A Flawed
UN Investigation on Syria
U.N. investigators increasingly make their
conclusions fall in line with Western propaganda,
especially on the war in Syria, as occurred in a
distorted report about last year’s attack on an aid
convoy, explains Gareth Porter.
By Gareth Porter
March 13,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
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The March 1
report by the United Nations’ “Independent
International Commission of Inquiry“
asserted that the bloody attack on a humanitarian
aid convoy west of Aleppo City on Sept. 19, 2016,
was an airstrike by Syrian government planes. But an
analysis of the U.N. panel’s report shows that it
was based on an account of the attack from the
pro-rebel Syrian “White Helmets” civil defense
organization that was full of internal
contradictions.
The UN
account also was not supported by either the
photographic evidence that the White Helmets
provided or by satellite imagery that was available
to the commission, according to independent experts.
Further undermining the UN report’s credibility, the
White Helmets now acknowledge that rockets they
photographed were not fired from Russian or Syrian
planes but from the ground.
Like
last December’s summary of the UN’s
Headquarters Board of Inquiry report
on the same incident, the Commission’s report
described the attack as having begun with “barrel
bombs” dropped by Syrian helicopters, followed by
further bombing by fixed-wing planes and, finally,
strafing by machine guns from the air.
The March 1
report did not identify any specific source for its
narrative, citing only “[c]ommunications from
governments and non-government organizations.” But
in fact the UN investigators accepted the version of
events provided by the White Helmets chief in Aleppo
province as well as specific evidence that the White
Helmets had made public.
The White
Helmets, which are heavily funded by Western
governments and operate only in rebel-controlled
areas, are famous for using social media to upload
videos purporting to show injured children and other
civilian victims of the war.
Last
year, a well-organized campaign pushed the group’s
nomination for a Nobel Peace Prize and
a Netflix film about the group won an Oscar
last month. The United Nations and the mainstream
Western news media have frequently relied on White
Helmets accounts from war zones
that are not accessible to outsiders. But the White
Helmets’ officials have pursued an obvious political
agenda in support of opposition forces in Al
Qaeda-dominated zones in Aleppo and Idlib where they
have operated.
On Sept.
19, immediately after the attack on the aid convoy,
the chief of the White Helmets organization in the
Aleppo governorate, Ammar al-Selmo, presented a
dramatic narrative of a Russian-Syrian air attack,
but it was marked by obvious internal
contradictions.
At
first, Selmo
claimed in an interview
that he had been more than a kilometer away from the
warehouses where the attack occurred and had seen
Syrian helicopters dropping “barrel bombs” on the
site. But his eyewitness account would have been
impossible because it was already dark by the time
he said the attack began at about 7:15 p.m. He
changed his story
in a later interview, claiming that he had been
right across the street at the moment of the attack
and had heard the “barrel bombs” being dropped
rather than seeing them.
Selmo
insisted in a video filmed that night that the
attack began with Syrian helicopters dropping
eight “barrel bombs,”
which are described as large, crudely constructed
bombs weighing from 250 kg to 500 kg or even more.
Citing a box-shaped indentation in the rubble, Selmo
said the video is showing “the box of the barrel
bomb,” but the indentation is far too small to be a
crater from such a bomb.
Selmo
continued the account, “Then the regime also target
this place with cluster bombs two times, and also
the aircraft of the Russians target this place with
C-5 and with bullets,” apparently referring to
Soviet-era S-5 rockets. The White Helmets
photographed two such rockets and sent it to media
outlets, including the Washington Post, which
published the picture
in the Post story with credit to the White Helmets.
Story Contradictions
But
Hussein Badawi, apparently the White Helmet official
in charge of the Urum al Kubrah area,
contradicted Selmo’s story.
In a separate interview, Badawi said the attack had
begun not with “barrel bombs” but with “four
consecutive rockets” that he said had been launched
by government forces from their defense plant in
Aleppo province – meaning that it was a
ground-launched attack rather than an air attack.
In an email
response to a query from me, Selmo retracted his own
original claim about the S-5 rockets. “[B]efore
aircraft’s attack on the area,” he wrote, “many land
to land missiles attacked the place coming from the
defense factories which [are] located in eastern
Aleppo [east of] the city, regime controlled area.
[T]hen aircraft came and attacked the place.”
But
such a rocket attack from that “regime controlled
area” would not have been technically possible. The
Syrian government defense plant is located in
Safira,
25 kilometers southeast
of Aleppo City and even farther from Urum al-Kubrah,
whereas the S-5 rockets that the White Helmets
photographed have a
range of only three or four
kilometers.
Moreover, the Russians and Syrian government forces
were not the only warring parties to have S-5s in
their arsenal. According to a
study of the S-5 rocket by Armament Research
Services
consultancy, Syrian armed opposition forces had been
using S-5 rockets as well. They had gotten them from
the CIA’s covert program of moving weapons from
Libyan government stockpiles to be distributed to
Syrian rebels beginning in late 2011 or early 2012.
Syrian rebels had used improvised launch systems to
fire them, as the ARS study documented with a
picture.
Significantly, too, the explicit claim by Selmo that
Russian planes were involved in the attack, which
was immediately echoed by the Pentagon, was
summarily dismissed by the UN panel report, which
stated flatly, without further explanation, that “no
Russian strike aircraft were nearby during the
attack.”
Break
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Misplaced Evidence
Yet,
despite the multiple discrepancies in the White
Helmets’ story, the UN investigators said they
corroborated the account of the air attack “by a
site assessment, including analysis of remnants of
aerial bombs and rockets documented at the site, as
well as satellite imagery showing impact consistent
with the use of air-delivered munitions.”
The
UN Commission’s report cited a photograph of the
crumpled tailfin of a Russian OFAB-250 bomb found
under some boxes in a warehouse as evidence that it
had been used in the attack. The White Helmets took
the photograph and circulated it to the news media,
including to the Washington Post
and
to the Bellingcat website,
which specializes in countering Russia’s claims
about its operations in Syria.
But
that bomb could not have exploded in that spot
because it would have made a crater many times
larger than the small indentation in the floor in
the White Helmet photo – as
shown in this video
of a man standing in the crater of a similar bomb in
Palmyra.
Something other than an OFAB-250 bomb – such as an
S-5 rocket – had caused the fine shrapnel tears in
the boxes shown in the photo, as a
detail from the larger scene
reveals. So the OFAB bomb tailfin must have been
placed at the scene after the attack.
Both UN
imagery analysts and independent experts who
examined the satellite images found that the impact
craters could not have come from the “aerial bombs”
cited by the Commission.
The
analysis of the satellite images by United Nations
specialists at UNITAR-UNOSAT
made public by the
UN Office of Humanitarian Coordination on March 1
further contradicts the White Helmet account,
reflecting the absence of any evidence of either
“barrel bombs” or OFAB-250 bombs dropped on the
site.
The UN
analysts identified four spots in the images on
pages five and six of their report as “possible
impact craters.” But a UN source familiar with their
analysis of the images told me that it had ruled out
the possibility that those impact points could have
been caused by either “barrel bombs” or Russian
OFAB-250 bombs.
The reason,
the UN source said, was that such bombs would have
left much larger craters than those found in the
images. Those possible impact points could have been
either from much smaller air-launched munitions or
from ground-based artillery or mortar fire, but not
from either of those weapons, according to the UN
source.
Expert Challenges
A former
U.S. intelligence official with long experience in
analysis of aerial photos and Pierre Sprey, a former
Pentagon analyst, both of whom reviewed the
satellite images, agreed that the spots identified
by UNOSAT could not have been from either “barrel
bombs” or OFAB-250 bombs.
The former
intelligence official, who demanded anonymity
because he still deals with government officials,
said the small impact points identified by the UN
team reminded him of impacts from “a multiple rocket
launcher or possibly a mortar.”
Sprey
agreed that all of those impact points could have
been from artillery or mortar fire but also noted
that photographs of the trucks and other damaged
vehicles show no evidence that they were hit by an
airstrike. The photos show only extensive fire
damage and, in the case of one car, holes of
irregular size and shape, he said, suggesting flying
debris rather than bomb shrapnel.
Sprey
further pointed to photographic evidence indicating
that an explosion that the UN Commission blamed on a
Syrian airstrike came from within the building
itself, not from an external blast. The building
across the street from some of the trucks destroyed
by an explosion (in
Figure 9 of a
series of
photos on the Bellngcat website)
clearly shows that the front wall of the building
was blown outward toward the road,
whereas the rear wall and the roof were still
intact.
The
photograph (in Figure 10) taken from inside the
remains of that same building shows the debris from
the blast was blown all the way across the street to
the damaged truck. Sprey said those pictures
strongly suggest that an IED (improvised explosive
device) had been set in the house to explode toward
the trucks.
In
embracing the Syrian-air-strike narrative – although
it falls apart on closer examination – the
UN“Commission of Inquiry” thus fell into line with
the dominant Western political bias in favor of the
armed opposition to the Syrian government, a
prejudice that has been applied to the Syrian
conflict by UN organs since the beginning of the war
in 2011.
But never
has the evidence so clearly contradicted that line
as it has in this case – even though you will not
learn that by reading or watching the West’s
commercial news media.
Gareth Porter is an independent investigative
journalist and winner of the 2012 Gellhorn Prize for
journalism. He is the author of the newly published Manufactured
Crisis: The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing
House.
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