US report says 'high confidence' Syrian forces used chemical weapons multiple times

US report says 'high confidence' Syrian forces used chemical weapons multiple times

WASHINGTON - Reuters
US report says high confidence Syrian forces used chemical weapons multiple times

In this file picture downloaded from the US Navy website, taken on Feb. 26 the guided-missile destroyer USS Barry (DDG 52), foreground pulls into formation with the French Marine Nationale during Exercise Proud Manta 2013 in the Ionian Sea. U.S. destroyers, including the USS Barry, are currently deployed in the Mediterranean as part of a range of 'options' for U.S. president if he chooses to launch a military action against Syria. AFP photo / US NAVY photo

A U.S. intelligence report disclosed on Aug. 30 that there was "high confidence" that Syrian forces had used chemical weapons multiple times in the last year, including the Aug. 21 attack outside Damascus.

The report said that 1,429 people were killed in the chemical weapons attack, including at least 426 children. 

U.S. President Barack Obama is using the report to make the case for retaliation against the Syrian government.

The report, based partly on intercepted communications, stressed U.S. authorities have a high degree of confidence that the Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad was responsible, which it said is the strongest position the U.S. intelligence community can take short of confirmation.

A central piece of intelligence included a communication that was intercepted from "a senior official intimately familiar with the attack," who confirmed that chemical weapons had been used by the government on Aug. 21 and was "concerned with the U.N. inspectors obtaining evidence" about it.

The report said a nerve agent was used in the attack, which took place in the Damascus suburbs and was aimed at ridding the area of those trying to topple the al-Assad government.

The death toll given by the report was the first precise number and far larger than previously estimated. A senior administration official who briefed reporters said the number could rise.

The report said the conclusion was based on human, signals and satellite intelligence as well as a significant body of public material, such as amateur videos.

The report said three hospitals in the Damascus area received some 3,600 patients showing symptoms consistent with nerve agents in less than three hours on the morning of Aug. 21.

Rejecting claims by the Syrian government that the Syrian opposition conducted the attack, the report said the rebels had no capability to fabricate all of the videos and the physical symptoms verified by medical personnel.