The US
wants to oust the Damascus regime by raising fears overs its chemical weapons
stockpiles, creating a scenario similar to that which led to the invasion of
Iraq, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem said in an interview broadcast
Monday.
"This
issue is an invention of the American administration," Muallem told
Beirut-based Al-Mayadeen TV in excerpts of an interview to be broadcast in full
later Monday.
But
Muallem remained vague on whether President Bashar al-Assad's regime possesses
chemical weapons, despite Damascus acknowledging in July that it has such
stockpiles.
"These
chemical weapons in Syria, if they exist -- and I emphasise if -- how is it
possible that we would use them against our own people? It's a joke," he
said in the interview excerpts of which were broadcast by the staunchly
anti-American and anti-Israeli channel.
"But
this definitely does not mean that Syria has a stockpile of chemical weapons or
that it intends to use these weapons against its own people ... it is a myth
they invented to launch a campaign against Syria like they did in Iraq,"
he said in the interview given on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly
meeting in New York.
A US-led
coalition had invaded Iraq in March 2003, accusing Saddam Hussein of possessing
weapons of mass destruction. No such weapons were ever found.
Damascus
acknowledged for the first time in late July that it possessed chemical
weapons. It threatened to use them if attacked by outside countries, but never
against its own people.
The
admission raised deep concerns among the international community, with the
United States saying Damascus would be making a "tragic mistake" if
it decided to deploy its chemical weapons arsenal.
Rebel
fighters waging an armed insurrection against Assad's regime claimed in July
that the Syrian government had moved some of these weapons to the country's
borders.
US
Defence Secretary Leon Panetta said on Friday that the Syrian regime had moved
some chemical weapons to safeguard the material as it wages war against the
rebels. He said the main storage sites for its arsenal remain secure.
According
to experts, these stocks, which amount to hundreds of tonnes, date back to the
1970s and are the largest in the Middle East.
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