Echoes
of Iraq-WMD Fraud in Syria
Just as the West ignored signs in 2002-03 that
anti-government Iraqis were fabricating WMD
claims, evidence is being brushed aside that
Syrian jihadists have ginned up chemical
attacks.
By Robert Parry
September
11, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The New York Times and other Western media
have learned few lessons from the Iraq War,
including how the combination of a demonized
foreign leader and well-funded “activists”
committed to flooding the process with fake data
can lead to dangerously false conclusions that
perpetuate war.
What we
have seen in Syria over the past six years
parallels what occurred in Iraq in the run-up to
the U.S.-led invasion in 2002-03. In both cases,
there was evidence that the “system” was being
gamed – by the Iraqi National Congress (INC) in
pushing for the Iraq War and by pro-rebel
“activists” promoting “regime change” in Syria –
but those warnings were ignored. Instead, the
flood of propagandistic claims overwhelmed what
little skepticism there was in the West.
Regarding Iraq, the INC generated a surge of
“defectors” who claimed to know where Saddam
Hussein was concealing his WMD stockpiles and
where his nuclear program was hidden. In Syria,
we have seen something similar with dubious
claims about chemical weapons attacks.
The Iraqi “defectors,” of course,
were lying, and
a little-noticed congressional study revealed
that the CIA had correctly debunked some of the
fakers but – because of the pro-invasion
political pressure from George W. Bush’s White
House and the U.S. mainstream media’s contempt
for Saddam Hussein – other bogus claims were
accepted as true. The result was catastrophic.
But the
telltale signs of an INC disinformation campaign
were there before the war. For instance, by
early February 2003, as the final invasion plans
were underway, the parade of Iraqi “walk-ins”
was continuing. U.S. intelligence agencies had
progressed up to “Source Eighteen,” one fellow
who came to epitomize what some CIA analysts
suspected was systematic INC coaching of
sources.
As the
CIA planned a debriefing of Source Eighteen,
another Iraqi exile passed on word to the agency
that an INC representative had told Source
Eighteen to “deliver the act of a lifetime.” CIA
analysts weren’t sure what to make of that piece
of news since Iraqi exiles frequently badmouthed
each other but the value of the warning soon
became clear.
U.S.
intelligence officers debriefed Source Eighteen
the next day and discovered that “Source
Eighteen was supposed to have a nuclear
engineering background, but was unable to
discuss advanced mathematics or physics and
described types of ‘nuclear’ reactors that do
not exist,” according to a Senate Intelligence
Committee report on the Iraq War’s intelligence
failures.
“Source
Eighteen used the bathroom frequently,
particularly when he appeared to be flustered by
a line of questioning, suddenly remembering a
new piece of information upon his return. During
one such incident, Source Eighteen appeared to
be reviewing notes,” the report said.
Not
surprisingly, U.S. intelligence officers
concluded that Source Eighteen was a fabricator.
But the sludge of INC-connected disinformation
kept oozing through the U.S. intelligence
community, fouling the American intelligence
product in part because there was little
pressure from above demanding strict quality
controls. Indeed, the opposite was true.
A more
famous fake Iraqi defector earned the code name
“Curve Ball” and provided German intelligence
agencies details about Iraq’s alleged mobile
facilities for producing agents for biological
warfare.
Tyler
Drumheller, then chief of the CIA’s European
Division, said his office had issued repeated
warnings about Curve Ball’s accounts. “Everyone
in the chain of command knew exactly what was
happening,” Drumheller said. [Los Angeles Times,
April 2, 2005]
Despite
those objections and the lack of direct U.S.
contact with Curve Ball, he earned a rating as
“credible” or “very credible,” and his
information became a core element of the Bush
administration’s case for invading Iraq.
Drawings of Curve Ball’s imaginary bio-weapons
labs were a central feature of Secretary of
State Colin Powell’s presentation to the U.N. on
Feb. 5, 2003.
The Syrian
Parallel
Regarding Syria, a similar mix of factors
exists. The Obama administration’s advocacy for
Syrian “regime change” and the hostility from
many Western interest groups toward President
Bashar al-Assad lowered the bar of skepticism
enabling propaganda arms of Al Qaeda and its
jihadist allies to have enormous success in
selling dubious accusations about chemical
attacks and other atrocities.
As with the CIA analysts who tripped up a few of
the Iraqi liars, some United Nations
investigators have seen evidence of the
trickery. For instance, they
learned from
townspeople of Al-Tamanah about how the rebels
and allied “activists” staged a chlorine gas
attack on the night of April 29-30, 2014, and
then sold the false story to a credulous Western
media and, initially, to the U.N. investigative
team.
“Seven
witnesses stated that frequent alerts [about an
imminent chlorine weapons attack by the
government] had been issued, but in fact no
incidents with chemicals took place,” the U.N.
report stated. “While people sought safety after
the warnings, their homes were looted and
rumours spread that the events were being
staged. … [T]hey [these witnesses] had come
forward to contest the wide-spread false media
reports.”
Accounts from other people, who did allege that
there had been a government chemical attack on
Al-Tamanah, provided suspect evidence, including
data from questionable sources, according to the
U.N. report.
The
report said, “Three witnesses, who did not give
any description of the incident on 29-30 April
2014, provided material of unknown source. One
witness had second-hand knowledge of two of the
five incidents in Al-Tamanah, but did not
remember the exact dates. Later that witness
provided a USB-stick with information of unknown
origin, which was saved in separate folders
according to the dates of all the five incidents
mentioned by the FFM (the U.N.’s Fact-Finding
Mission).
“Another witness provided the dates of all five
incidents reading it from a piece of paper, but
did not provide any testimony on the incident on
29-30 April 2014. The latter also provided a
video titled ‘site where second barrel
containing toxic chlorine gas was dropped
tamanaa 30 April 14’”
Some
other witnesses alleging a Syrian government
attack offered curious claims about detecting
the chlorine-infused “barrel bombs” based on how
the device sounded in its descent.
The
U.N. report said, “The eyewitness, who stated to
have been on the roof, said to have heard a
helicopter and the ‘very loud’ sound of a
falling barrel. Some interviewees had referred
to a distinct whistling sound of barrels that
contain chlorine as they fall. The witness
statement could not be corroborated with any
further information.”
However, the claim itself is absurd since it is
inconceivable that anyone could detect a
chlorine canister inside a “barrel bomb” by “a
distinct whistling sound.”
The
larger point, however, is that the jihadist
rebels in Al-Tamanah and their propaganda teams,
including relief workers and activists, appear
to have organized a coordinated effort at
deception complete with a fake video supplied to
U.N. investigators and Western media outlets.
For instance, the Telegraph in London
reported that
“Videos allegedly taken in Al-Tamanah … purport
to show the impact sites of two chemical bombs.
Activists said that one person had been killed
and another 70 injured.”
The
Telegraph also quoted supposed weapons expert
Eliot Higgins, the founder of Bellingcat, as
endorsing the report. “Witnesses have
consistently reported the use of helicopters to
drop the chemical barrel bombs used,” said
Higgins. “As it stands, around a dozen chemical
barrel bomb attacks have been alleged in that
region in the last three weeks.”
To
finish up pointing the finger of guilt at the
government, the Telegraph added that “The regime
is the only party in the civil war that
possesses helicopters” – a claim that also has
been in dispute since the rebels had captured
government air assets and had received
substantial military assistance from Saudi
Arabia, Turkey, the United States, Israel,
Jordan and other countries.
The Al-Tamanah
debunking received no mainstream media attention
when the U.N. findings were issued in September
2016 because the U.N. report relied on rebel
information to blame two other alleged chlorine
attacks on the government and that got all the
coverage. But the case should have raised red
flags given the extent of the apparent
deception.
If the
seven townspeople were telling the truth, that
would mean that the rebels and their allies
issued fake attack warnings, produced propaganda
videos to fool the West, and prepped “witnesses”
with “evidence” to deceive investigators. Yet,
no alarms went off about other rebel claims.
The Ghouta
Incident
A more
famous attack – with sarin gas on the Damascus
suburb of Ghouta on Aug. 21, 2013, killing
hundreds – was also eagerly blamed on the Assad
regime, as The New York Times, Human Rights
Watch, Higgins’s Bellingcat and many other
Western outlets jumped to that conclusion
despite the unlikely circumstances. Assad had
just welcomed U.N. investigators to Damascus to
examine chemical attacks that he was blaming on
the rebels.
Assad
also was facing a “red line” threat from
President Obama warning him of possible U.S.
military intervention if the Syrian government
deployed chemical weapons. Why Assad and his
military would choose such a moment to launch a
deadly sarin attack, killing mostly civilians,
made little sense.
But
this became another rush to judgment in the West
that brought the Obama administration to the
verge of launching a devastating air attack on
the Syrian military that might have helped Al
Qaeda’s Syrian affiliate and/or the Islamic
State win the war.
Eventually, however, the case blaming Assad for
the 2013 sarin attack
collapsed. An
analysis by genuine weapons experts – Theodore
A. Postol, a professor of science, technology
and national security policy at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and
Richard M. Lloyd, an analyst at the military
contractor Tesla Laboratories – found that the
missile that delivered the sarin had a very
short range placing its likely firing position
in rebel territory.
Later, reporting by journalist Seymour Hersh
implicated
Turkish intelligence working with jihadist
rebels as the likely source of the sarin.
We also learned in 2016 that
a message from
the U.S. intelligence community had warned Obama
how weak the evidence against Assad was. There
was no “slam-dunk” proof, said Director of
National Intelligence James Clapper. And Obama
cited his rejection of the Washington
militaristic “playbook” to bomb Syria as one of
his proudest moments as President.
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With
this background, there should have been extreme
skepticism when jihadists and their allies made
new claims about the Syrian government engaging
in chemical weapons attacks, just like the CIA
should have recognized that the Iraqi National
Congress’s production of some obviously phony
“walk-ins” justified doubts about all of them.
After
the invasion of Iraq and the U.S. failure to
find the promised WMD caches, INC leader Ahmed
Chalabi congratulated his organization as
“heroes in error” for its success in using
falsehoods to help get the United States to
invade.
But the
West appears to have learned next to nothing
from the Iraq deceptions – or arguably the
lessons are being ignored out of a desire to
continue the neoconservative “regime change”
project for the Middle East.
Pressure
to Confirm
U.N. investigators, who have been under
intense pressure to confirm accusations
against the Syrian government, continue to brush
aside contrary evidence, such as testimony
regarding the April 4 “sarin incident” at Khan
Sheikhoun, that suggested a replay of the
Al-Tamanah operation.
In a new U.N. report,
testimony from two people,
who were apparently considered reliable by
investigators from the Organization for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, asserted that
anti-government aircraft spotters issued no
early-morning warning of a flight leaving the
Syrian military airbase of Shayrat,
contradicting claims from Al Qaeda’s allies
inside Khan Sheikhoun who insisted that there
had been such a warning.
If no
warplanes left Shayrat airbase around dawn on
April 4, then President Trump’s case for
retaliating with 59 Tomahawk missiles launched
against the base two days later would collapse.
The U.S. strike reportedly killed several
soldiers at the base and nine civilians,
including four children, in nearby
neighborhoods. It also risked inflicting death
on Russians stationed at the base.
But the
U.N. report accepts the version from the
activists and rebels inside the Al
Qaeda-controlled town and then goes on to
endorse other rebel claims regarding alleged
Syrian military chemical attacks on at least 20
other occasions.
The New York Times was mightily impressed with
the U.N. report’s “unequivocal condemnation” of
Assad’s regime and
cited it as
justification for Israeli warplanes bombing a
Syrian military facility on Thursday. Rather
than criticize Israel for attacking a
neighboring country, the Times framed the action
in a positive light as having “brought renewed
attention to Syria’s chemical weapons.”
But the
journalistic (and intelligence) point should
have been that the West was fooled in Iraq by
self-interested “activists” flooding the Times,
the CIA and the world with fake information — so
many bogus walk-ins that they overwhelmed
whatever half-hearted process there was to weed
out lies from truth. The Syrian “opposition”
appears to have adopted a similar strategy in
Syria with similar success.
Given
the history, skepticism should be the rule in
Syria, not credulity. Or, as President George W.
Bush once said in a different context, “fool me
once, shame on — shame on you. Fool me — you
can’t get fooled again.”
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).
This article was first published by
Consortium News
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