Did Al
Qaeda Fool the White House Again?
Despite evidence that Al Qaeda and its allies
have staged fake chemical attacks in Syria
before, Official Washington asserts with “high
confidence” that it’s not being fooled again.
By Robert Parry
April
15/16, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News"-
In
Official Washington, words rarely mean what they
say. For instance, if a U.S. government official
voices “high confidence” in a supposed
“intelligence assessment,” that usually means
“we don’t have any real evidence, but we figure
that if we say ‘high confidence’ enough that no
one will dare challenge us.”
It’s
also true that after a U.S. President or another
senior official jumps to a conclusion that is
not supported by evidence, the ranks of
government careerists will close around him or
her, making any serious or objective
investigation almost impossible. Plus, if the
dubious allegations are directed at some “enemy”
state, then the mainstream media also will
suppress skepticism. Prestigious “news” outlets
will run “fact checks” filled with words in
capital letters: “MISLEADING”; “FALSE”; or maybe
“FAKE NEWS.”
Which
is where things stand regarding President
Trump’s rush to judgment within hours about an
apparent chemical weapons incident in Syria’s
Idlib province on April 4. Despite the fact that
much of the information was coming from Al Qaeda
and its propaganda-savvy allies, the mainstream
U.S. media rushed emotional images onto what
Trump calls “the shows” – upon which he says he
bases his foreign policy judgments – and he
blamed Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for the
scores of deaths, including “beautiful little
babies,” as Trump declared.
Given
the neocon/liberal-interventionist domination of
Official Washington’s foreign policy – and the
professional Western propaganda shops working
for Assad’s overthrow – there was virtually no
pushback against the quick formulation of this
new groupthink. All the predictable players
played their predictable parts, from The New
York Times to CNN to the Atlantic
Council-related Bellingcat and its “citizen
journalists.”
All the Important People who appeared on the TV
shows or who were quoted in the mainstream media
trusted the
images provided by Al Qaeda-related
propagandists
and ignored documented prior cases in which the
Syrian rebels staged chemical weapons incidents
to implicate the Assad government.
‘We All
Know’
One smug CNN commentator pontificated, “we all
know what happened in 2013,” a reference to the
enduring conventional wisdom that an Aug. 21,
2013 sarin attack outside Damascus was carried
out by the Assad government and that President
Obama then failed to enforce his “red line”
against chemical weapons use. This beloved
groupthink survives even though
evidence later showed
the operation was carried out by rebels, most
likely by Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front with help from
Turkish intelligence, as investigative
journalist Seymour Hersh
reported and
brave Turkish officials
later confirmed.
But Official Washington’s resistance to reality
was perhaps best demonstrated one year ago when
The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg published a
detailed article about Obama’s foreign policy
that repeated the groupthink about Obama
shrinking from his “red line” but included the
disclosure that Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper had informed the
President that U.S. intelligence
lacked any “slam dunk” evidence
that Assad’s military was guilty.
One
might normally think that such a warning from
DNI Clapper would have spared Obama from the
media’s judgment that he had chickened out,
especially given the later evidence pointing the
finger of blame at the rebels. After all, why
should Obama have attacked the Syrian military
and killed large numbers of soldiers and
possibly civilians in retaliation for a crime
that they had nothing to do with – and indeed an
offense for which the Assad government was being
framed? But Official Washington’s propaganda
bubble is impervious to inconvenient reality.
Nor does anyone seem to know that a United
Nations report disclosed
testimonies from eyewitnesses
about how rebels and their allied “rescue
workers” had staged one “chlorine attack” so it
would be blamed on the Assad government. Besides
these Syrians coming forward to expose the
fraud, the evidence that had been advanced to
“prove” Assad’s guilt included bizarre claims
from the rebels and their friends that they
could tell that chlorine was inside a “barrel
bomb” because of the special sound that it made
while it was descending.
Despite
the exposure of that one frame-up, the U.N.
investigators – under intense pressure from
Western governments to give them something to
pin on the Assad regime – accepted rebel claims
about two other alleged chlorine attacks, an
implausible finding that is now repeatedly cited
by the Western media even as it ignores the case
of the debunked “chlorine attack.” Again, one
might think that proof of two staged chemical
weapons attacks – one involving sarin and the
other chlorine – would inject some skepticism
about the April 4 case, but apparently not.
All
that was left was for President Trump to “act
presidential” and fire off 59 Tomahawk missiles
at some Syrian airbase on April 6, reportedly
killing several Syrian soldiers and nine
civilians, including four children, collateral
damage that the mainstream U.S. media knows not
to mention in its hosannas of praise for Trump’s
decisiveness.
Home-Free
Groupthink
There
might be some pockets of resistance to the
groupthink among professional analysts at the
CIA, but their findings – if they contradict
what the President has already done – will be
locked away probably for generations if not
forever.
In
other words, the new Assad-did-it groupthink
appeared to be home free, a certainty that The
New York Times could now publish without having
to add annoying words like “alleged” or
“possibly,” simply stating Assad’s guilt as
flat-fact.
Thomas L. Friedman, the Times’ star foreign
policy columnist, did that and then extrapolated
from his certainty to propose that the U.S.
should ally itself with the jihadists fighting
to overthrow Assad,
a position long favored
by U.S. “allies,” Saudi Arabia and Israel.
“Why should our goal right now be to defeat the
Islamic State in Syria?” Friedman
asked before
proposing outright support for the jihadists:
“We could dramatically increase our military aid
to anti-Assad rebels, giving them sufficient
anti-tank and antiaircraft missiles to threaten
Russian, Iranian, Hezbollah and Syrian
helicopters and fighter jets and make them
bleed, maybe enough to want to open
negotiations. Fine with me.”
So, not only have the mainstream U.S. media
stars decided that they know what happen on
April 4 in a remote Al Qaeda-controlled section
of Idlib province (without seeing any real
evidence) but they are now building off their
groupthink to propose that the Trump
administration hand out antiaircraft missiles to
the “anti-Assad rebels” who, in reality, are
under the command of Al Qaeda
and/or the Islamic State.
In
other words, Friedman and other deep thinkers
are advocating material support for terrorists
who would get sophisticated American
ground-to-air missiles that could shoot down
Russian planes thus exacerbating already
dangerous U.S.-Russian tensions or take down
some civilian airliner as Al Qaeda has done in
the past. If someone named Abdul had made such a
suggestion, he could expect a knock on his door
from the FBI.
Expert
Skepticism
Yet,
before President Trump takes Friedman’s advice –
arming up Al Qaeda and entering into a de facto
alliance with Islamic State – we might want to
make sure that we aren’t being taken in again by
a clever Al Qaeda psychological operation,
another staged chemical weapons attack.
With
the U.S. intelligence community effectively
silenced by the fact that the President has
already acted, Theodore Postol, a technology and
national security expert at Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, undertook his own
review of the supposed evidence cited by Trump’s
White House in issuing a four-page “intelligence
assessment” on April 11 asserting with “high
confidence” that Assad’s military delivered a
bomb filled with sarin on the town of Khan
Sheikdoun on the morning of April 4.
Postol, whose analytical work helped debunk
Official Washington’s groupthink regarding the
2013 sarin attack outside Damascus, expressed
new shock at the shoddiness of the latest White
House report (or WHR). Postol produced “a
quick turnaround assessment”
of the April 11 report that night and went into
greater detail in
an addendum on
April 13, writing:
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“This
addendum provides data that unambiguously shows
that the assumption in the WHR that there was no
tampering with the alleged site of the sarin
release is not correct. This egregious
error raises questions about every other claim
in the WHR. … The implication of this
observation is clear – the WHR was not reviewed
and released by any competent intelligence
expert unless they were motivated by factors
other than concerns about the accuracy of the
report.
“The
WHR also makes claims about ‘communications
intercepts’ which supposedly provide high
confidence that the Syrian government was the
source of the attack. There is no reason to
believe that the veracity of this claim is any
different from the now verified false claim that
there was unambiguous evidence of a sarin
release at the cited crater. … The evidence that
unambiguously shows that the assumption that the
sarin release crater was tampered with is
contained in six photographs at the end of this
document.”
Postol
notes that one key photo “shows a man standing
in the alleged sarin-release crater. He is
wearing a honeycomb facemask that is designed to
filter small particles from the air. Other
apparel on him is an open necked cloth shirt and
what appear to be medical exam gloves. Two other
men are standing in front of him (on the left in
the photograph) also wearing honeycomb
facemask’s and medical exam gloves.
“If
there were any sarin present at this location
when this photograph was taken everybody in the
photograph would have received a lethal or
debilitating dose of sarin. The fact that these
people were dressed so inadequately either
suggests a complete ignorance of the basic
measures needed to protect an individual from
sarin poisoning, or that they knew that the site
was not seriously contaminated.
“This
is the crater that is the centerpiece evidence
provided in the WHR for a sarin attack delivered
by a Syrian aircraft.”
No
‘Competent’ Analyst
After
reviewing other discrepancies in photos of the
crater, Postol wrote: “It is hard for me to
believe that anybody competent could have been
involved in producing the WHR report and the
implications of such an obviously predetermined
result strongly suggests that this report was
not motivated by a serious analysis of any kind.
“This
finding is disturbing. It indicates that the WHR
was probably a report purely aimed at justifying
actions that were not supported by any
legitimate intelligence. This is not a unique
situation. President George W. Bush has argued
that he was misinformed about unambiguous
evidence that Iraq was hiding a substantial
amount of weapons of mass destruction. This
false intelligence led to a US attack on Iraq
that started a process that ultimately led to a
political disintegration in the Middle East,
which through a series of unpredicted events
then led to the rise of the Islamic State.”
Postol
continued: “On August 30, 2013, the White House
[under President Obama] produced a similarly
false report about the nerve agent attack on
August 21, 2013 in Damascus. This report also
contained numerous intelligence claims that
could not be true. An interview with President
Obama published in The Atlantic in
April 2016 indicates that Obama was initially
told that there was solid intelligence that the
Syrian government was responsible for the nerve
agent attack of August 21, 2013 in Ghouta,
Syria. Obama reported that he was later told
that the intelligence was not solid by the then
Director of National Intelligence, James
Clapper.
“Equally serious questions are raised about the
abuse of intelligence findings by the incident
in 2013. Questions that have not been answered
about that incident is how the White House
produced a false intelligence report with false
claims that could obviously be identified by
experts outside the White House and without
access to classified information. There also
needs to be an explanation of why this 2013
false report was not corrected. …
“It is
now obvious that a second incident similar to
what happened in the Obama administration has
now occurred in the Trump administration. In
this case, the president, supported by his
staff, made a decision to launch 59 cruise
missiles at a Syrian air base. This action was
accompanied by serious risks of creating a
confrontation with Russia, and also undermining
cooperative efforts to win the war against the
Islamic State. …
“I
therefore conclude that there needs to be a
comprehensive investigation of these events that
have either misled people in the White House, or
worse yet, been perpetrated by people seeking to
force decisions that were not justified by the
cited intelligence. This is a serious matter and
should not be allowed to continue.”
While
Postol’s appeal for urgent attention to this
pattern of the White House making false
intelligence claims – now implicating three
successive administrations – makes sense, the
likelihood of such an undertaking is virtually
nil. The embarrassment and loss of “credibility”
for not only the U.S. political leadership but
the major U.S. news outlets would be so severe,
especially in the wake of the WMD fiasco in
Iraq, that no establishment figure or
organization would undertake such a review.
Instead, Official Washington’s propaganda bubble
will stay firmly in place allowing its
inhabitants to go happily about their business
believing that they are the caretakers of
“truth.”
Investigative reporter Robert Parry broke many
of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated
Press and Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his
latest book, America’s Stolen Narrative,
either in print
here or as an
e-book (from
Amazon and
barnesandnoble.com).
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.
See
also
Declassified U.S. Report
Accusing “Assad Regime” of Using Chemical
Weapons
“ No proof
whatsoever!
A
Government of
Morons
By Paul Craig
Roberts |
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Western
Civilization, if
civilization it
is, is the
greatest
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crimes in human
history. -
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