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Updated at 11:45 a.m. Eastern


Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem strengthened Tuesday his nation's backing for a Russian proposal to see his nation turn its chemical weapons stockpiles over to international control to avoid a U.S. military strike, even as his Russian allies worked to hammer out the details of the proposal.


After meeting with the speaker of the Russian parliament, al-Moallem said his government quickly "agreed to the Russian initiative," adding that Syria did so to "uproot U.S. aggression." His statement sounded more definitive than his remarks Monday, when he said that Damascus welcomed Russia's initiative.


CBS News White House correspondent Major Garrett reports that President Obama has agreed to U.N. talks on Syrian chemical weapons to be placed under international control.


Garrett reports that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry told the House Armed Services Committee that the administration also wanted Congress to press ahead in consideration of a use-of-force resolution. He said it was yet to be determined "whether this has any meat on it," in reference to the Russian-Syrian proposal.


Earlier, White House press secretary Jay Carney told CBS News the Russian proposal still represented only "the potential for positive development and has only come about because of the credible U.S. military threat that is out there."




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"I think we have to be skeptical, but cautiously optimistic because this is a positive development," added Carney.


The White House spokesman also said the Syria response was "a direct result of the threat of U.S. military force."


Russia said it was working to flesh-out the details of its proposal. Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Russia was working with Syria to prepare a "effective, concrete" plan of action, which would be presented shortly.


"The plan developed together with the Syrian side will be submitted to all interested parties, including the United States," Lavrov was quoted as saying by the Itar-Tass news agency. "We maintain constant contacts with Secretary of State Kerry, in particular, yesterday we had a telephone conversation on this issue."


France, meanwhile, announced Tuesday it would put forward a resolution in the U.N. Security Council aimed at forcing Syria to ultimately dismantle its chemical weapons program, seizing on the diplomatic opening created by the Russian proposal.


France, a permanent member of the 15-nation council, was to start the resolution process on Tuesday under Chapter 7 of the U.N. Charter, which is militarily enforceable, Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told reporters at a quickly arranged news conference.


French Foreign Affairs Minister Laurent Fabius at a press conference flanked by Secretary of State John Kerry

French Foreign Affairs Minister Laurent Fabius at a press conference flanked by Secretary of State John Kerry at the ministry in Paris, Sept. 7, 2013.


/ Getty

The proposal would also condemn a chemical weapons attack near Damascus on Aug. 21 that Western powers allege was carried out by Assad's regime — a claim he has denied.


CBS Radio News correspondent Elaine Cobbe reports that France has thus far steered-clear of U.N. resolutions on Syria, knowing that Russia would veto any significant measures. But with this new Russian proposal on the table, Fabius saw an opportunity. The move by Paris is seen as an effort to guarantee Assad follows through with what the Russians have proposed, and will include provisions for "extremely serious consequences" if he doesn't, according to Fabius.




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Kerry suggests a way for Syria to avoid U.S. strikes



On Monday, John Kerry said Assad could resolve the crisis by surrendering control of his chemical arsenal to the international community. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov responded by promising to push Syria to place its chemical weapons under international control and then dismantle them quickly, to avert U.S. strikes.


Now, CBS News foreign affairs analyst Pamela Falk says "there are a lot of negotiations that have to take place -- on a rapid-fire timeline -- to get the Russia-U.S. proposal into a U.N. Resolution."


Falk, based at United Nations Headquarters in New York, said diplomats suggested the rest of Tuesday and Wednesday would likely be filled with bilateral meetings to see what parts of the French proposal can be worked into a draft resolution, "but there seems to be agreement by Security Council members on the big issues."


Russia, also a veto-wielding permanent member of the Security Council, has thus-far blocked any measures which included the possibility of foreign military intervention in Syria, but President Vladimir Putin said last week his government didn't "exclude" supporting a U.N. resolution on punitive military strikes -- if it is proven that the Assad regime used poison gas on its own people.




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Obama: Russia's chemical weapon proposal must be verified, enforced



Mr. Obama called the yet-to-be formulated plan a "potentially positive development" in an interview Monday with CBS Evening News anchor Scott Pelley.


"Let's see if they're serious," Mr. Obama said in the White House interview. "But we have to make sure that we can verify it and enforce it, and if in fact we're able to achieve that kind of agreement that has Russia's agreement and the [United Nations] Security Council's agreement, then my central concern in this whole episode is resolved."


The president said it would be premature at this point to detail the terms of an agreement that he would accept, but he said the U.S. would be discussing the idea this week with Russia and the rest of the international community.


Hours after President Obama's remarks, the international divide over the significance of the Russian proposal became clear, with Israel voicing even more skepticism than Washington, and Assad's longtime ally Iran offering its backing for the deal.


Avigdor Lieberman, who chairs the Israeli parliament's foreign affairs and defense committee, told Israel Radio on Tuesday that Syria could use the proposal to "buy time."


He said Syrian President Bashar was "winning time and lots of it."


Iranian foreign ministry spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham, on the other hand, said the Islamic Republic and longtime Israeli adversary "favors" the Russian initiative and found it "to be within putting a halt to militarism in the region."


China, which along with Russia has blocked harsh punitive action against Assad from the United Nations Security Council until now, also welcomed the Russian proposal and said it would support the 11th-hour diplomatic effort.


In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said: "As long as it eases the tension and helps maintain Syrian and regional peace and stability, and helps politically settle the issue, the global community should consider it positively."




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Assad: "Not (a) single shred of evidence" on chemical weapons use



Syria's response to the Russian proposal marked the first official acknowledgement from the Assad regime that it even possesses chemical weapons. In an interview conducted Sunday by Charlie Rose, Assad again refused to admit that his government has stockpiles of chemical weapons estimated by many observers to include hundreds of tons of lethal chemical agents.


Noting their refusal up until Monday to acknowledge the existence of the weapons, White House spokesman Jay Carney said that while the U.S. would "work with the Russians and speak with them" about their proposal, "we would have some skepticism about the Assad regime's credibility."



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