U.S at Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
United States Delegation to the Seventy-Fifth Session of the Executive Council Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
Remarks
Robert
P. Mikulak
U.S. Permanent Representative to the
Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
Meeting of the Organization for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons Executive Committee
The Hague,
Netherlands
March 4,
2014
________________________________________
At the
opening of this Seventy-Fifth Session of the Executive
Council, Mr. Chairman, I would like to assure you of the
continued support of my Delegation to the OPCW. We look
forward to your leadership of the Council as we maneuver
through these challenging times.
Mr. Chairman, Mr.
Director-General, Distinguished Delegates,
Over the last
few weeks we all have witnessed two extraordinary meetings
of the Council. On January 30, delegation after delegation
after delegation expressed concern about the slow pace of
removal of chemicals from Syria and called for acceleration
of the CW removal process. Again, on February 21, delegation
after delegation after delegation – nearly the entire
Council, in fact, – repeated and strengthened their
expressions of concern. Now, due to the insistence of
members of the Council that Syria meet its commitments,
there is the possibility that Syria may at last be starting
to take its removal obligations seriously. Syria has now
withdrawn its 100-day removal plan, which was indefensible,
and presented a 65-day removal plan. Although, this is
useful, the Operational Planning Group had earlier
recommended steps that would allow all the chemicals to be
removed in just 37 days. Moreover, the revised Syrian plan
appears vulnerable to quickly expanding back to its original
length since the gains were made by simply shrinking the
original time devoted to packaging the chemicals at each
site. There are few or no gains made by other means, for
example consolidating movements into fewer than 24 missions.
The Director-General made it clear that the OPG plan offered
a faster timeline while also addressing Syrian concerns
regarding security and the availability of equipment and
personnel.
The United States believes that Syria should implement and, with the assistance of the Operational Planning Group, accelerate the new Syrian plan immediately to ensure that these deadly chemicals are out of Syria as soon as possible. We look forward to learning the Director-General’s detailed assessment, and the further recommendations of the OPCW.
To any members of this Council who might be flush with optimism over the new Syrian plan, a word of caution is appropriate and necessary. What counts is not a plan on paper, but actual performance on the ground. This Council should resist any temptation to simply assume that the government of Syria will follow through on its new plan to remove chemicals from its territory. Syria’s dismal record of compliance to date with the Council’s removal decisions should belie any such assumption. Now is not the time for complacency, but rather for circumspection and diligent exercise of the oversight responsibilities of this Council.
As it has repeatedly done, after weeks of inaction, Syria has moved chemicals just before an Executive Council session. Perhaps more will be moved while the Council is in session this week. What counts is what happens on a consistent and regular basis going forward. The Council needs to see a systematic, sustained, and accelerated series of movements of chemicals to Latakia for removal.
This Council should consider the acceleration of the new plan to be a test of Syria’s commitment to finally comply with its elimination obligations under Executive Council Decisions and UN Security Council Resolution 2118. Syria should be held to account for the plan it has put forward and directed to work with the Joint Mission to substantially accelerate the timeline for completing removal. It should immediately begin to make substantial and regular deliveries of chemicals, particularly Priority One chemicals, to Latakia. We request that the Director-General provide the Council with a chart showing the aggregate amount of chemicals to be moved each week under the plan so that the Council can monitor Syria’s efforts. Weekly reports on removal actions should be provided to the Council by the Technical Secretariat. This Council should not tolerate any slippage on removal actions or political backsliding by the Syrian government.
Mister Chairman,
As you are well aware,
this Council has held two successive meetings to discuss the
Syria CW situation – on January 30thand February 21st –
without issuing a report, unfortunately, because consensus
could not be achieved. On September 27th, this Council put
politics aside and let itself be guided by the moral compass
of the Chemical Weapons Convention. Every State Party on
this Council has pledged through the Convention’s preamble
“for the sake of all mankind to exclude completely the
possibility of the use of chemical weapons ...” So long as
those chemicals remain in Syria, the possibility of use
remains. For the sake of the Syrian people, let us once
again put politics aside and ensure through the actions of
this Council that the Syrian government completes, with
urgency and dispatch, the removal effort it has begun. To
that honorable end, the report of this session should
unequivocally reflect the Council’s determination and
commitment to closely monitor the government of Syria’s
efforts to implement and accelerate its new removal
plan.
Mister Chairman,
Let us also not forget that
Syria is about to disregard yet another deadline set by this
Council. The date set by this Council for completing
destruction of Syria’s twelve chemical weapons production
facilities is March 15 – two weeks from today. The United
States has made every effort to work with Syria to reach an
understanding on a destruction plan. Syria has refused to
negotiate, and has adamantly clung to its proposal to
inactivate, rather than destroy, these CW production
facilities.
Mister Chairman,
The Convention is clear
with respect to the physical destruction requirement and
this Council should also be clear. Since Syria has failed to
propose destruction methods that meet the Convention’s
requirements, the United States has tabled a draft decision
for this Council’s consideration for addressing Syria’s
inertia and calculated misreading of the Convention. In our
view, a Council decision should have two principal
components:
-- First, with respect to the seven hardened
aircraft shelters, this Council should require that Syria by
March 15 collapse the roofs using precision explosives. The
United States and a number of Council members have carefully
analyzed this approach, and concluded that it would meet the
Convention standard for physical destruction in an expedited
and cost-effective manner that ensures the safety of the
population and the protection of the environment.
-- Second, with respect to the five underground structures, this Council, noting the additional technical challenges they entail, should extend the deadline for destruction but only on the condition that specified measures be undertaken by Syria first to inactivate them and then to physically destroy the entire underground structure.
Mister
Chairman,
The physical destruction of CW production
facilities is a fundamental requirement of the Convention,
and a prudent protection against the retainment or restart
of a chemical weapons program. The seriousness attached to
this requirement by the Council is attested to by the past
practice of completely leveling all such facilities to the
ground. Given the extraordinary circumstances associated
with Syria’s accession to the Convention, it would be
irresponsible for this Council to exhibit the same inertia
and disregard for the Convention as the Syrian government
has on this issue. This Council needs to summon the same
resolve it evinced in December when it categorically
rejected Syria’s request to convert these CW production
facilities to allegedly peaceful uses.
Mister
Chairman,
In closing, let me emphasize that March will be
a critical test for the international effort to eliminate
Syria’s chemical weapons program. Syrian action – or
inaction -- will tell the international community whether
Syria is truly committed to giving up its CW arsenal or
choosing instead to play political games. As the world waits
to see what path Syria takes, this Council, along with its
members, should work to ensure that Syria remains committed
to giving up its chemical weapons. Every step that Syria has
taken has been the result of international monitoring and
prodding, not because of Syria’s moral abhorrence of
chemical weapons. Indeed, less than a month before it
announced its intent to accede to the Chemical Weapons
Convention, Syria on August 21 launched a brutal chemical
attack in the suburbs of Damascus. Let us not be swayed by
any illusions about the nature or good faith of the Assad
regime. Four-and-a-half months after Syria’s accession, we
are here in this Council talking about Syria’s failure to
meet two deadlines on the path that was set before it by
this Council to eliminate the Syrian chemical weapons
program. This Council has an essential role to play in
keeping the pressure on the Syrian government to ensure that
Syria is completely disarmed of its chemical arsenal. Syria
is testing the resolve of this Council to defend its own
decisions – we as a Council should not fail this
test.
Mister Chairman,
As all of us walked into this
room today, we passed the Nobel Prize for Peace awarded to
the OPCW. That prize honors what this Organization has
accomplished and also challenges us to remain a force for
peace in the future. The historic effort in which this
Organization embarked on September 27, 2013, to eliminate
the Syrian chemical weapons program, is not finished; in
fact, the end is regrettably not yet in sight. Let us
continue to remain a force for peace and finish what we have
started. Let us end the silence of this Council and speak
loudly and clearly so that the Assad regime knows that we
will not relent until Syria’s chemical weapons program –
and the threat it poses to peace and security - has been
completely eliminated.
I ask that this statement be considered an official document of this Executive Council session and placed on the OPCW website and external server.
Thank you, Mister Chairman.
ENDS