Secretary of State John Kerry, whose call to action kicked off the administration’s campaign for U.S. intervention in Syria after a horrific chemical attack, laid out the case for a diplomatic solution ahead of next week’s United Nations summit.
“The [U.N.] Security Council must be prepared to act next week,” Kerry said Thursday in the State Department briefing room. “It is vital for the international community to stand up, speak out, in the strongest possible terms on the enforcement of action to rid the world of chemical weapons.”
He called on members to embrace a plan brokered by Russia to cede Syria’s chemical weapons to international control. Hours earlier, Russian President Vladimir Putin publicly expressed doubt over whether the plan would work.
Kerry also defended the findings of a recent U.N. report that pointed to the use of sarin gas via surface-to-surface rockets on Aug. 21. That attack, which American intelligence confirmed was perpetrated by the Assad regime, killed nearly 1,500 people, including more than 400 children. Though the Russian and Syrian governments maintain that the attack was the work of anti-government rebel forces, Kerry said the U.N. investigation, with its environmental samples and eyewitness testimony, corroborated U.S. intelligence.









