Former Defense Intelligence Agency Chief Says Rise
of Islamic State Was “A Willful Decision”
By Brad Hoff
August 07, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Levant
Report" -
In Al Jazeera’s latest Head to Head
episode, former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency
Michael Flynn confirms to Mehdi Hasan that not only had he studied
the
DIA memo predicting the West’s backing of an Islamic State in
Syria when it came across his desk in 2012, but even asserts that
the White House’s sponsoring of radical jihadists (that would emerge
as ISIL and Nusra) against the Syrian regime was “a willful
decision.”
Amazingly, Flynn actually took issue with the way
interviewer Mehdi Hasan posed the question—Flynn seemed to want to
make it clear that the policies that led to the rise of ISIL were
not merely the result of ignorance or looking the other way, but the
result of conscious decision making:
Hasan:
You are basically saying that even in government at the time you
knew these groups were around, you saw this analysis, and you
were arguing against it, but who wasn’t listening?
Flynn: I think the administration.
Hasan: So the administration turned a blind eye
to your analysis?
Flynn: I don’t know that they turned a blind
eye, I think it was a decision. I think it was a willful
decision.
Hasan: A willful decision to support an
insurgency that had Salafists, Al Qaeda and the Muslim
Brotherhood?
Flynn: It was a willful decision to do what
they’re doing.
Hasan himself expresses surprise at Flynn’s
frankness during this portion of the interview. While holding up a
paper copy of the 2012 DIA report declassified through FOIA, Hasan
reads aloud key passages such as, “there is the possibility of
establishing a declared or undeclared Salafist principality in
Eastern Syria, and this is exactly what the supporting powers to the
opposition want, in order to isolate the Syrian regime.”
Rather than downplay the importance of the
document and these startling passages,
as did the State Department soon after its release, Flynn does
the opposite: he confirms that while acting DIA chief he “paid very
close attention” to this report in particular and later adds that
“the intelligence was very clear.”
Lt. Gen. Flynn, speaking safely from retirement,
is the highest ranking intelligence official to go on record saying
the United States and other state sponsors of rebels in Syria
knowingly gave political backing and shipped weapons to Al-Qaeda in
order to put pressure on the Syrian regime:
Hasan:
In 2012 the U.S. was helping coordinate arms transfers to those
same groups [Salafists, Muslim Brotherhood, Al Qaeda in Iraq],
why did you not stop that if you’re worried about the rise of
quote-unquote Islamic extremists?
Flynn:
I hate to say it’s not my job…but that…my job was to…was to to
ensure that the accuracy of our intelligence that was being
presented was as good as it could be.
The early reporting that treated the DIA memo as
newsworthy and hugely revelatory was criticized and even mocked by
some
experts, as well as outlets like The Daily Beast. Yet the very
DIA director at the time the memo was drafted and
circulated widely now unambiguously confirms the document to be
of high value, and indicates that it served as source material in
his own discussions over Syria policy with the White House.
As Michael Flynn also previously served as
director of intelligence for Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC)
during a time when its prime global mission was dismantling
Al-Qaeda, his honest admission that the White House was in fact
arming and bolstering Al-Qaeda linked groups in Syria is especially
shocking given his stature.
Consider further the dissonance that comes with
viewing the Pentagon’s former highest ranking intelligence officer
in charge of the hunt for Osama bin Laden now calmly and coolly
confessing that the United States directly aided the foot soldiers
of Ayman al-Zawahiri beginning in at least 2012 in Syria.
This confirmation is significant to my own
coverage of the DIA report, as I was contacted by a number of
individuals who attempted to assure me that the true experts and
“insiders” knew the document was unimportant and therefore
irrelevant within the intelligence community and broader Syria
policy.
This began after a Daily Beast article entitled
The ISIS Conspiracy That Ate the Web cited former NSA
officer John Schindler as an expert source. Schindler concluded of
the DIA document: “it’s difficult to say much meaningful about it…
Nothing special here, not one bit.”
To my surprise, only hours after I published a
rebuttal of Schindler and the Daily Beast article, I was
contacted by a current high level CIA official who is also a
personal friend from my time living in the D.C. area.
This official, who spent most of his career with
CIA Public Affairs, made a personal appeal urging me to drop my
comments attacking John Schindler’s credibility, as I had noted that
Schindler is a highly ideological and scandal-laden commentator who
consistently claims
special insider knowledge in support of his arguments. This CIA
official further attempted to convince me of Schindler’s credibility
as an insider and expert, assuring me that “he has written
insightfully.”
Mehdi Hasan’s historic interview with General
Flynn should put the issue to rest—the declassified DIA report is
now confirmed to be a central and vital source that sheds light on
the origins of ISIS, and must inform a candid national debate on
American policy in Syria and Iraq.
As it is now already becoming part of
the official record on conflict in Syria among respected
international historians, knowledge of the declassified document
must make it into every American household.