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The report, being compiled by the Office of the Director of National Intelligenc e, is one of the final steps that

the administration is taking before President Obama makes a decision on a U.S. military strike against Syria, which now appear s all but inevitable, We are prepared, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel told the BBC on Tuesday. We have mov ed assets in place to be able to fulfill and comply with whatever option the pre sident wishes to take. We are ready to go. The assets include four cruise-missile -armed destroyers in the Mediterranean. The timing of such a military response is being dictated by the need not only assemble incontrovertible evidence against Assad an important prerequisite the administration, and the country, given the recent memories of a war based false claims of weapons of mass destruction but also to allow consultation Congress and international partners. to for on with

Britain, France and Turkey have indicated willingness to contribute to military action. The administration is weighing the importance of direct international pa rticipation in an effort that U.S. forces are prepared to undertake themselves. The safety of United Nations experts who are in Syria investigating the chemical weapons allegations is also an issue, said a senior administration official who spoke about internal deliberations on the condition of anonymity. The U.N. experts, who on Monday conducted the first of what was to be four days of on-site inspections, postponed their Tuesday visit because of security concer ns. Reports of the Aug. 21 attack in the Ghouta area outside Damascus derailed t heir original plans to visit three other sites in western Syria where chemical s trikes allegedly occurred earlier, and the permission granted by the government for a two-week stay expires Sunday. We are concerned about the possibility that the Syrian government would seek to d elay access and negotiate so as to seek to keep this [inspection] process going and avert the consequences, the administration official said. Ongoing government shelling of Ghouta and surrounding areas, the official said, is creating more tim e and space for them to seek to cover things up and delay. One question that is unlikely to be addressed in the intelligence report is why Assad would launch such a massive chemical strike in the face of a near-certain international response. It is a question that Russia, Assad s principal internatio nal backer, has raised repeatedly in suggesting that Syrian rebels arranged the attack to implicate the government.

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