How
the U.S. Government Spins the Story
Did Syria actually use chemical weapons?
By Philip Giraldi
April
18, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Unz
Review" -
Sounds
like we’ve heard it all before, because we have,
back in August 2013, and that turned out to be
less than convincing. Skepticism is likewise
mounting over current White House claims that
Damascus used a chemical weapon against
civilians in the village of Khan Sheikhoun in
Idlib province on April 4th. Shortly after the
more recent incident, President Donald Trump,
possibly deriving his information from
television news reports, abruptly stated that
the government of President Bashar al-Assad had
ordered the attack. He also noted that the use
of chemicals had “crossed many red lines” and
hinted that Damascus would be held accountable.
Twenty-four hours later retribution came in the
form of the launch of 59 cruise missiles
directed against the Syrian airbase at Sharyat.
The number of casualties, if any, remains
unclear and the base itself sustained only minor
damage amidst allegations that many of the
missiles had missed their target. The physical
assault was followed by a verbal onslaught, with
the Trump Administration blaming Russia for
shielding al-Assad and demanding that Moscow end
its alliance with Damascus if it wishes to
reestablish good relations with Washington.
The
media, led by the usual neoconservative
cheerleaders, have applauded Trump’s brand of
tough love with Syria, even though Damascus had
no motive to stage such an attack while the
so-called rebels had plenty to gain. The
escalation to a war footing also serves no U.S.
interest and actually damages prospects for
eliminating ISIS any time soon. Democratic Party
liberal interventionists have also joined with
Senators John McCain, Lindsay Graham and Marco
Rubio to celebrate the cruise missile strike and
hardening rhetoric. Principled and eminently
sensible Democratic Congressman Tulsi Gabbard,
has demanded evidence of Syrian culpability,
saying “It
angers and saddens me that President Trump has
taken the advice of war hawks and escalated our
illegal regime change war to overthrow the
Syrian government. This escalation is
short-sighted and will lead to more dead
civilians, more refugees, the strengthening of
al-Qaeda and other terrorists, and a direct
confrontation between the United States and
Russia—which could lead to nuclear war. This
Administration has acted recklessly without care
or consideration of the dire consequences of the
United States attack on Syria without waiting
for the collection of evidence from the scene of
the chemical poisoning.” For her pains, she has
been vilified by members of her own party, who
have
called for her resignation.
Other
congressmen, including Senators Rand Paul and
Tim Kaine, who have asked for a vote in congress
to authorize going to war, have likewise been
ignored or deliberately marginalized. All of
which means that the United States has committed
a war crime against a country with which it is
not at war and has done so by ignoring Article 2
of the Constitution, which grants to Congress
the sole power to declare war. It has also
failed to establish a casus belli that
Syria represents some kind of threat to the
United States.
What has
become completely clear, as a result of the U.S.
strike and its aftermath, is that any general
reset with Russia has now become unimaginable,
meaning among other things that a peace
settlement for Syria is for now unattainable. It
also has meant that the rebels against
al-Assad’s regime will be empowered, possibly
deliberately staging more chemical “incidents”
and blaming the Damascus government to shift
international opinion farther in their
direction. ISIS, which was reeling prior to the
attack and reprisal, has been given a reprieve
by the same United States government that
pledged to eradicate it. And Donald Trump has
reneged on his two campaign pledges to avoid
deeper involvement in Middle Eastern wars and
mend fences with Moscow.
There have
been two central documents relating to the
alleged Syrian chemical weapon incidents in 2013
and 2017, both of which read like press
releases. Both refer to a consensus within the
U.S. intelligence community (IC)and express
“confidence” and even “high confidence”
regarding their conclusions but neither is
actually a product of the office of the Director
of National Intelligence, which would be
appropriate if the IC had actually come to a
consensus. Neither the Director of National
Intelligence nor the Director of CIA were
present in a photo showing the White House team
deliberating over what to do about Syria. Both
documents supporting the U.S. cruise missile
attack were, in fact, uncharacteristically put
out by the White House, suggesting that the
arguments were stitched together in haste to
support a political decision to use force that
had already been made.
The
two documents provide plenty of circumstantial
information but little in the way of actual
evidence. The 2013
Obama version
“Government Assessment of the Syrian
Government’s Use of Chemical Weapons on August
21, 2013,” was criticized almost
immediately when it was determined that there
were
alternative explanations
for the source of the chemical agents that might
have killed more than a thousand people in and
around the town of Ghouta. The 2017
Trump version “The
Assad Regime’s Use of Chemical Weapons on April
4, 2017,” is likewise under fire from
numerous quarters. Generally reliable journalist
Robert Parry
is reporting
that the intelligence behind the White House
claims comes largely from satellite
surveillance, though nothing has been released
to back-up the conclusion that the Syrian
government was behind the attack, an odd
omission as everyone knows about satellite
capabilities and they are not generally
considered to be a classified source or method.
Parry also cites the fact that there are
alternative theories on what took place and why,
some of which appear to originate with the
intelligence and national security community,
which was in part concerned over the rush to
judgment by the White House. MIT Professor
Theodore Postol, considered to be an expert on
munitions,
has also questioned
the government’s account of what took place in
Khan Sheikhoun through a detailed analysis of
the available evidence. He believes that the
chemical agent was fired from the ground, not
from an airplane, suggesting that it was an
attack initiated by the rebels made to appear as
if it was caused by the Syrian bomb.
In spite
of the challenges, “Trust me,” says Donald
Trump. The Russians and Syrians are demanding an
international investigation of the alleged
chemical weapons incident, but as time goes by
the ability to discern what took place
diminishes. All that is indisputably known at
this point is that the Syrian Air Force attacked
a target in Idlib and a cloud of toxic chemicals
was somehow released. The al-Ansar terrorist
group (affiliated with al-Qaeda) is in control
of the area and benefits greatly from the
prevailing narrative. If it was in fact the
actual implementer of the attack, it is no doubt
cleaning and reconfiguring the site to support
the account that it is promoting and which is
being uncritically accepted both by the
mainstream media and by a number of governments.
The United States will also do its best to
disrupt any inquiry that challenges the
assumptions that it has already come to. The
Trump Administration is threatening to do more
to remove Bashar al-Assad and every American
should accept that the inhabitant of the White
House, when he is actually in residence, will
discover like many before him that war is good
business. He will continue to ride the wave of
jingoism that has turned out to be his
salvation, reversing to an extent the negative
publicity that has dogged the new
administration.
Phil
Giraldi is a former CIA Case Officer and Army
Intelligence Officer who spent twenty years
overseas in Europe and the Middle East working
terrorism cases. He holds a BA with honors from
the University of Chicago and an MA and PhD in
Modern History from the University of London.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.