Syria will implement US-Russian chemical weapons deal once it has UN approval
Damascus will commit to a US-Russian plan to eradicate its chemical weapons once it has United Nations approval, Syria's information
https://www.goldengooseshoesit.com/ minister has said, adding that the regime had already begun preparing relevant documents.
The United States and Russia have agreed on a deal that demands action within days and is designed to eradicate Syria's chemical weapons by mid-2014.
The deal averts the possibility of any immediate US military action against president Bashar al-Assad's government, though the US has warned it remains prepared to take action if diplomacy fails. US-Russian deal on SyriaThe deal requires the complete destruction of chemical weapons in Syria by mid-2014.Initial arms inspections in Syria are to be completed by November.Chemical weapons production and mixing equipment must also be destroyed by November.The deal mentions a hybrid approach to destroy weapons in Syria or remove them for destruction outside the country.The US and Russia will work with the UN, OPCW and Syrian parties to achieve the goals.Source: Joint Framework on Destruction of Syrian CW
"Syria is committing itself to whatever comes from the UN," Omran al-Zoubi said. "We accept the Russian plan to get rid of our chemical weapons.
"In fact, we've started preparing our list. We are already documenting our papers and we have
Golden Goose Shoes started to do our job.
"We don't waste time."
Syria will implement the US-Russian deal when it "turns into something more concrete" following a UN Security Council vote, Mr Zoubi said.
"For 40 years Syria has always been trusted once it has committed itself."
Mr Zoubi vowed that war-torn Syria would "absolutely" grant access to weapons inspectors, saying the country "respects and honours what it says".
"We take this agreement very seriously," the minister said.Assad has a week to disclose details of his arsenalThe ambitious plan to dismantle and destroy Syria's chemical arms was thrashed out during three days of talks in Geneva