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At least 14 people have died or were hurt after a Syrian military airport was hit by missiles, state media said, amid global alarm over a suspected chemical attack on a rebel-held town.
Monday's attack hit the Tiyas airbase, known as T4, near the city of Homs.
Syria initially said the West was involved. The US and France threatened to respond to the alleged chemical attack, but deny striking the base.
Israel has previously hit Syrian targets. It has not commented.
US President Donald Trump said there would be a "big price to pay" after the chemical attack in Douma, in the Eastern Ghouta region, near the capital, Damascus.
He branded Syria's President Bashar al-Assad an "animal".
Meanwhile the last rebel fighters in Douma have surrendered and are being bussed out of the enclave after reaching a deal with the government.
Mr Trump and France's President Emmanuel Macron issued a joint statement on Sunday vowing to "co-ordinate a strong, joint response" to the alleged attack.
But US officials said it did not launch a missile attack.
"At this time, the Department of Defense is not conducting air strikes in Syria," the Pentagon said in a statement.
"However, we continue to closely watch the situation and support the ongoing diplomatic efforts to hold those who use chemical weapons, in Syria and otherwise, accountable."
France also issued a denial.
Syria's state news agency Sana initially called the reported missile strike on the Tiyas airfield a "suspected US attack," but later dropped the reference to the US.

Russian warning of 'dire consequences'

We've been here before. Almost exactly a year ago, the same horrific images of children choking to death, and President Trump insisting this could not be allowed to stand unanswered.
Then, within days the US military fired cruise missiles at a Syrian airfield where the sarin attack had been launched from. So when Donald Trump says there will be a price to pay, it is no empty threat.
But this time round, the Russians are warning of dire consequences if the West uses this alleged chemical weapon attack as a pretext to intervene in Syria.
Over the weekend the president's senior national security advisers have been meeting to consider what would be the appropriate response, and Mr Trump has been rallying international support.
Last night he spoke to President Macron of France where the two agreed there should be a strong, coordinated response.
A week ago President Trump said he wanted to pull American troops out of Syria, but he now might be on the brink of ordering a military response, that could drag the US deeper still into this intractable conflict.

Could Israel be involved?

Israel also carried out major strikes on targets in Syria, including the T4 air base, earlier this year.
It followed an incursion by an Iranian drone into Israel and the shooting down by Syrian air defences of an Israeli F16 fighter jet.
The Israeli military said Iran and its Revolutionary Guards had long been active in the Tiyas base, and were using it to transfer weapons, including to Lebanese Shia militant group Hezbollah which is hostile to Israel and allied to Syrian troops.
They also said the drone had been launched from the base.
Israel has not yet commented on Monday's Tiyas attack, but Hezbollah's al-Manar TV described the attack as an "Israeli aggression".
Monitoring group the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that fighters of various nationalities were among the dead at the base, meaning Iranians or members of Iranian-backed Shia militias.

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