diplomat, John Kerry, have said there’s no doubt that the gassing was the work of the Syrian government, headed by President Bashar Assad. But US officials have told The Associated Press there are still holes in the case against Assad, and other leaders, including Cameron, have acknowledged lingering uncertainty over who exactly was behind the strike.
Nevertheless, the BBC quoted Cameron as saying that evidence of the Assad Government’s culpability was “growing all the time.”
A spokesman for Cameron’s office said the evidence referred to by the Prime Minister in his interview consisted of clothing from one of the reported victims and some soil taken from the area. Both samples tested positive for the deadly nerve gas sarin, he said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to be quoted by name.
Kerry said on Sunday that Washington has evidence of sarin gas use.
Cameron declined to comment on how or when the evidence made its way to Britain, citing security concerns.
Porton Down, where the samples are being examined, has a nearly 100-year-old history of chemical weapons research. The lab, roughly 135 km west of London, was established in World War I as the centre of Britain’s chemical warfare programme, and tests on a variety of chemical and biological agents continued there in World War II and throughout the Cold War.