Unverified footage shows jubilant rebels on the streets of Aleppo
Syria says it will not use chemical weapons against its own people, but would do so against an external attack.
Syrian foreign ministry spokesman Jihad Makdissi said the weapons, stored and secured by the armed forces, would never be used "inside Syria".Earlier, the Arab League called on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to step down, offering him safe passage.
Rebels have told the BBC's Paul Wood, inside Syria, that they are encouraged by assassinations last week.
Four officials, including the defence minister and President Assad's brother-in-law, were killed in an attack in Damascus on 18 July.
Rebels from the Free Syrian Army (FSA) told our correspondent, who is undercover with them near Damascus, that the deaths were a severe blow to the government.
They said the once-feared secret police were now a spent force, and the government was relying entirely on a weakened military.
'External aggression' "Any chemical or biological weapons will never be used, I repeat, will never be used in the Syrian crisis, no matter what the internal developments in this crisis are," Mr Makdissi said, at a news conference broadcast on Syrian state TV.
"All varieties of these weapons are stored and secured by the Syrian armed forces and under its direct supervision, and will not be used unless Syria is subjected to external aggression."
At the scene
After days of walking, we reach a town which is tenuously in rebel hands. But the town is ringed by Syrian artillery. It starts up at various times of the day, targeting the orchards where rebel fighters hide.During a pause in the shelling, a couple of fighters drive me and our translator around town, describing some of their recent clashes with army forces.
The town is deserted now, with plenty of debris on the streets, burned out cars, big holes in the walls from mortars and shells. One or two people are walking about though, so it seems people are still here.
The assassinations in Damascus were a major blow to the regime, the men tell me, but it has retaliated by targeting civilians.
Syria has never officially confirmed it has chemical weapons. It is not a signatory to the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC), which outlaws production.
The West and Israel were deeply worried that Syria might use its stocks of chemical weapons, says the BBC's Jim Muir in neighbouring Lebanon. On 16 July, the most senior Syrian politician to defect to the opposition told the BBC the government would not hesitate to use chemical weapons if it were cornered.
Nawaf al-Fares, Syria's former ambassador to Iraq, said unconfirmed reports indicated such weapons might have already been used.
However, the opposition has not reported any use of chemical weapons.
Aleppo offensive Meanwhile, Syrian government forces have retaken parts of Damascus that had fallen to the rebels.
Syrian state TV on Monday showed images of government forces going house-to-house and kicking down doors in Damascus, searching for any remaining rebel fighters.
Continued clashes are reported in the northern city of Aleppo.
Rebels launched a new offensive at the weekend, vowing to take the city completely and use it as a base for liberating the whole country.
Videos posted online on Monday showed jubilation by rebel fighters in the Sakhour district.
State TV played down the scale of the violence, saying troops were merely hunting down "terrorists".
The most senior Turkish diplomat remaining in Syria, the consul in Aleppo, has been withdrawn for consultations.
Turkey, which closed its embassy in Damascus earlier this year, did not say whether the consul would return.
As the fighting continues, aid agencies are reporting a sharp increase in humanitarian needs both inside and outside Syria.
Most of the refugees fleeing the Syrian conflict are children
Camps have already been set up for Syrian refugees in Turkey, Lebanon and Iraq and the UN refugee agency says its staff are now building a camp in Jordan.
Around 1,000 people are arriving every day and the agency says the site at Za'atri, close to the border, should be able to cope with more than 100,000 refugees.
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