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Syria unveils plan to eliminate Assad's chemical weapons

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on March 18, 2026

3 min read

· Last updated: April 1, 2026

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Syria unveils plan to eliminate Assad's chemical weapons
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NEW YORK, March 18 (Reuters) - Syria on Wednesday launched a plan supported by Washington to rid the Middle Eastern country of legacy chemical weapons that were used against its people by forces under

Syria Implements US-Backed Plan to Eradicate Assad-Era Chemical Weapons Stockpile

International Efforts to Eliminate Syria's Chemical Weapons

Background of Syria's Chemical Weapons Program

NEW YORK, March 18 (Reuters) - Syria on Wednesday launched a plan supported by Washington to rid the Middle Eastern country of legacy chemical weapons that were used against its people by forces under ousted leader Bashar al-Assad.

For decades, Assad ran a large-scale program for chemical weapons, the use of which killed and injured thousands during Syria's long-running civil war.

Despite Damascus' signing onto the Chemical Weapons Convention in 2013 and declaring a 1,300-ton stockpile, prohibited use continued and the size of the program remains unclear.

International Taskforce and Oversight

An international taskforce backed by the United States, Germany, Britain, Canada and France, among others, will track down all remaining elements of the program and destroy them under the supervision of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, Syria's ambassador to the United Nations, Ibrahim Olabi, said in an interview.

Scope of Inspections and Challenges

As many as 100 sites in Syria need to be inspected to determine what toxic munitions remain and how they should be destroyed, OPCW experts have said.

It will require a time-consuming and costly operation to prevent the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction in a region fraught with conflict and political turmoil. The expanding U.S.-Israeli war on Iran and broader regional security concerns will make the timing of the mission uncertain, but all the more necessary to prevent future use, officials said.

Government Cooperation and Future Outlook

New Government's Commitment

GOVERNMENT VOWS FULL ACCESS

Assad was overthrown in December 2024, and the new government under Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa has vowed to turn a page and eradicate banned chemical weapons and give inspectors full access. 

The move shows that Syria has shifted from a country that was once concealing chemical weapons use to one that is "leading the resolve" to do away with them, Olabi said.

Uncertainties and Remaining Risks

Several international investigations concluded that the nerve agent sarin, as well as chlorine and sulfur mustard gas, was used by the Assad regime, but never revealed the full extent of the clandestine program.

"We don't know what's remaining. It was a secret program," Olabi said. "The job is on Syria to basically look for these things and then declare them."

A diplomatic source, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive matter, said the 100 sites could be anything from military bases to laboratories or offices.

Timeline and Regional Instability

"It will probably take many months if not years to get it done, and of course the current situation in the Middle East doesn’t help the process to move forward to the actual destruction of any remnants of Assad‘s chemical weapons program," the source said.

(Reporting and writing by Anthony Deutsch, editing by Andrei Khalip)

Key Takeaways

  • Syria’s new leadership under President Ahmed al‑Sharaa is working with the OPCW to map and eliminate legacy chemical weapons, pledging transparency and full access. (armscontrol.org)
  • The OPCW estimates more than 100 sites remain to be inspected—far beyond the 26 originally declared—making this a complex, lengthy, and costly operation. (armscontrol.org)
  • International backing is significant: the U.S., Germany, Britain, Canada, France and others support the effort, but regional instability and sanctions dynamics add uncertainty. (press.un.org)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Syria's new plan for chemical weapons?
Syria has launched an international plan to locate and destroy all remaining chemical weapons from the Assad era, with support from the US and several countries.
Who is supervising the chemical weapons elimination in Syria?
The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) is supervising the operation, in coordination with a US-backed international taskforce.
How many sites in Syria are suspected of housing chemical weapons?
Experts estimate that as many as 100 sites in Syria need to be inspected for potential chemical weapons remnants.
What challenges does the operation face?
Regional security concerns, ongoing conflict, and the secretive nature of Assad's program pose major challenges and could prolong the process.
What changes has the new Syrian government implemented?
The new government under President Ahmed al-Sharaa has pledged full access for inspectors and is committed to eradicating banned weapons.

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