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The United States, on 13 April, blamed the Syrian government for a deadly chemical weapons attack this month and slammed Russia for failing to stop its ally, President Bashar al-Assad, as US President Donald Trump appeared to weigh a forceful military response.
Trump is pressing for a more aggressive strike on Syria than US military chiefs have recommended as he adopts a tougher stance toward Russian President Vladimir Putin, US officials told Reuters.
US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis has been urging caution in meetings, trying to avoid a strike that would trigger a broader conflict, two US officials said.
"We have a very high confidence that Syria was responsible and, once again, Russia's failure to stop them and their continued (lack of action) on this front has been part of the problem," White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said.
US intelligence shows a Russian claim that the attack was false, Sanders said. "Our intelligence tells us otherwise. I can't go beyond that," Sanders told reporters.
Trump warned on 11 April that missiles "will be coming" in response to the Douma incident. Russia has told the United States and its allies not to carry out any military strike.
Chemical weapons experts for the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) arrived in Syria to investigate the suspected poison gas attack.
The investigators, who are mandated to determine only if chemical weapons were used and not who used them, were expected to start their investigations into the Douma incident on Saturday, the Netherlands-based organization said.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said earlier that Moscow was in contact with Washington to discuss an atmosphere he described as alarming.
"God forbid anything adventurous will be done in Syria along the lines of the Libyan and Iraqi experience," Lavrov told a news conference, referring to past Western military interventions elsewhere in the region.
Britain's UN Ambassador Karen Pierce, meanwhile, rejected a charge by a Russian defense ministry spokesman that Britain was involved in staging a fake chemical weapons attack in Douma.
"This is grotesque, it is a blatant lie, it is the worst piece of fake news we've yet seen from the Russian propaganda machine," Pierce told reporters.
Assad is supported by Iranian-back fighters as well as the Russian air force and has cemented his control over most of the western, more heavily populated, part of the country.
The capture of Douma from rebels who evacuated this week has clinched a major victory for Assad, crushing what was once a center of the insurgency near Damascus, and underlines his seemingly unassailable position in the war.
The Syria crisis has come as a test not only for Trump, but incoming White House national security adviser John Bolton, a hawk who joined Trump's team this week.
While Trump himself was silent on Syria on Friday, giving no further clues on whether American military action is imminent, US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said Washington estimated that Assad's forces had used chemical weapons at least 50 times during the seven-year-old Syrian conflict.
"Our president has not yet made a decision about possible action in Syria. But should the United States and our allies decide to act in Syria, it will be in defense of a principle on which we all agree," Haley told the UN Security Council.
"All nations and all people will be harmed if we allow Assad to normalize the use of chemical weapons."
Any US strike would probably involve the Navy. A US guided-missile destroyer, the USS Donald Cook, is in the Mediterranean. Last year, the United States carried out strikes from two Navy destroyers against a Syrian air base after another deadly toxic gas attack on a rebel-controlled area.
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