Last September, the Syrian Foreign Ministry spokesman, Jihad Makdissi, declared the regime would only use chemical weapons in the case of an 鈥渆xternal aggression.鈥 (Since then Mr. Makdissi has fled the country). The declaration was noteworthy because it was the regime鈥檚 first acknowledgment that it possesses chemical weapons stockpiles 鈥 but also because it offered some reassurance that Assad had his own 鈥渞ed line鈥 about using his stockpiled sarin and mustard gas against Syrians.
But some skeptics of the regime鈥檚 intentions say it鈥檚 worth keeping in mind that Assad, who seems to have had no qualms about raining down Scud missiles and explosives from helicopters and bombers onto Syrian neighborhoods, has also made a point of describing the rebels fighting him as 鈥渢errorists,鈥 and in some cases as terrorists who have come from outside Syria to fight.
As evidence of the August attacks spread around the world, Syrian officials followed the regime鈥檚 established pattern: It was 鈥渋llogical鈥 to think the government would attack the Damascus suburbs with chemical weapons, they said, but they also repeated the regime鈥檚 characterization of its opponents as 鈥渢errorists.鈥
George Lopez, a former UN sanctions expert now at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind., says that not only does Assad insist that the uprising is coming from 鈥渇oreign terrorists,鈥 but US and other experts now agree that foreign extremists are increasingly involved in the fighting.
Put those factors together, he says, and one can see how Assad鈥檚 鈥渟ick logic鈥 would 鈥渆xcuse and explain鈥 the use of chemical weapons.
After the March attacks Professor Lopez echoed those who said Assad might have launched a small-scale chemical weapons attack as a test for something bigger, adding, 鈥淲e should be very, very worried.鈥 The August attacks might be the kind of thing he was warning about.