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Chemical arms inspectors in Syria miss deadline

BEIRUT — International inspectors overseeing the destruction of Syria’s chemical weapons stockpile have missed an early deadline in a tight schedule after security concerns prevented them from visiting two sites linked to Damascus’ chemical program.

Experts from the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons were to have checked all 23 of Syria’s declared chemical sites by Sunday, but the organization said Monday that inspectors have visited only 21 because of security issues.

While there are no consequences for missing the deadline, the group’s failure to meet it underscores the ambitious timeline as well as the risks its inspectors face in carrying out their mission in the middle of Syria’s civil war.

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The organization did not say who was responsible for the security problems, but the organizations’ director general has said that temporary cease-fires may have to be negotiated between rebels and forces loyal to President Bashar Assad to reach some sites.

The chemical weapons watchdog said it has not given up hope of gaining access to the two locations. ‘‘Negotiations continue to try to get security guarantees so our inspectors can go in,’’ spokesman Michael Luhan said.

The joint OPCW-UN mission faces a string of target dates for specific tasks as it aims to achieve the goal of ridding Syria of its chemical stockpile by mid-2014. Luhan said the next deadline is Nov. 1, by which time Syria has to complete ‘‘functional destruction of the critical equipment for all its chemical weapons production facilities and mixing-filing plants.’’

That step will ensure that Syria can no longer make chemical weapons. After that, the international community and Syria have to agree to a plan to destroy the country’s chemical stockpile.

Also Monday, Syrian government forces retook a Christian town north of Damascus, expelling Al Qaeda-linked rebels after a week of heavy fighting, state media and opposition activists said.

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State media also said rebels captured a member of Parliament, Sheik Mahna el-Fayadh, on Sunday near Deir el-Zour. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Fayadh was being held by rebels from the Ahrar al-Sham brigade and Al Qaeda-linked Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.