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U.N. official: There are strong suspicions Syrian rebels used sarin gas
>From   Frederik Pleitgen.    Sara Sidner  and   Hada Messia  CNN
May 6, 2013 -- Updated 1144 GMT (1944 HKT) CNN.com 
U.N. official: There are strong suspicions Syrian rebels used sarin gas
Damascus, Syria (CNN) -- A U.N. official says there are 
strong suspicions that Syrian rebel forces have used the deadly nerve 
agent sarin gas in the country's civil war.
Carla Del Ponte told an 
Italian-Swiss TV station that the findings come after interviews with 
doctors and Syrian victims now in neighboring countries.
Del Ponte, the 
commissioner of the U.N. Independent International Commission of Inquiry for 
Syria, said the notion isn't surprising, given the infiltration of 
foreign fighters into the Syrian opposition.
But rebel Free Syrian Army spokesman Louay Almokdad said rebels don't even have 
unconventional weapons, nor do they want any.
"In any case, we don't have the 
mechanism to launch these kinds of weapons, which would need missiles 
that can carry chemical warheads, and we in the FSA do not possess these kind 
of capabilities," Almokdad said. 
Will Israel, Syria go to war? 
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Did Israel conduct airstrike on Syria?
"More importantly, we do not aspire to have (chemical weapons) because we view 
our battle with the regime 
as a battle for the establishment of a free democratic state. ... We 
want to build a free democratic state that recognizes and abides by all 
international accords and agreements -- and chemical and biological 
warfare is something forbidden legally and internationally."
The claim of rebels using sarin gas comes after months of suspicions that the 
Syrian regime has used the 
same nerve agent against rebels.
In April, the head of Israeli 
military's intelligence research said the Syrian government is using 
chemical weapons against rebel forces.
"In all likelihood they used sarin gas," Brig. Gen. Itai Brun said.
The Free Syrian Army's chief of 
staff has also said the Syrian regime has used sarin in cities such as 
Homs, Aleppo and Otaiba, outside Damascus.
"We took some samples of the soil 
and of blood. The injured people were observed by doctors, and the 
samples were tested, and it was very clear that the regime used chemical 
weapons," Gen. Salim Idriss told CNN's Christiane Amanpour last month.
Sarin gas can be hard to detect 
because is colorless, odorless and tasteless. But it can cause severe 
injuries to those exposed to it, including blurred vision, convulsions, 
paralysis and death.
Why the use of sarin gas is hard to prove 
Heightened tensions among Syria, Iran and Israel 
Syria claimed Israeli missiles struck three military facilities Sunday, causing 
an unspecified number of deaths and injuries.
Israel has not confirmed or denied that it fired rockets that hit a military 
research center in the Damascus suburbs Sunday.
But Syria says it was the second 
Israeli airstrike in three days, and Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal al 
Mekdad told CNN the attack was a declaration of war by Israel.
The airstrikes have riled Syria's allies in the region: Iran and the Lebanese 
militant group Hezbollah.
Syrian ally Iran will "stand by 
Syria, and if there is need for training, we will provide them with 
necessary training," Brig. Gen. Ahmad-Reza Pourdastan, commander of the 
Iranian Army's Ground Forces, told reporters Sunday.
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman 
Ramin Mehmanparast said he had no doubt Syria and its allies will "give a 
crushing response to the aggressions of the Zionists," the state-run IRNA news 
agency reported.
Russia also weighed in Monday, with a Foreign Ministry spokesman calling the 
reports of Israeli strikes "very worrying."
"Any intensification of military 
confrontation greatly increases the risks of creating hotbeds of tension aside 
from Syria, in Lebanon, and also destabilizing the 
Israeli-Lebanese border, which has so far remained relatively calm," 
ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said Monday.
The Foreign Ministry also called on world powers to stop politicizing the issue 
of chemical weapons in 
Syria and to halt "the stirring up of an anti-Syrian atmosphere."
Why Syria matters 
The Syrian civil war has pitted 
rebel fighters against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad, whose 
family has ruled the country for four decades. More than 70,000 people, 
mostly civilians, have been killed in the bitter conflict during the 
past two years.
Syria matters to Iran because it is believed to be the main conduit to the 
Shiite militia Hezbollah in 
Lebanon, the proxy through which Iran can threaten Israel with an 
arsenal of short-range missiles.
In 2009, the top U.S. diplomat in 
Damascus disclosed that Syria had begun delivery of ballistic missiles 
to Hezbollah, according to official cables leaked to and published by 
WikiLeaks.
The last thing Iran wants is a 
Sunni-dominated Syria -- especially as the Syrian rebels' main 
supporters are Iran's Persian Gulf rivals: Qatar and Saudi Arabia.
Hezbollah's feared scenario is Israel on one side and a hostile Sunni-led Syria 
on the other.
'We are watching everything' 
Sunday's reported attack comes days after U.S. officials told CNN that they 
believed Israel had conducted 
an airstrike against Syria on Thursday or Friday.
The Israeli military did not comment on the U.S. claim either.
But Israel has long said it would target any transfer of weapons to Hezbollah 
or other terrorist groups.
"We are watching everything when it comes to the movement of these types of 
weapons. We have the means to 
do that," a senior Israeli defense official told CNN's Sara Sidner on 
Sunday. The official is not authorized to speak to the media.
Shaul Mofaz, a lawmaker in Israel's Knesset, told Israeli Army Radio on Sunday 
that Israel isn't meddling 
with Syria's civil war. But Israel must protect itself from Lebanese 
militants, he said.
"For Israel, it is very important that the front group for Iran, which is in 
Lebanon, needs to be stopped," Mofaz said.
Hezbollah did not immediately comment after Sunday's claims.
'Everything kept exploding' 
Syria said Sunday's attack targeted the Jamraya research center in the Damascus 
suburbs. But state media 
reports did not provide details about what type of research occurs in 
the facility, or how much damage occurred.
"Until now, the details are not 
clear on what happened," al Mekdad told CNN. "Did they fire missiles? 
... It is not clear for me, because I don't know how it happened, and of course 
it is worrying, but Israel will suffer the same."
The blasts rocked a large military 
area in the suburbs of Syria's capital, prompting terrified residents 
nearby to run for cover.
"Everything kept exploding over and over again," said Anna Deeb, whose family 
lives just over a mile away. 
"We could hear gunshots, we could hear people screaming. ... We didn't 
know what to do, and there was a problem with us breathing because the 
smoke was too much."
In January, Syrian authorities said Israeli warplanes killed two workers and 
injured five others when they 
struck the same research facility that officials said was targeted on 
Sunday.
A U.S. official told CNN at the time that the Syrian claims were false.
CNN's Frederik Pleitgen reported 
from Damascus; Sara Sidner reported from Jerusalem; and Hada Messia 
reported from Rome. CNN's Schams Elwazer, Tim Lister, Holly Yan, Samira 
Said and Tracy Doueiry contributed to this report.
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© 2013 Cable News Network.   Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.  All Rights 
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