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Dismantling Syria chemical weapons arsenal would be tough task

A Free Syrian Army fighter sets up a homemade rocket to be launched towards forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad based in the Kwers military airport in Aleppo September 9, 2013. REUTERS/Loubna Mrie

By Phil Stewart WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Any deal with Syria to hand over its chemical weapons in the middle of a chaotic civil war would be difficult for inspectors to enforce and destroying them would likely take years, U.S. officials and experts caution. Syria's strongest backer, Russia, proposed on Monday that Damascus save itself from a U.S. military strike over its alleged use of chemical weapons by putting its stockpiles under international control. The proposal was welcomed by Syria and seized upon by the secretary-general of the United Nations. U.S. President Barack Obama said the offer was a potential breakthrough but had to be handled with skepticism. Syria has never signed a global treaty banning the storage of chemical weapons and is believed to have large stocks of sarin, mustard gas and VX nerve agents. The actual use of chemical weapons is banned by a 1925 treaty to which Damascus is a signatory. Accounting for Syria's chemical arms cache - believed to be spread over dozens of locations - would be difficult, as would be shielding arms inspectors from violence. "This is a nice idea but tough to achieve," said one U.S. official speaking on condition of anonymity. "You're in the middle of a brutal civil war where the Syrian regime is massacring its own people. Does anyone think they're going to suddenly stop the killing to allow inspectors to secure and destroy all the chemical weapons?" the official said. Amy Smithson, an expert on nuclear, biological and chemical weapons at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies in Washington, said a lack of hard data on Syria's chemical weapons inventory would complicate verification. She pointed to years of cat-and-mouse maneuvering between U.N. weapons inspectors and then-president Saddam Hussein in neighboring Iraq as an example of what could happen in Syria. "The Iraqis lied through their teeth. They did everything they could to hide these ultra-secret weapons programs," Smithson said. "Libya also did not come completely clean when it forfeited their weapons of mass destruction program." CHEMICAL WEAPONS MOVED AROUND Syria's Scientific Studies and Research Center, oversees chemical weapons facilities in Dumayr, Khan Abou, Shamat, and Firaqlus, according to the U.S. Center for Strategic and International Studies. Brigadier General Mustafa al-Sheikh, a Syrian army defector, told Reuters this summer that most of the chemical weapons have been transported to Alawite areas in Latakia and near the coast. Some chemical munitions remain in bases around Damascus, he said. The United States has been watching Syria move around its chemical weapons since last year. General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the U.S. military's Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Congress last week he thinks Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces are doing that to keep them secure. But the Syrian government's motives are unclear and U.S. officials privately acknowledge those movements complicate identification of chemical weapons sites. "While Assad controls the chemical stockpiles, they've been moved over time," a second U.S. official said, also speaking on condition he not be named. "Security and relocation of those weapons with a very fluid situation on the ground with the opposition forces (fighting) could pose challenges." Experts say it would take months to locate and secure Syria's chemical weapons and years to destroy them - and there is always the possibility some are left over. "You're always going to have the problem of the bomb in the basement," said Joseph Cirincione of the Ploughshares Fund group, which opposes the spread of nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. "It's possible that the regime would hold some back that you wouldn't know about … But there's ways of getting at that," he added, pointing to past efforts to cross-check stockpiles against production records. For Obama, who is waging an uphill battle to win domestic support for military action, a U.N. deal could prevent a potentially devastating defeat in Congress. But even as he described Russia's proposal as potentially positive in a NBC television interview, Obama said: "I think you have to take it with a grain of salt initially." (Additional reporting by Anthony Deutsch; Editing by Alistair Bell and Lisa Shumaker)