"We have moved assets in place to be able to fulfil and comply with whatever
option the president wishes to take," Mr Hagel said. The White House said the US would release intelligence on last week's
suspected attack in the next few days.
A good number of Syrians, in particular those supporting the regime, believe
the visit of the UN chemical weapons investigation team is nothing but a move to
justify a military attack on Syria. The opposition, however, thinks that these
visits will lead to some evidence being unearthed, proving that chemical weapons
have been used against civilians by the Syrian regime.
Above all, fear and discomfort are palpable among those living in the
capital. People are haunted by the possibility of a Western military strike on
Syria, discussion of which is dominating the headlines of satellite
channels.
"I don't want Syria to become another Iraq... Enough bloodshed," cried one
Syrian woman.
"We, and thousands like us across Syria, will face any country that tries to
attack us," threatened a young man, pointing at his weapon, which he uses to
protect his neighbourhood. "These are Syria's problems and it is up to us,
Syrians, to solve them."
The crisis follows last Wednesday's suspected chemical
attack near the Syrian capital, Damascus, which reportedly killed more than 300
people.
US Vice President Joe Biden said there was "no doubt who was responsible for
this heinous use of chemical weapons in Syria: The Syrian regime".
In a speech to a veterans' group in Houston, Mr Biden said that "those who
use chemical weapons against defenceless men, women, and children... must be
held accountable".
French President Francois Hollande said France was "ready to punish" whoever
was behind the attack, and had decided to increase military support for Syria's
main opposition. Diplomatic correspondent James Robbins says the US, UK and France will
now have the larger task of building as wide a coalition as possible to support
limited military action.
Meanwhile the Arab League said it held Syrian President Bashar al-Assad
responsible for the attacks and called for UN action. Syrian opposition sources have said they have been told to expect a Western
intervention in the conflict imminently.
"There is no precise timing... but one can speak of an imminent international
intervention against the regime. It's a question of days and not weeks," AFP
news agency quoted Syrian National Coalition official Ahmad Ramadan as
saying.
"There have been meetings between the Coalition, the [rebel] Free Syrian Army
and allied countries during which possible targets have been discussed."
Russia and China, allies of the Syrian government, have
stepped up their warnings against military intervention, with Moscow saying any
such action would have "catastrophic consequences" for the region.
Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem has said he rejects "utterly and
completely" claims that Syrian forces used chemical weapons, and his government
has blamed rebel fighters. On Monday, United Nations weapons inspectors were fired on while
investigating one of the five alleged chemical weapons attack sites around
Damascus.Mr Hagel said the US Department of Defense had provided President Obama with "all options for all contingencies". "He has seen them, we are prepared. We are ready to go."
US weapons inspectors spent three hours in Muadhamia Damascus searching and questioning residents
Inspectors toured hospitals to speak to survivors of chemical attack and question doctors
Inspectors questioned residents of Muadhamia
Mr Hagel said that intelligence currently being gathered by the UN inspectors would confirm that the Syrian government was responsible for the chemical attack last week.
"I think it's pretty clear that chemical weapons were used against people in Syria," he said.
Mr Hagel left little doubt that he believed the Assad government was responsible, and was ready to execute the orders of his commander-in-chief.
White House spokesman Jay Carney later said that a
separate report on chemical weapons use being compiled by the US intelligence
community would be published this week. Mr Carney said that Mr Obama had a variety of options and was not limited to
the use of force, adding that it was not Washington's intention to remove Mr
Assad.
Meanwhile, warnings have been issued on sites linked to Islamist militants fighting for the rebels in Syria, saying that their leaders and training camps might also be targeted by a possible US-led attack.
Several online sites linked to the Nusra Front and similar groups have advised militants not to hold meetings or gather in large numbers, and to change routines and locations, he says.
Western powers have made clear their distrust and dislike of groups like the Nusra Front, which have spearheaded rebel victories, although there has been no indication from the US or anyone else that jihadists would be targeted, he adds.
The UN says more than 100,000 people have been killed since the uprising against President Assad began more than two years ago. The conflict has produced more than 1.7 million registered refugees.
Earlier on Tuesday, a Russian transport plane landed in the Syrian city of Latakia with a cargo of humanitarian aid. The aircraft later left with dozens of Russian citizens on board, an official spokeswoman for the Russian Emergencies Ministry, Irina Rossius, told Russian news agencies.
The flight was intended to evacuate Russians who wanted to leave Syria, she added.
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