Any notion that the departure of the UN chemical weapons inspection team from Syria on Saturday opens a window for a U.S. attack is "grotesque," the top UN spokesman said.
UN spokesman Martin Nesirky spoke at a news conference shortly after Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon had met in New York with UN disarmament chief Angela Kane who had just returned from Damascus after days of tense negotiations with Syrian officials over a UN probe into an apparent poison gas attack on Aug. 21 in the Damascus suburb of Ghouta, a rebel stronghold.
A U.S. intelligence assessment says the attack was carried out by Syrian President Bashar Assad's government and killed 1,429 civilians, including more than 400 children.
Ban spoke to the head of the UN chemical weapons inspection team, Ake Sellstrom, on Saturday to thank him, and will be briefed further by Sellstrom on Sunday, Nesirky said.
The UN chemical weapons inspection team is now in The Hague, Netherlands, Nesirky said. The samples they collected in Syria are expected to be repackaged and sent to laboratories around Europe to check them for traces of poison gas, Nesirky said.
The spokesman said the evidence would have to be analyzed in the laboratories before any report is made to member states. There is no specific time line for how soon the analysis will be completed, Nesirky said.
The inspectors left Syria and flew out of Lebanon early Saturday. The team carried out a fourth and final day of inspections on Friday as they sought to determine precisely what happened in the alleged chemical weapons attack.
Nesirky said the departure of the UN inspection team should not be seen as any kind of a green light for military action.
"I've seen all kinds of reporting suggesting that the departure of the chemical weapons team somehow opens a window for military action of some kind," Nesirky said. "Frankly, that is grotesque, and it's an affront to the more than 1,000 staff, UN staff, who are on the ground in Syria delivering humanitarian aid and who will continue to deliver critical aid."
He also said any attack would leave the Syrian population vulnerable to harm.
Nesirky was pressed repeatedly on whether the inspectors would try to assign blame for the attack, and responded that the team's mandate is limited to determining whether chemical weapons were used, as agreed between Damascus and the United Nations.
In recent days, another UN spokesman, Farhan Haq, has said the team would build an 'evidence-based narrative" of the alleged attack that seemed to hint that they might look at how the event began.
The United States, however, has said it has gathered intelligence showing that the apparent gas attack was ordered by Assad's government, not the rebels, making the outcome of the UN inquiry moot if the United States launches an attack to punish Syria in the coming days.