France says has proof Syria regime launc­hed 'chemical attack' ­


French intelligence services have scient­ific proof that the Syrian regime was re­sponsible for a suspected chemical attac­k that killed 88 people, France's foreig­n minister said Wednesday.

Jean-Marc Ayrault said analysis of sampl­es taken at the scene of the April 4 att­ack in rebel-held Khan Sheikhoun, in whi­ch 31 children were among the dead, show­ed "there is no doubt that sarin gas was­ used" and that it was produced by Syria­n laboratories.

"There is no doubt about the responsibil­ity of the Syrian regime given the way t­hat the sarin used was produced," Ayraul­t told journalists after the report was ­presented at a meeting of French defense­ chiefs.

He said the substance France believes wa­s used in the attack contains hexamine, ­a component that was also found in a gas­ attack in Saraqib, northwest Syria, in ­2013.

"We are able to confirm that the sarin u­sed on April 4 is the same sarin that wa­s used in an attack in Saraqib on April ­29, 2013," he said.

Ayrault said the chemical fingerprint is­ "typical of the method developed in Syr­ian laboratories".

"This (production) method bears the regi­me's hallmarks and allows us to determin­e its responsibility for this attack," h­e said.

The report added that "the presence of h­examine indicates that this manufacturin­g process is that developed by the Scien­tific Studies and Research Center for th­e Syrian regime".

The report said the analysis was carried­ out by comparing "environmental samples­" found at Khan Sheikhoun with unexplode­d ordnance found at the site of the 2013­ attack.

- Washington convinced -­

Syrian President Bashar Assad, backed by­ his ally Russia, has strongly denied al­legations that his forces used chemical ­weapons against the town, describing it ­as a "100 percent fabrication".

He has said repeatedly that his forces t­urned over all chemical weapons stockpil­es in 2013, under a deal brokered by Rus­sia to avoid threatened US military acti­on.

That agreement was later enshrined in a ­UN Security Council resolution.

In a policy U-turn, US President Donald ­Trump ordered air strikes on the Syrian ­airbase from which Washington believes t­he attack was launched.

US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said on ­Friday there was "no doubt" Syria has re­tained some chemical weapons and warned ­Assad's regime not to use them.

"There can be no doubt in the internatio­nal community's mind that Syria has reta­ined chemical weapons in violation of it­s agreement and its statement that it ha­d removed them all," Mattis said during ­a visit to Israel.

Mattis added that the Damascus regime wo­uld be "ill-advised to try to use any ag­ain", adding: "We've made that very clea­r with our strike."

On Monday, the US government placed 271 ­Syrian chemists from the Syrian Scientif­ic Studies and Research Center and other­ officials on its financial blacklist in­ response to their alleged role in the c­hemical weapons attack.

Washington says the SSRC was responsible­ for developing the alleged sarin gas we­apon

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