Chemical Weapons Watchdog Is Just an
American Lap Dog
By
Scott Ritter
December 19, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
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A spate of
leaks from within the Organisation for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW),
the international inspectorate created for
the purpose of implementing the Chemical
Weapons Convention, has raised serious
questions about the institution’s integrity,
objectivity and credibility. The leaks
address issues pertaining to the OPCW
investigation into allegations that the
Syrian government used chemical weapons to
attack civilians in the Damascus suburb of
Douma on April 7, 2018. These allegations,
which originated from such anti-Assad
organizations as the Syrian Civil Defense
(the so-called
White Helmets)
and the Syrian American Medical Society (SAMS),
were immediately embraced as credible by the
OPCW, and were used by the United States,
France and the United Kingdom
to justify punitive military strikes
against facilities inside Syria assessed by
these nations as having been involved in
chemical weapons-related activities before
the OPCW initiated any on-site
investigation.
The Douma
incident was initially described by the
White Helmets, SAMS and the U.S., U.K. and
French governments as involving both sarin
nerve agent and chlorine gas. However, this
narrative was altered when OPCW inspectors
released, on July 6, 2018,
interim findings of their investigation
that found no evidence of the use of sarin.
The focus of the investigation quickly
shifted to a pair of chlorine cylinders
claimed by the White Helmets to have been
dropped onto apartment buildings in Douma by
the Syrian Air Force, resulting in the
release of a cloud of chlorine gas that
killed dozens of Syrian civilians. In March,
the OPCW released its
final report on the Douma incident,
noting that it had “reasonable grounds” to
believe “that the use of a toxic chemical as
a weapon has taken place on 7 April 2018,”
that “this toxic chemical contained reactive
chlorine” and that “the toxic chemical was
likely molecular chlorine.”
Much has been
written about the OPCW inspection process in
Syria, and particularly the methodology used
by the Fact-Finding Mission (FFM), an
inspection body created by the OPCW in 2014
“to establish facts surrounding allegations
of the use of toxic chemicals, reportedly
chlorine, for hostile purposes in the Syrian
Arab Republic.” The FFM was created under
the direction of
Ahmet Üzümcü,
a career Turkish diplomat with extensive
experience in multinational organizations,
including service as Turkey’s ambassador to
NATO. Üzümcü was the OPCW’s third director
general, having been selected from a field
of seven candidates by its executive council
to replace Argentine diplomat Rogelio
Pfirter. Pfirter had held the position since
being nominated to replace the OPCW’s first
director general, José Maurício Bustani.
Bustani’s tenure was marred by controversy
that saw the OPCW transition away from its
intended role as an independent implementor
of the Chemical Weapons Convention to that
of a tool of unilateral U.S. policy, a role
that continues to mar the OPCW’s work in
Syria today, especially when it comes to its
investigation of the alleged use by the
Syrian government of chemical weapons
against civilians in Douma in April 2018.
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Bustani was
removed from his position in 2002,
following an unprecedented campaign
led by John Bolton, who at the time was
serving as the undersecretary of state
for Arms Control and International
Security Affairs in the U.S. State
Department. What was Bustani’s crime? In
2001, he had dared to enter negotiations
with the government of Iraq to secure
that nation’s entry into the OPCW,
thereby setting the stage for OPCW
inspectors to visit Iraq and bring its
chemical weapons capability under OPCW
control. As director general, there was
nothing untoward about Bustani’s action.
But Iraq circa 2001 was not a typical
recruitment target. In the aftermath of
the Gulf War in 1991, the U.N. Security
Council had passed a resolution under
Chapter VII requiring Iraq’s weapons of
mass destruction (WMD), including its
chemical weapons capability, to be
“removed, destroyed or rendered
harmless” under the supervision of
inspectors working on behalf of the
United Nations Special Commission, or
UNSCOM.
The pursuit of
Iraqi weapons of mass destruction led to a
series of confrontations with Iraq that
culminated in inspectors being ordered out
of the country by the U.S. in 1998, prior to
a 72-hour aerial attack—Operation Desert
Fox. Iraq refused to allow UNSCOM inspectors
to return, rightfully claiming that the U.S.
had infiltrated the ranks of the inspectors
and was using the inspection process to spy
on Iraqi leadership for the purposes of
facilitating regime change. The lack of
inspectors in Iraq allowed the U.S. and
others to engage in wild speculation
regarding Iraqi rearmament activities,
including in the field of chemical weapons.
This speculation was used to fuel a call for
military action against Iraq, citing the
threat of a reconstituted WMD capability as
the justification. Bustani sought to defuse
this situation by bringing Iraq into the
OPCW, an act that, if completed, would have
derailed the U.S. case for military
intervention in Iraq.
Bolton’s intervention
included threats to Bustani and his family,
as well as threats to
withhold U.S. dues
to the OPCW accounting for some 22% of that
organization’s budget; had the latter threat
been implemented, it would have resulted in
OPCW’s disbandment.
Bustani’s
departure marked the end of the OPCW as an
independent organization. Pfirter, Bolton’s
hand-picked replacement, vowed to keep the
OPCW out of Iraq. In an
interview with U.S. media
shortly after his appointment, Pfirter noted
that while all nations should be encouraged
to join the OPCW, “We should be very aware
that there are United Nations resolutions in
effect” that precluded Iraqi membership “at
the expense” of its obligations to the
Security Council. Under the threat of
military action, Iraq allowed UNMOVIC
inspectors to return in 2002; by February
2003,
no WMD had been found,
a result that did not meet with U.S.
satisfaction. In March 2003, UNMOVIC
inspectors were withdrawn from Iraq under
orders of the U.S., paving the way for the
subsequent invasion and occupation of that
nation that same month (the CIA
later concluded
that Iraq had been disarmed of its weapons
of mass destruction by the summer of 1991).
Under Pfirter’s leadership, the OPCW became
a compliant tool of U.S. foreign policy
objectives. By completely subordinating OPCW
operations through the constant threat of
fiscal ruin, the U.S. engaged in a
continuous quid pro quo arrangement, trading
the financial solvency of an ostensible
multilateral organization for complicity in
operating as a de facto extension of
American unilateral policy. Bolton’s actions
in 2002 put the OPCW and its employees on
notice: Cross the U.S., and you will pay a
terminal price.
When Üzümcü
took over the OPCW’s reins in 2010, the
organization was very much the model of
multinational consensus, which, in the case
of any multilateral organization in which
the U.S. plays a critical role, meant that
nothing transpired without the express
approval of the U.S. and its European NATO
allies, in particular the United Kingdom and
France. Shortly after he took office, Üzümcü
was joined by
Robert Fairweather,
a career British diplomat who served as
Üzümcü’s chief of Cabinet. (While Üzümcü was
the ostensible head of the OPCW, the daily
task of managing the functioning of the OPCW
was that of the chief of Cabinet. In short,
nothing transpired within the OPCW without
Fairweather’s knowledge and concurrence.)
Üzümcü and
Fairweather’s tenure at the OPCW was
dominated by Syria, where, since 2011, the
government of President Bashar Assad had
been engaged in a full-scale conflict with a
foreign-funded and -equipped insurgency
whose purpose was regime change. By 2013,
allegations emerged from both the Syrian
government and rebel forces concerning the
use of chemical weapons by the other side.
In August 2013, the OPCW dispatched an
inspection team into Syria as part of a
U.N.-led effort, which included specialists
from the World Health Organization (WHO) and
the U.N. itself, to investigate allegations
that sarin had been used in attack on
civilians in the town of Ghouta. While the
mission
found
conclusive evidence that sarin nerve agent
had been used,
it did not assign blame for the attack.
Despite the
lack of causality, the U.S. and its NATO
allies quickly assigned blame for the sarin
attacks on the Syrian government. To
forestall U.S. military action against
Syria, the
Russian government helped broker a deal
whereby the U.S. agreed to refrain from
undertaking military action if the Syrian
government joined the OPCW and subjected the
totality of its chemical weapons stockpile
to elimination. In October 2013,
the OPCW-U.N. Joint Mission,
created under the authority of U.N. Security
Council resolution 2118 (2103), began the
process of identifying, cataloging, removing
and destroying Syria’s chemical weapons.
This process was completed in September 2014
(in December 2013, the OPCW was awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize
for its disarmament work in Syria).
If the
destruction of Syria’s chemical weapons was
an example of the OPCW at its best, what
followed was a case study of just the
opposite. In May 2014, the OPCW created the
Fact-Finding Mission, or FFM,
charged with establishing “facts surrounding
allegations of the use of toxic chemicals,
reportedly chlorine, for hostile purposes in
the Syrian Arab Republic.” The FFM was
headed by
Malik Ellahi,
who served as head of the OPCW’s government
relations and political affairs branch. The
appointment of someone lacking both
technical and operational experience
suggests that Ellahi’s primary role was
political. Under his leadership, the FFM
established a close working relationship
with the anti-Assad Syrian opposition,
including the White Helmets and SAMS.
In 2015,
responsibility for coordinating the work of
the FFM with the anti-Assad opposition was
transferred to a British inspector named Len
Phillips (another element of the FFM, led by
a different inspector, was responsible for
coordinating with the Syrian government).
Phillips developed a close working
relationship with the White Helmets and SAMS
and played a key role in OPCW’s
investigation of the April 2017 chemical
incident in Khan Shaykhun. By April 2018,
the FFM had undergone a leadership
transition, with Phillips
replaced by a Tunisian inspector named Sami
Barrek. It
was Barrek who led the FFM into Syria in
April 2018 to investigate allegations of
chemical weapons use at Douma. Like
Phillips, Barrek maintained a close working
relationship with the White Helmets and
SAMS.
Once the FFM
wrapped up its investigation in Douma,
however, it became apparent to Fairweather
that it had a problem. There were serious
questions about whether chlorine had, in
fact, been used as a weapon. The solution,
brokered by Fairweather, was to release an
interim report that ruled out sarin
altogether, but left the door open regarding
chlorine. This report was released on July
6, 2018. Later that month, both Üzümcü and
Fairweather were gone, replaced by a
Spaniard named
Fernando Arias
and a French diplomat named
Sébastien Braha.
It would be up to them to clean up the Douma
situation.
The situation
Braha inherited from Fairweather was
unenviable.
According to an unnamed OPCW official
who spoke with the media after the fact, two
days prior to the publication of the interim
report, on July 4, 2018, Fairweather had
been paid a visit by a trio of U.S.
officials, who indicated to Fairweather and
the members of the FFM responsible for
writing the report that it was the U.S.
position that the chlorine cannisters in
question had been used to dispense chlorine
gas at Douma, an assertion that could not be
backed up by the evidence. Despite this, the
message that Fairweather left with the OPCW
personnel was that there had to be a
“smoking gun.” It was now Braha’s job to
manufacture one.
Braha
did this by dispatching OPCW inspectors to
Turkey in September 2018 to interview new
witnesses identified by the White Helmets,
and by commissioning new engineering studies
that better explained the presence of the
two chlorine cannisters found in Douma. By
March, Braha had assembled enough
information to enable the technical
directorate to issue its final report.
Almost immediately, dissent appeared in the
ranks of the OPCW. An engineering report
that contradicted the findings published by
Braha
was leaked,
setting off a firestorm of controversy
derived from its conclusion that the
chlorine cannisters found in Douma had most
likely been staged by the White Helmets.
The OPCW, while
eventually acknowledging that the leaked
report was genuine, explained its exclusion
from the final report on the grounds that it
attributed blame, something the FFM was not
mandated to do.
According to the OPCW,
the engineering report in question had been
submitted to the investigation and
identification team, a newly created body
within the OPCW mandated to make such
determinations. Moreover, Director General
Arias stood by the report’s conclusion that
it had “reasonable grounds” to believe “that
the use of a toxic chemical as a weapon has
taken place on 7 April 2018.”
Arias’
explanation came under attack in November,
when WikiLeaks
published an email
sent by a member of the FFM team that had
participated in the Douma investigation. In
this email, which was sent on June 22, 2018,
and addressed to Robert Fairweather, the
author noted that, when it came to the Douma
incident, “[p]urposely singling out chlorine
gas as one of the possibilities is
disingenuous.” The author of the email, who
had participated in drafting the original
interim report, noted that the original text
had emphasized that there was insufficient
evidence to support this conclusion, and
that the new text represented “a major
deviation from the original report.”
Moreover, the author took umbrage at the new
report’s conclusions, which claimed to be
“based on the high levels of various
chlorinated organic derivatives detected in
environmental samples.” According to email’s
author “They were, in most cases, present
only in parts per billion range, as low as
1-2 ppb, which is essentially trace
quantities.” In short, the OPCW had cooked
the books, manufacturing evidence from thin
air that it then used to draw conclusions
that sustained the U.S. position that
chlorine gas had been used by the Syrian
government at Douma.
Arias, while
not addressing the specifics of the
allegations set forth in the leaked email,
recently declared
that it is “the nature of any thorough
inquiry for individuals in a team to express
subjective views,” noting that “I stand by
the independent, professional conclusion”
presented by the OPCW about the Douma
incident. This explanation, however, does
not fly in the face of the evidence. The
OPCW’s credibility as an investigative body
has been brought into question through these
leaks, as has its independent character. If
an organization like the OPCW can be used at
will by the U.S., the United Kingdom and
France to trigger military attacks intended
to support regime-change activities in
member states, then it no longer serves a
useful purpose to the international
community it ostensibly serves. To survive
as a credible entity, the OPCW must open
itself to a full-scale audit of its
activities in Syria by an independent
authority with inspector general-like
investigatory powers. Anything short of this
leaves the OPCW, an organization that was
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for its
contributions to world peace, permanently
stained by the reality that it is little
more than a lap dog of the United States,
used to promote the very conflicts it was
designed to prevent.
Scott
Ritter spent more than a dozen years in the
intelligence field, beginning in 1985 as a
ground intelligence officer with the US
Marine Corps
This article was originally published by "Truth
Dig"
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