A war of words erupted Sunday over Syria as Washington said it is 
ready to take action over chemical weapons attacks and Tehran warned US 
intervention would carry “harsh consequences”.
Pressure mounted on
 Damascus to allow a UN probe of chemical attacks, with French President
 Francois Hollande saying evidence indicated the regime in war-ravaged 
Syria was to blame and Israel demanding action against its neighbour.
The
 Al-Nusra Front, a fierce Al-Qaeda-linked group fighting the regime of 
Bashar al-Assad, vowed revenge against villages of the Syrian 
president’s minority Alawite community.
Doctors Without Borders 
said 355 people died this week of “neurotoxic” symptoms, after Syria’s 
opposition claimed regime forces unleashed chemicals east and southwest 
of Damascus on Wednesday causing more than 1,300 deaths.
If 
confirmed, it would be the deadliest use of chemical agents since late 
Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein gassed Iranian troops and Kurdish rebels 
in the 1980s.
US President Barack Obama said a year ago that the 
use of chemical weapons by Assad’s forces was a “red line” that could 
trigger Western intervention.
On Sunday a strident warning came 
from Washington’s archfoe Iran.
“If the United States crosses this
 red line, there will be harsh consequences for the White House,” armed 
forces deputy chief of staff Massoud Jazayeri said.
His comments 
come a day after Obama held a rare meeting with his top aides and 
discussed Syria by phone with British Prime Minister David Cameron.
Cameron’s
 office said they two leaders agreed the use of chemical weapons would 
“merit a serious response” — echoing French calls.
On Sunday 
Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel said the US military was “prepared to 
exercise whatever option” against Syria but intelligence was still being
 evaluated.
Syria denies it used chemical weapons and has 
reportedly said it will work with UN inspectors who have been on the 
ground for a week to probe three other suspect sites.
“The Syrian 
government will cooperate with the United Nations mission now in Syria 
to create the conditions for a visit to zones where terrorist groups 
have carried out attacks with chemical weapons,” Iranian Foreign 
Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said.
He said Muallem gave him the 
pledge during a phone conversation but there was no independent 
confirmation.
US Secretary of State John Kerry told Muallem this 
week that if Syria has “nothing to hide” it should let the UN experts 
inspect the site before evidence is destroyed.
On a visit to 
Malaysia, Hagel said the US defence department had prepared “options for
 all contingencies” at Obama’s request.
“Again, we are prepared to
 exercise whatever option, if he decides to employ one of those 
options,” he added.
Obama and Cameron “are both gravely concerned 
by… increasing signs that this was a significant chemical weapons attack
 carried out by the Syrian regime against its own people,” the British 
leader’s office said.
Several world leaders have said they believe
 Syria’s regime is behind the chemical attacks and are demanding it 
gives the inspectors unfettered access.
Hollande said there was “a
 body of evidence indicating that the August 21 attack was chemical in 
nature, and that everything led to the belief that the Syrian regime was
 responsible for this unspeakable act”.
UN High Representative for
 Disarmament Affairs Angela Kane was tasked by Secretary General Ban 
Ki-moon with establishing the terms of an inquiry.
Doctors Without
 Borders (MSF) has said about 3,600 patients displaying “neurotoxic 
symptoms” had flooded into three Syrian hospitals on the day of the 
alleged attacks, and 355 of them died.
“Medical staff working in 
these facilities provided detailed information to MSF doctors regarding 
large numbers of patients arriving with symptoms including convulsions, 
excess saliva, pinpoint pupils, blurred vision and respiratory 
distress,” said MSF operations director Bart Janssens.
MSF 
president Mego Terzian told AFP that “scientific” proof is still 
lacking.
“Syrian doctors we work with have no scientific proof. 
They must take hair samples, for example, and send them to a specialist 
laboratory,” to carry out conclusive tests, he said.
In Israel, 
President Shimon Peres called for international efforts to “take out” 
chemical weapons in Syria as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said 
Israel will pull the “trigger” if needed to protect its people.
As
 Syria and its opponents traded accusations on who used chemicals, the 
radical Al-Nusra Front vowed punitive action.
“The Alawite 
villages will pay the price for each chemical rocket that struck our 
people in Damascus,” the group’s leader Abu Mohammed al-Jawlani said in 
an audio message posted online.
More than 100,000 people have been
 killed in Syria since an uprising against Assad’s rule flared in March 
2011, the UN says.
AFP
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