Trump
Withholds Syria-Sarin Evidence
Despite President Trump’s well-known trouble
with the truth, his White House now says
“trust us” on its Syrian-sarin charges while
withholding the proof that it claims to
have, reports Robert Parry.
By
Robert Parry
April 12/13, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News"
-
After
making the provocative and dangerous charge
that Russia is covering up Syria’s use of
chemical weapons, the Trump administration
withheld key evidence to support its core
charge that a Syrian warplane dropped sarin
on a northern Syrian town on April 4.
A
four-page white paper,
prepared by President Trump’s National Security
Council staff and released by the White House on
Tuesday, claimed that U.S. intelligence has
proof that the plane carrying the sarin gas left
from the Syrian military airfield that Trump
ordered hit by Tomahawk missiles on April 6.
The
paper asserted that “we have signals
intelligence and geospatial intelligence,” but
then added that “we cannot publicly release all
available intelligence on this attack due to the
need to protect sources and methods.”
I’m
told that the key evidence was satellite
surveillance of the area, a body of material
that U.S. intelligence analysts were reviewing
late last week even after the Trump-ordered
bombardment of 59 Tomahawk missiles that,
according to Syrian media reports, killed seven
or eight Syrian soldiers and nine civilians,
including four children.
Yet, it
is unclear why releasing these overhead videos
would be so detrimental to “sources and methods”
since everyone knows the U.S. has this
capability and the issue at hand – if it gets
further out of hand – could lead to a nuclear
confrontation with Russia.
In
similarly tense situations in the past, U.S.
Presidents have released sensitive intelligence
to buttress U.S. government assertions,
including John F. Kennedy’s disclosure of U-2
spy flights in the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis and
Ronald Reagan revealing electronic intercepts
after the Soviet shoot-down of Korean Airlines
Flight 007 in 1983.
Yet, in
this current case, as U.S.-Russian relations
spiral downward into what is potentially an
extermination event for the human species,
Trump’s White House insists that the world must
trust it despite its record of consistently
misstating facts.
In the
case of the April 4 chemical-weapons incident in
the town of Khan Sheikhoun, which reportedly
killed scores of people including young
children, I was told that initially the U.S.
analysts couldn’t see any warplanes over the
area in Idlib province at the suspected time of
the poison gas attack but later they detected a
drone that they thought might have delivered the
bomb.
A Drone
Mystery
According to a source, the analysts struggled to
identify whose drone it was and where it
originated. Despite some technical difficulties
in tracing its flight path, analysts eventually
came to believe that the flight was launched in
Jordan from a Saudi-Israeli special operations
base for supporting Syrian rebels, the source
said, adding that the suspected reason for the
poison gas was to create an incident that would
reverse the Trump administration’s announcement
in late March that it was no longer seeking the
removal of President Bashar al-Assad.
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If
indeed that was the motive — and if the source’s
information is correct — the operation would
have been successful, since the Trump
administration has now reversed itself and is
pressing Russia to join in ousting Assad who is
getting blamed for the latest chemical-weapons
incident.
Presumably, however, the “geospatial
intelligence” cited in the four-page dossier
could disprove this and other contentions if the
Trump administration would only make its
evidence publicly available.
The
dossier stated, “Our information indicates that
the chemical agent was delivered by regime Su-22
fixed-wing aircraft that took off from the
regime-controlled Shayrat Airfield. These
aircraft were in the vicinity of Khan Shaykhun
approximately 20 minutes before reports of the
chemical attack began and vacated the area
shortly after the attack.”
So,
that would mean – assuming that the dossier is
correct – that U.S. intelligence analysts were
able to trace the delivery of the poison gas to
Assad’s aircraft and to the airfield that Trump
ordered attacked on April 6.
Still,
it remains a mystery why this intelligence
assessment is not coming directly from President
Trump’s intelligence chiefs as is normally the
case, either with an official Intelligence
Estimate or a report issued by the Director of
National Intelligence
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.