Syrian Rebels Caught in ‘False-Flag’ Kidnapping
In August 2013, when the U.S. government almost went to war in Syria over a
Sarin attack, suspicions that it was a rebel “false-flag” were ridiculed. But
new disclosures about a rebel role in kidnapping NBC’s Richard Engel several
months earlier show the rebels knew such propaganda tricks, says Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
April 16, 2015 "ICH"
- "Consortium
News" - In
December 2012, Syria’s U.S.-backed
“moderate” rebels pulled off a false-flag
kidnapping and “rescue” of NBC’s chief
foreign correspondent Richard Engel and his
crew, getting the crime blamed on a militia
tied to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, a
propaganda scam that NBC played along with
despite having evidence of the truth.
On Wednesday, Engel, who
had blamed an Assad-linked Shiite militia in
reports both for NBC and Vanity Fair,
acknowledged that a new examination of the
case persuaded him that “the group that
kidnapped us was Sunni, not Shia.” He added
that the kidnappers “put on an elaborate
ruse to convince us they were Shiite shabiha
militiamen.”
According to
an
account published by the New York
Times on Thursday – in its “Business Day”
section – NBC executives had evidence from
the beginning that the actual kidnappers
were part of “a Sunni criminal element
affiliated with the Free Syrian Army, the
loose alliance of rebels opposed to Mr.
Assad.”
The Free Syrian Army has
been the principal rebel force supported by
the U.S. government which, in April 2013,
several months after Engel’s high-profile
ordeal, earmarked $123 million in aid to the
group to carry out its war against Assad’s
government.
The other significance of
the Syrian rebels’ successful false-flag
kidnapping/rescue of Engel is that it may
have encouraged them to sponsor other events
that would be blamed on the Syrian
government and excite the U.S. government
and media to intervene militarily against
Assad.
On Aug. 21, 2013, a
mysterious Sarin gas attack outside Damascus
killed several hundred people, causing U.S.
officials, journalists and human rights
activists to immediately leap to the
conclusion that Assad was responsible and
that he had crossed President Barack Obama’s
“red line” against the use of chemical
weapons and thus deserved U.S. military
retaliation.
Within days, this
political-media hysteria brought the United
States to the verge of a sustained bombing
campaign against the Syrian military before
contrary evidence began emerging suggesting
that extremist elements of the Syrian rebel
force may have deployed the Sarin as a
false-flag event. Obama pulled back at the
last moment, infuriating America’s
influential neoconservatives who had long
put “regime change” in Syria near the top of
their to-do list.
In retrospect, the aborted
U.S. bombing campaign, if carried out, might
well have so devastated the Syrian military
that the gates of Damascus would have fallen
open to the two most powerful rebel armies,
Al-Qaeda’s Nusra Front and the hyper-brutal
Islamic State, meaning that the black flag
of Islamic terrorism might have been raised
over one of the Mideast’s most important
capitals.
Dangers of Bad
Journalism
The revelations about
Engel’s staged kidnapping/rescue also
illuminate the dangers of biased mainstream
U.S. journalism in which the big news
organizations take sides in a conflict
overseas and shed even the pretense of
professional objectivity.
In the case of Syria, the
major U.S. media put on blinders for many
months to pretend that Assad was opposed by
“moderate” rebels until it became impossible
to deny that the dominant rebel forces were
Al-Qaeda’s Nusra Front and the Islamic
State. In late September 2013, many of the
U.S.-backed, supposedly “moderate” rebels realigned themselves
with Al-Qaeda’s affiliate.
In the case of Ukraine,
U.S. journalists have put on their blinders
again so as not to notice that the
U.S.-backed coup regime in Kiev has relied
on neo-Nazis and other right-wing extremists
to wage an “anti-terrorist operation”
against ethnic Russians in the east who have
resisted the overthrow of their elected
President Viktor Yanukovych. When it comes
to Ukraine, the more than 5,000 deaths –
mostly ethnic Russians in the east – are all
blamed on Russian President Vladimir Putin.
[See Consortiumnews.com’s “Seeing
No Neo-Nazi Militias in Ukraine.”]
These biased storylines –
with the “U.S. side” wearing white hats and
the other side wearing black hats – are not
only bad journalism but invite atrocities
because the “U.S. side” knows that the U.S.
mainstream media with reflexively blame any
horrors on the black-hatted “bad guys.”
In the case of Engel’s
staged kidnapping/rescue, the New York Times
belatedly reexamined the case not in the
context of a disinformation campaign
designed to excite war against Syria’s Assad
but as a follow-up to disclosures that NBC’s
longtime anchor Brian Williams had
exaggerated the danger he was in while
covering the Iraq War in 2003 – explaining
the story’s placement in the business
section where such media articles often go.
The most serious
journalistic offense by NBC in this case
appeared to be that it was aware of the
behind-the-scenes reality – that individuals
associated with the U.S.-backed rebels were
likely responsible – but still let Engel go
on the air to point the finger of blame in
Assad’s direction.
The Times reported that
the kidnapping “group, known as the North
Idlib Falcons Brigade, was led by two men,
Azzo Qassab and Shukri Ajouj, who had a
history of smuggling and other crimes. … NBC
executives were informed of Mr. Ajouj and
Mr. Qassab’s possible involvement during and
after Mr. Engels’s captivity, according to
current and former NBC employees and others
who helped search for Mr. Engel, including
political activists and security
professionals.
“Still, the network moved
quickly to put Mr. Engel on the air with an
account blaming Shiite captors and did not
present the other possible version of
events. … NBC’s own assessment during the
kidnapping had focused on Mr. Qassab and Mr.
Ajouj, according to a half-dozen people
involved in the recovery effort.
“NBC had received GPS data
from the team’s emergency beacon that showed
it had been held early in the abduction at a
chicken farm widely known by local residents
and other rebels to be controlled by the
Sunni criminal group.
“NBC had sent an Arab envoy
into Syria to drive past the farm, according
to three people involved in the efforts to
locate Mr. Engel, and engaged in outreach to
local commanders for help in obtaining the
team’s release. These three people declined
to be identified, citing safety
considerations.
“Ali Bakran, a rebel
commander who assisted in the search, said
in an interview that when he confronted Mr.
Qassab and Mr. Ajouj with the GPS map, ‘Azzo
and Shukri both acknowledged having the NBC
reporters.’ Several rebels and others with
detailed knowledge of the episode said that
the safe release of NBC’s team was staged
after consultation with rebel leaders when
it became clear that holding them might
imperil the rebel efforts to court Western
support.
“Abu Hassan, a local medic
who is close to the rebel movement, and who
was involved in seeking the team’s release,
said that when the kidnappers realized that
all the other rebels in the area were
working to get the captives out, they
decided to create a ruse to free them and
blame the kidnapping on the Assad regime.
‘It was there that the play was completed,’
he said, speaking of the section of road Mr.
Engel and the team were freed on.
“Thaer al-Sheib, another
local man connected with the rebel movement
who sought the NBC team, said that on the
day of the release ‘we heard some random
shots for less than a minute coming from the
direction of the farm.’ He said that Abu
Ayman, the rebel commander credited with
freeing the team, is related by marriage to
Mr. Ajouj, and that he staged the rescue.”
The Sarin Mystery
While it’s impossible to
determine whether the successful scam about
Engel’s kidnapping/rescue influenced the
thinking of other Syrian rebels to sponsor a
false-flag attack using Sarin, some of the
same propaganda factors applied – with the
U.S. news media jumping to conclusions about
Assad’s responsibility for the Sarin deaths
and then ridiculing any doubters.
Yet, like the Engel
kidnapping affair, there were immediate
reasons to doubt the “group think” on the
Sarin attack, especially since Assad had
just invited United Nations inspectors to
Syria to investigate what he claimed was an
earlier use of chemical weapons by the
rebels. As the inspectors were unpacking
their bags in Damascus, the Sarin attack
occurred in a Damascus suburb, a provocation
that quickly forced the inspectors to
address the new incident instead.
The inspectors were under
extraordinary U.S. pressure to implicate
Assad — especially after Secretary of State
John Kerry described a massive Sarin attack
using multiple rockets that he said could
only have come from a Syrian military base.
But the inspectors only found one crudely
made Sarin-laden rocket – and when rocket
experts examined it, they estimated that it
could only travel a couple of kilometers,
meaning it was likely fired from
rebel-controlled territory. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “The
Collapsing Syria-Sarin Case.”]
Even as the evidence
implicating the Syrian government
evaporated, the mainstream U.S. news media
and many wannabe important bloggers
continued to defend the earlier “group
think” on the Sarin attack and reject the
possibility that the sainted rebels had done
it. But the false-flag Engel
kidnapping/rescue shows that such propaganda
stunts were in the rebels’ bag of tricks.
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).
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the Bush Family and its connections to
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