Syria: Chemical Weapons Watchdog Accused of
Evidence-Tampering by Its Own Inspectors
By Jonathan Steele
November 19, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -Claims that President
Bashar al-Assad’s forces have used chemical weapons
are almost as old as the Syrian civil war itself.
They have produced strong reactions, and none more
so than in the case of the alleged attack in April
last year on the opposition-controlled area of Douma
near Damascus in which 43 people are said to have
been killed by chlorine gas. The United States,
Britain and France responded by launching airstrikes
on targets in the Syrian capital.
Were the strikes justified? An inspector from the
eight-member team sent to Douma has just come
forward with disturbing allegations about the
international watchdog, the Organisation for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, which was tasked
with obtaining and examining evidence.
Involved in collecting samples as well as
drafting the OPCW’s interim report, he claims his
evidence was suppressed and a new report was written
by senior managers with assertions that contradicted
his findings.
The inspector went public with his allegations at
a recent all-day briefing in Brussels for people
from several countries working in disarmament,
international law, military operations, medicine and
intelligence. They included Richard Falk, former UN
special rapporteur on Palestine and Major-General
John Holmes, a distinguished former commander of
Britain’s special forces. The session was organised
by the Courage Foundation, a New York-based fund
which supports whistle-blowers. I attended as an
independent reporter.
The whistle-blower gave us his name but prefers
to go under the pseudonym Alex out of concern, he
says, for his safety.
He is the second member of the Douma Fact-Finding
Mission to have alleged that scientific evidence was
suppressed. In May this year an unpublished report
by Ian Henderson, a South African ballistics expert
who was in charge of the mission’s engineering
sub-team was leaked. The team examined two
suspicious cylinders which rebels said were filled
with chlorine gas. One cylinder was found on the
roof of a damaged building where over two dozen
bodies were photographed. The other lay on a bed on
the upper floor of a nearby house below a hole in
the roof. The inspectors were able to check the
scene because Syrian troops drove rebel fighters out
of the area a few days after the alleged gas attack.
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Assessing the damage to the cylinder
casings and to the roofs, the inspectors
considered the hypothesis that the
cylinders had been dropped from Syrian
government helicopters, as the rebels
claimed. All but one member of the team
concurred with Henderson in concluding
that there was a higher probability that
the cylinders had been placed manually.
Henderson did not go so far as to
suggest that opposition activists on the
ground had staged the incident, but this
inference could be drawn. Nevertheless
Henderson’s findings were not mentioned
in the published OPCW report.
The staging scenario has long been promoted by
the Syrian government and its Russian protectors,
though without producing evidence. By contrast
Henderson and the new whistleblower appear to be
completely non-political scientists who worked for
the OPCW for many years and would not have been sent
to Douma if they had strong political views. They
feel dismayed that professional conclusions have
been set aside so as to favour the agenda of certain
states.
Alex, the new whistleblower, said his aim in
going public was not to undermine the OPCW, most of
whose investigators are objective scientists, but to
persuade the organisation’s leadership to allow the
Douma team to put forward their findings and answer
questions at the week-long annual conference of
member states which starts on November 25. “Most of
the Douma team felt the two reports on the incident,
the Interim Report and the Final Report, were
scientifically impoverished, procedurally irregular
and possibly fraudulent”, he said. Behind his call
for the Douma inspectors to address the next OPCW
conference was the hope that thereby the watchdog
would “demonstrate transparency, impartiality and
independence”.
He told me “Ian and I wanted to have this issue
investigated and hopefully resolved internally,
rather than exposing the failings of the
Organisation in public, so we exhausted every
internal avenue possible including submission of all
the evidence of irregular behaviour to the Office of
Internal Oversight. The request for an internal
investigation was refused and every other attempt to
raise our concerns was stone walled. Our failed
efforts to get management to listen went on over a
period of nearly nine months. It was only after we
realised the internal route was impossible that we
decided to go public”.
Within days of rebel-supplied videos of dead
children and adults in the aftermath of the alleged
attack in Douma Francois DeLattre, France’s
representative at the UN Security Council, said the
videos and photos showed victims with “symptoms of a
potent nerve agent combined with chlorine gas”.
The Douma fact-finding team quickly discovered
this was wrong. Blood and other biological samples
taken from alleged victims examined in Turkey (where
some had fled after government forces regained
control of Douma in mid-April) showed no evidence of
nerve agents. Nor was there any in the surrounding
buildings or vegetation in Douma. As the Interim
Report, published on July 6 2018, put it: “No
organophosphorus nerve agents or their degradation
products were detected, either in the environmental
samples or in plasma samples from the alleged
casualties”.
The next sentence said “Various chlorinated
organic chemicals were found”. The indirect
reference to chlorine was reported in many media as
proof of the use of lethal gas. According to Alex
there were huge internal arguments at the OPCW
before the Interim report was released. Chlorinated
organic chemicals (COCs) are present in the natural
environment so one crucial point in discovering what
actually happened at Douma was to measure the amount
in the locations where the two cylinders were found
and in the other parts of the two buildings and the
street outside.
As Alex put it, “if the finding of these
chemicals at the alleged site is to be used as an
indicator that chlorine gas was present in the
atmosphere, they should at least be shown to be
present at levels significantly higher than what is
present in the environment already”.
But when the analysis of these key levels came
back from the laboratories the results were kept
with Sami Barrek, a Tunisian who was the Duma
fact-finding mission’s leader. Against normal
expectations they were not passed on to the
inspector who was drafting the OPCW’s interim report
on Douma.
The inspector did, however, have the analysis
from the samples of blood, hair, and other
biological data from eleven alleged victims who had
gone from Douma to Turkey. In no case did the
samples reveal any relevant chemicals. On this basis
he wrote in his report that the signs and symptoms
of victims were not consistent with poisoning from
chlorine. Instead of an attack producing multiple
fatalities there had been “a non chemical-related
event”, it said.
The language was low-key, in part, as Alex put
it, because of the tension and anxiety involved when
evidence doesn’t match what it is thought that
management wants to hear. But the implications of
implying a non-chemical event were dramatic. Like
the engineering report, it hinted that the Douma
incident may have been staged by opposition
activists. Alex described it as “the elephant in the
room which no-one dared mention explicitly”.
When the inspector’s report was submitted to
senior management, silence ensued. A few weeks later
on the eve of the expected publication the inspector
who had drafted the report discovered that
management was going to issue a redacted version on
June 22 2018 without the knowledge of most of the
Douma Fact-Finding Mission. Its conclusions
contradicted the inspector’s version. By then the
inspector had learnt that the results of the
quantitative analysis of the samples from the
allegedly attacked buildings had been delivered to
management from the test laboratories but not passed
on to the inspectors. He got sight of the results
which indicated that the levels of COCs were much
lower than what would be expected in environmental
samples. They were comparable to and even lower than
those given in the World Health Organisation’s
guidelines on recommended permitted levels of
trichlorophenol and other COCs in drinking water.
The redacted version of the report made no mention
of the findings.
Alex described this omission as “deliberate and
irregular”. “Had they been included, the public
would have seen that the levels of COCs found were
no higher than you would expect in any household
environment”, he said.
The inspector who drafted the original report was
furious when he realised it was to be replaced by a
doctored management version. He wrote an email of
complaint to the OPCW’s director general. The DG was
Ahmet Uzumcu, a Turkish diplomat but his chef de
cabinet, the man considered to have the most power
in the OPCW on day-to-day issues was Bob
Fairweather, a British career diplomat. (He has
since been succeeded by Sebastien Braha, a diplomat
from another anti-Assad government, France). In his
email the inspector complained that it was wrong for
the new report to describe the levels of COCs as
high. He insisted that his original 105-page report
be published.
This request was rejected but Sami Barrek, the
team leader, was put in charge of replacing the
doctored version with what turned out to be a
toned-down but still misleading report. During the
editing four of the Douma inspectors, including Ian
Henderson, the engineering expert, had managed to
get Barrek to agree that the low levels of COCs
should be mentioned. On the day before the new
publication date, July 6, they found that the levels
were again being omitted.
On July 4 there was another intervention.
Fairweather, the chef de cabinet, invited several
members of the drafting team to his office. There
they found three US officials who were cursorily
introduced without making clear which US agencies
they represented. The Americans told them
emphatically that the Syrian regime had conducted a
gas attack, and that the two cylinders found on the
roof and upper floor of the building contained 170
kilograms of chlorine. The inspectors left
Fairweather’s office, feeling that the invitation to
the Americans to address them was unacceptable
pressure and a violation of the OPCW’s declared
principles of independence and impartiality.
Two days later the interim report was released.
That morning, Alex recalled, “a senior colleague
told us: ‘First floor [management] says that for the
OPCW’s credibility we have to have a smoking gun”.
Meanwhile, Fairweather asked the inspectors if he
could get back the emails of complaint, including
any which had been put into the trash folder. They
complied.
After Alex’s briefing I emailed Fairweather with
a request that he explain why he had facilitated the
US officials’ meeting with the inspectors as well as
why he had recalled emails. He did not reply.
The final Douma report which was published in
March this year also failed to give any quantitative
analysis of the COC samples. But its thrust went
much further than the interim report. It stated that
the OPCW concluded that the evidence from the Douma
investigation provides “reasonable grounds that the
use of a toxic chemical as a weapon took place”.
Alex argued that the concept of “reasonable
grounds” was undefined. What should have been done
in the report, he said, was to set out alternative
hypotheses for what had occurred in Douma and then
assess the balance of probabilities of the various
options and conclude which was the most likely.
This is what was done in Henderson’s report on
the provenance of the two cylinders.
I asked the OPCW’s media office to explain why
the COC levels were excluded from the interim and
final reports but they did not respond. Asked
whether the inspectors would be permitted to address
the conference of member states, they also did not
respond.
An open letter to every delegate at the
forthcoming OPCW conference calling for the
inspectors to be heard has been signed by
Jose Bustani, first Director General of the
OPCW
Hans von Sponeck, former UN Humanitarian
Coordinator (Iraq)
George Carey, former Archbishop of Canterbury
Scott Ritter, UNSCOM Weapons Inspector
1991-1998.
Noam Chomsky, Emeritus Professor, MIT.
John Pilger, Journalist and documentary film
maker
Ray McGovern, former CIA analyst and co-founder
of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
(VIPS)
Oliver Stone, Film Director, Producer and
Writer.
Jonathan Steele
is the former chief foreign correspondent for the
Guardian.
This article was originally published by "Counterpunch"
--
Whistleblower: OPCW suppressed Syria chemical
evidence after US pressure
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