DHAKA: US Secretary of State John Kerry has accused Syrian government forces of killing 1,429 people in a chemical weapons attack in Damascus last week.
Mr Kerry said the dead included 426 children, and described the attack as an "inconceivable horror".
President Barack Obama later said the US was considering a "limited narrow act" in response.
Syria has dismissed Mr Kerry`s statement as "full of lies", insisting the rebels carried out the attack.
State-run news agency Sana said Mr Kerry, who cited a US intelligence assessment, was using "material based on old stories which were published by terrorists over a week ago".
The US says its assessment is backed by accounts from medical personnel, witnesses, journalists, videos and thousands of social media reports.
UN chemical weapons inspectors are investigating the alleged poison-gas attacks and will present preliminary findings to the UN after they leave Damascus on Saturday.
But Mr Kerry said the US already had the facts, and nothing that the UN weapons inspectors found could tell the world anything new.
He highlighted evidence in the assessment that regime forces had spent three days in eastern Damascus preparing for the attack.
"We know rockets came only from regime-controlled areas and landed only in opposition-held areas," he said.
"All of these things we know, the American intelligence community has high confidence."
Mr Kerry called Mr Assad "a thug and a murderer" but said any response by the US would be carefully measured and would not involve a protracted campaign like Iraq or Afghanistan.
However, the UN Security Council is unlikely to approve any military intervention because permanent member Russia is a close ally of the Syrian government.
Russia, along with China, has vetoed two previous draft resolutions on Syria.
The US was also dealt a blow on Thursday when the UK parliament rejected a motion supporting the principle of military intervention.
The vote rules the UK out of any potential military alliance.
British Prime Minister David Cameron and Mr Obama spoke over the telephone on Friday, agreeing to continue to co-operate on international issues.
The president told Mr Cameron he "fully respected" the approach taken by the UK government, according to the prime minister`s office.
US officials said they would continue to push for a coalition, and France said it was ready to take action in Syria alongside the US.
Neither France nor the US need parliamentary approval for action.
French President Francois Hollande, who also spoke to Mr Obama late on Friday, said the two men had agreed that the international community must "send a strong message" denouncing chemical attacks.
Another US ally, Turkey, called for action similar to the Nato bombing raids in the former Yugoslavia in 1999.
Source: BBC
BDST: 0925 HRS, AUG 31, 2013
AKA/BSK