WASHINGTON —The Trump administration issued sanctions Monday on 271 people linked to the Syrian agency responsible for producing non-conventional weapons, part of an ongoing U.S. crackdown on Syrian President Bashar Assad’s alleged use of chemical weapons.

The sanctions target employees of Syria’s Scientific Studies and Research Center, which the U.S. says partly enables the use of chemical weapons.

The U.S. has blamed Assad for an attack this month that killed more than 80 civilians in rebel-held northern Idlib.

“The United States is sending a strong message with this action: That we will not tolerate the use of chemical weapons by any actor,” Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin told reporters Monday at the White House. He said it was one of the largest such sanctions actions in U.S. history.

President Trump has called Assad “evil” and said his use of chemical weapons “crossed a lot of lines.”

Assad has strongly denied he was behind the attack, in which sarin gas was allegedly used.

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As a result of Monday’s action, any property or interest in property of the individuals’ sanctioned must be blocked, and U.S. persons are generally prohibited from dealing with them.

As Trump dined this month with China’s President Xi Jinping during their highly anticipated summit at Trump’s Florida resort, word emerged that Trump took action against Assad by launching missiles against a Syrian airfield.

The retaliation was seen as somewhat unexpected for a president that vowed to stay out of lingering wars and conflicts overseas.

This month, Russia vetoed a Western-backed U.N. resolution that would have condemned the reported use of chemical weapons in Syria and demanded a speedy investigation into the attack.

China abstained for the first time, a move the White House billed as a win for their efforts to isolate Russia.

“On Syria, the Council failed again this month to respond to Syria’s use of chemical weapons,” Trump said Monday at a White House meeting of U.N. ambassadors from countries on the Security Council. “A great disappointment.”


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