Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has warned that the US would "pay the price" for any strike against Syria.
He told US broadcaster PBS that strikes would increase instability and lead to the spread of terrorism in the region.
He said there was "no evidence" that government forces had used chemical weapons against their own people.
Meanwhile, US Secretary of State John Kerry has once again 
warned that taking no action against Mr Assad's regime is riskier than 
launching strikes.
When asked at a news conference whether there was anything Mr
 Assad could do to avoid military action, Mr Kerry replied that he could
 hand over his entire stockpile of chemical weapons within the next 
week.
However, US officials later clarified that Mr Kerry was making a "rhetorical argument" rather than a serious offer.
Mr Kerry has been lobbying hard for military action against Syria during talks with EU and Arab foreign ministers in Europe.
The US Congress is due to debate whether to authorise intervention in Syria.
Politicians will return from their summer recess on Monday to
 start discussing President Barack Obama's resolution to launch a 
"limited, narrow" strike.
A Senate vote on the issue is expected as early as Wednesday,
 although the timetable for Mr Obama's request is less certain in the 
House, where the measure faces an even rockier time.
'Expect everything'
The US accuses Mr Assad's forces of killing 1,429 people in a 
poison-gas attack on 21 August on the outskirts of the capital, 
Damascus.
Mr Assad's government blames the attack on rebels fighting to
 overthrow him in the country's two-and-a-half-year civil war, which has
 claimed some 100,000 lives, according to UN estimates.
In his interview with PBS, the Syrian president said the Middle East was "on the brink of explosion".
"You're going to pay the price if you're not wise with dealing with terrorists. There are going to be repercussions," he said.
"You should expect everything. The government is not the only
 player in this region. You have different parties, different factions, 
different  ideologies. You have everything in this decision now."
Mr Assad did not explain whether his comment was a threat 
that Syrian-backed groups such as Hezbollah would launch retaliation, or
 a warning that strikes would bolster al-Qaeda-linked groups.
Mr Assad calls the rebels "terrorists" and has often insisted that they are linked to al-Qaeda.
In the PBS interview, he once again denied using chemical weapons.
The White House immediately dismissed his statement.
"It doesn't surprise us that someone who would kill thousands
 of his own people, including hundreds of children with poison gas, 
would also lie about it," said spokeswoman Bernadette Meehan.
And UK Foreign Secretary William Hague said the world must not "fall into the trap" of giving Mr Assad any credibility.
'Heavy lift'
The White House has admitted it has no "irrefutable" evidence of Mr Assad's involvement in the August attack.
But a spokesman said on Sunday a "strong common-sense test 
irrespective of the intelligence" suggested his government was 
responsible.
Mr Obama has cleared his schedule this week to focus all his attention on building support for the Syrian intervention.
He has acknowledged he faces a "heavy lift" to win congressional backing.
While the government believes it has backing 
in the Senate, the passage of the Syria resolution in the Republican-led
 House of Representatives is likely to be much harder.
A poll carried out by ABC and the BBC on Friday suggested 
more than 230 of the 433 representatives were either opposed or likely 
to oppose strikes.
Just 44 representatives said they would support or were 
likely to support action, and a large proportion are still undecided on 
the issue.
Many US politicians remain concerned that military action 
could draw the nation into a prolonged war and spark broader hostilities
 in the region.
An opinion poll of 1,000 Americans carried out for CNN 
suggested 55% would oppose military strikes even if Congress passed the 
motion. Some 43% said they were in favour.
Should Congress reject the motion, the proportion against 
military strikes rises to 71% compared with 27% who said they would 
still favour action.
Outside the US, France supports military intervention but it 
wants to wait for a report by UN weapons experts before taking action.
Russia and China, which have refused to agree to a UN 
Security Council resolution against Syria, insist any military action 
without the UN would be illegal.
 source:BBC
 

 
 
 



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