ID | 130372 |
Title Proper | Syria steps up removal of chemicals |
Language | ENG |
Author | Horner, Daniel |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Syria has picked up the pace in removing its chemical weapons materials for overseas destruction and has sent about half of its stockpile out of the country, according to figures in a March 20 press release from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW). Syria had been under broad international pressure to speed up the effort. By the end of February, it had made four shipments, removing about 5 percent of its so-called Priority 1 chemicals and about 20 percent of the Priority 2 chemicals. Citing those figures, Robert Mikulak, the U.S. ambassador to the OPCW, had accused Syria of "continu[ing] to drag its feet." (See ACT, March 2014.) Under a schedule set last November by the OPCW Executive Council, the Priority 1 materials were supposed to leave the country by Dec. 31. All other materials that are part of the overseas destruction program were to leave by Feb. 5. The rest of the approximately 1,300 metric tons of chemical agents that Syria declared is to be destroyed within the country. The removal dates were set with an eye to a June 30 deadline for destruction of the chemical agents, which was established last September by the Executive Council and the UN Security Council. (See ACT, October 2013.) |
`In' analytical Note | Arms Control Today Vol.44, No.3; April 2014: p.41-42 |
Journal Source | Arms Control Today Vol.44, No.3; April 2014: p.41-42 |
Key Words | United Kingdom - UK ; NATO ; European Union - EU ; Syria ; Syrian Weapons ; Chemical and Biological Weapons - CBW ; Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons - OPCW ; United Nations - UN ; United States - US ; Foreign Policy ; Weapons Policy ; Disarmament ; Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty - NPT ; Destruction of Weapons ; Chemical Weapons ; Arms Control |