DAMASCUS, (PNA/Xinhua) — Syrian President Bashar al-Assad stressed commitment to the chemical weapon treaty as part of a broader deal between Russia and the United States to dismantle Syria’s chemical arsenal, media reported Thursday.
In an interview with Fox News, Assad reiterated abidance by the chemical weapon treaty, which his administration joined last week, in terms of its conditions that prohibit manufacturing, stockpiling and distributing chemical weapons.
He said according to the estimates he received, destroying the stockpiles would cost 1 billion U.S. dollars and would take roughly a year.
Also, he noted that Damascus’ abidance by the treaty had nothing to do with the threats of the U.S. administration.
Damascus rejected Washington’s accusation that the government troops gassed civilians with nerve agents during an attack on Aug. 21 near the capital Damascus; rather, it pointed the finger at the rebels and said it has evidence that could incriminate them.
On Wednesday, after talks with Syrian officials, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov said he had received “additional evidence” from the Syrian government on the rebels’ use of chemical gas near Damascus.
Moreover, Russian diplomats may present the new evidence at a UN Security Council meeting on Thursday.