US: Syria Is Burning Bodies To Hide Proof Of Mass Killings
WASHINGTON (AP) β The United States accused Syria on Monday of executing thousands of imprisoned political opponents and burning their bodies in a crematorium to hide the evidence.
The allegation could test the Trump administrationβs willingness to respond to atrocities, other than chemical weapons attacks, that it blames on President Bashar Assadβs government.
The allegation of mass killings came as President Donald Trump weighs options in Syria, where the U.S. launched cruise missiles on a government air base last month after accusing Assadβs military of killing scores of civilians with a sarin-like nerve agent. Trump on Monday kicked off a week of meetings with Middle East leaders, sitting down with the crown prince of Abu Dhabi a day before he hosts Turkeyβs president. Trump flies to Saudi Arabia later this week.
All are governments that have pressed the United States over six years of civil war in Syria to intervene more forcefully. Trump had backed away from President Barack Obamaβs calls for regime change in the Arab country, with the new presidentβs officials pointedly saying leadership questions should be left to Syriaβs citizens, until his intervention last month. His administration now says Assad cannot bring long-term stability to Syria.
In its latest accusations of Syrian abuses, the State Department said it believed about 50 detainees each day are being hanged at Saydnaya military prison, about 45 minutes north of Damascus. Many of the bodies are then burned in the crematorium βto cover up the extent of mass murders taking place,β said Stuart Jones, the top U.S. diplomat for the Middle East, accusing Assadβs government of sinking βto a new level of depravity.β
The department released commercial satellite photographs showing what it described as a building in the prison complex that was modified to support the crematorium. The photographs, taken over the course of several years, beginning in 2013, do not prove the building is a crematorium, but show construction consistent with such use.
The revelations echoed a February report by Amnesty International that said Syriaβs military police hanged as many as 13,000 people in four years before carting out bodies by the truckload for burial in mass graves.
Although the State Department cast its unusual news conference as an effort to press Assadβs key backers, Russia and Iran, it also underscored Trumpβs lack of a strategy for stopping Syriaβs violence. The war has killed as many as 400,000 people since 2011, contributed to Europeβs worst refugee crisis since World War II and enabled the Islamic State group to emerge as a global terrorism threat.
Trump had been highly critical of Obama for failing to respond to earlier chemical weapons attacks in 2013 after setting a βred lineβ against such usage. After last monthβs attack in northern Syria, Trump said the Syrians crossed βa lot of linesβ for his administration. Beyond authorizing cruise missiles in response, however, he didnβt outline a strategy to eliminate the threat.
White House spokesman Sean Spicer on Monday reiterated the administrationβs line that Syriaβs future βshould be decided by Syrians in a free credibly and transparent process.β But he called such a future βunimaginableβ if Assad is propped up with help from the βseemingly unconditional support from Russia and Iran.β He didnβt outline how such a future might become imaginable.
Russia has shown no inclination to drop its support for Assad. It is now pushing the idea of βde-escalation zonesβ that would be designed to reduce violence, while not challenging Assadβs authority over almost all of Syriaβs major cities.
State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said Secretary of State Rex Tillerson had been βfirm and clearβ in a meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov last week that βRussia holds tremendous influence over Bashar al-Assad.β
A main point of that meeting βwas telling Russia to use its power to rein in the regime,β she said. βSimply put, the killing, the devastation has gone on for far too long in Syria.β
Syrian human rights groups and opposition activists have long reported on mass killings inside Syrian prisons, though not on bodies being burned to cover up evidence.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights corroborated the U.S. accounts of mass killings but said it lacked sufficient information about the crematorium.