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Reuters
Makini Brice, Guy Faulconbridge and Vladimir Soldatkin
22 mins ago
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Trump says Syria attack "could be very soon or not so soon at all"
00:04 01:48 i CC SD
Fears of confrontation between Russia and the West have been running high since Trump
said on Wednesday that missiles "will be coming" after the suspected chemical weapons
assault in the Syrian town of Douma on April 7, and lambasted Moscow for standing by
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
"Never said when an attack on Syria would take place. Could be very soon or not so soon at
all!" the U.S. president said in his latest early morning tweet on Thursday.
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French President Emmanuel Macron said France
has proof the Syrian government carried out the
attack, which aid groups have said killed dozens of
people, and will decide whether to strike back
when all the necessary information has been
gathered.
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Prime Minister Theresa May prepared to convene a special cabinet meeting at 1430 GMT to
weigh whether Britain should join the United States and France in a possible military action.
May recalled ministers from their Easter holiday to debate action over what she has cast as
a barbaric poison gas attack in Douma, then rebel-held, just east of the capital Damascus.
There were signs, though, of a global effort to head off a direct confrontation between
Russia and the West. The Kremlin said a crisis communications link with the United States,
created to avoid an accidental clash over Syria, was in use.
"The situation in Syria is horrific, the use of chemical weapons is something the world has to
prevent," Britain's Brexit minister David Davis said.
"But also it's a very, very delicate circumstance and we've got to make this judgment on a
very careful, very deliberate, very well thought-through basis."
There was no direct word from Russian President Vladimir Putin on the crisis, though he
discussed the situation with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan by phone on Thursday,
Interfax news agency said.
The Russian Foreign Ministry said Moscow sought no escalation of the situation, but that it
could not support "dishonest accusations" and it had found no evidence of a chemical
weapons attack in Douma.
© Carlos Barria/Reuters
NAVAL MANOEUVRES
Syria's military has repositioned some air assets to avoid missile strikes, U.S. officials told
Reuters. Locating them alongside Russian military hardware might make Washington
reluctant to hit them.
Russian ships had left the Tartus naval base in Syria, Interfax news agency quoted a Russian
lawmaker as saying. Vladimir Shamanov, who chairs the defense committee of the lower
house, said the vessels had departed the Mediterranean base for their own safety, which
was "normal practice" when there were threats of attack.
For its part, the Russian military said it had observed movements of U.S. Navy forces in the
Gulf. Any U.S. strike would probably involve the navy, given the risk to aircraft from Russian
and Syrian air defenses. A U.S. guided-missile destroyer, the USS Donald Cook, is in the
Mediterranean.
Russia, Assad's most important ally in his seven-year-old war with rebels, said it had
deployed military police in Douma on Thursday after the town was taken over by
government forces.
"They are the guarantors of law and order in the town," RIA news agency quoted Russia's
defense ministry as saying.
Assad said any Western action "will contribute nothing but an increase in instability in the
region, threatening international peace and security," Syrian state TV reported.
The Syrian conflict has increasingly widened the rifts between Moscow, Washington and
European powers and inflamed the bitter rivalries that run across the Middle East.
Syria, Russia and Iran say reports of the attack were fabricated by rebels and rescue workers
in Douma and have accused the United States of seeking to use it as a pretext to attack the
government.
Nervous world stock markets showed signs of recovery after Trump signaled military strikes
might not be imminent.
ISRAELI AIR STRIKE
Syria and its allies Russia and Iran say Israel was behind an air strike on a Syrian air base on
Monday that killed seven Iranian military personnel, something Israel has neither confirmed
nor denied.
Russia's Putin spoke to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu by phone on Wednesday
and urged him to do nothing to destabilize Syria. Netanyahu's office said: "The prime
minister reiterated that Israel will not allow Iran to establish a military presence in Syria."
Ali Akbar Velayati, a top adviser to Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, said the Western
threats were "based on lies" about the poison gas assault, after meeting Assad. He said later
he hoped Syria's army and its allies would drive U.S. troops out of eastern Syria, and take
Idlib in the northwest from rebels.
May has ordered British submarines to move within missile range of Syria in readiness for
strikes against the Syrian military that could begin as early as Thursday night, London's
Daily Telegraph newspaper said on Wednesday.
The BBC reported that May was ready to give the go-ahead for Britain to take part in
military action. She would not seek approval from parliament, the BBC said.
Opposition
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said parliament must be consulted.
Parliament voted down British military action against Assad's government in 2013 in an
embarrassment for May's predecessor, David Cameron. That then deterred the U.S.
administration of Barack Obama from similar action.
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