Criticism
Of Hersh's New Piece Fails To Understand What Really
Happened
By Moon Of Alabama
December
21, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "MOA"
- The
latest Seymour Hersh piece alleges that the
Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) under General Dempsey
undermined the official White House policy on Syria.
Their impetus to do so came after a Defense
Intelligence Agency analysis
found in 2012 that there were hardly any
"moderate rebels" in Syria but only Islamists
fighting against the Syrian state. The CIA was at
least since early 2012 delivering weapons from Libya
to Turkey as well as
through other routes. The U.S. Ambassador to
Libya Chris Stevens
was killed on September 11 2012 in Benghazi over
some issues with the weapon transfers. Once in
Turkey those weapons, as well as plane loads of
others purchased by Qatar and Saudi Arabia, were
given to "moderate rebels" who took them into Syria.
There they sold off at least part of every weapon
and ammunition haul to the Islamists terror gangs
which were and are financed by the Wahhabi Gulf
states. A
new BBCRadio4 report by Peter Oborne explains in
detail how that scheme works.
The JCS
under Dempsey was quite disturbed that weapons
transferred by the CIA were going to exactly those
people they had fought in Iraq and Afghanistan just
a few years ago. They decided, according to Hersh's
source, to undermine the White House's and CIA's
regime-change program. They provided intelligence to
Syria via Germany, Russia and Israel. They also
convinced the CIA that it was preferable to give
away very old weapons that could be sourced in
Turkey instead of newer but more difficult to
transport weapons from Libya. As Hersh writes:
‘Our
policy of arming the opposition to Assad was
unsuccessful and actually having a negative
impact,’ the former JCS adviser said. ‘The Joint
Chiefs believed that Assad should not be
replaced by fundamentalists. The
administration’s policy was contradictory. They
wanted Assad to go but the opposition was
dominated by extremists. So who was going to
replace him? To say Assad’s got to go is fine,
but if you follow that through – therefore
anyone is better. It’s the “anybody else is
better” issue that the JCS had with Obama’s
policy.’ The Joint Chiefs felt that a direct
challenge to Obama’s policy would have ‘had a
zero chance of success’. So in the autumn of
2013 they decided to take steps against the
extremists without going through political
channels, by providing US intelligence to the
militaries of other nations, on the
understanding that it would be passed on to the
Syrian army and used against the common enemy,
Jabhat al-Nusra and Islamic State.
And Hersh
on the weapon dealing:
By the
late summer of 2013, the DIA’s assessment had
been circulated widely, but although many in the
American intelligence community were aware that
the Syrian opposition was dominated by
extremists the CIA-sponsored weapons kept
coming, presenting a continuing problem for
Assad’s army. Gaddafi’s stockpile had created an
international arms bazaar, though prices were
high. ‘There was no way to stop the arms
shipments that had been authorised by the
president,’ the JCS adviser said. ‘The solution
involved an appeal to the pocketbook. The CIA
was approached by a representative from the
Joint Chiefs with a suggestion: there were far
less costly weapons available in Turkish
arsenals that could reach the Syrian rebels
within days, and without a boat ride.’ But it
wasn’t only the CIA that benefited. ‘We worked
with Turks we trusted who were not loyal to
Erdoğan,’ the adviser said, ‘and got them to
ship the jihadists in Syria all the obsolete
weapons in the arsenal, including M1 carbines
that hadn’t been seen since the Korean War and
lots of Soviet arms. It was a message Assad
could understand: “We have the power to diminish
a presidential policy in its tracks.”’
The JCS,
according to Hersh, was undermining its Commander in
Chief. That is, arguably, treason but U.S. history
is full of examples where the military chiefs were
pushing into a very different direction than their
civil commanders. Trueman versus Douglas MacArthur
is just one example. Think of the closing of the
Guantanamo prison which the military is actively
preventing for seven years now despite Obama's
promise, demand and order to shut Gitmo down.
Max Fisher,
a critic of Hersh
not known for factual quality journalism,
claims that the Hersh account must be false
because Dempsey was not against weaponizing the
insurgents but even publicly asked to give them
weapons:
Hersh
alleges that the mastermind of this entire
conspiracy was Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
Martin Dempsey, whom Hersh says was horrified by
Obama's plan to arm Syrian rebels and sought to
aid Assad. This claim is difficult to believe:
While in office, Dempsey
famously and publicly clashed with Obama
over Syria because Dempsey wanted to do more
to arm Syrian rebels. Contemporaneous accounts
of arguments within the White House support
this, with Dempsey arguing the US should more
robustly arm Syrian rebels, and Obama arguing
for less.
Yet
Hersh claims, with no evidence, that Dempsey was
so opposed to arming Syrian rebels that he would
commit an apparent act of treason to subvert
those plans. Hersh makes no effort to reconcile
this seemingly fatal contradiction, and indeed
it is not clear Hersh is even aware that Dempsey
is known for supporting rather than opposing
efforts to arm the Syrian rebels.
Hersh is of
course perfectly aware what Dempsey said and thought
in early 2013. The one not aware is the critic.
Dempsey
argued in early 2013 that the Pentagon
should give weapons to a few carefully vetted
rebels:
Testifying
before the Senate Armed Services Committee,
Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta acknowledged
that he and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, had supported
a plan last year to arm carefully vetted
Syrian rebels.
...
[D]id the Pentagon, Mr. McCain continued,
support the recommendation by Mrs. Clinton and
Mr. Petraeus “that we provide weapons to the
resistance in Syria? Did you support that?”
“We
did,” Mr. Panetta said.
“You
did support that,” Mr. McCain said.
“We
did,” General Dempsey added.
The
Pentagon plan was killed by the White House in favor
of the ongoing CIA operation. This exchange then
does not contradict but even supports the Hersh
reporting. Let me explain the context.
By early
2013 Dempsey knew perfectly well that the CIA was
supplying -directly or indirectly- everyone in Syria
who asked for arms and ammunition. These weapons
were going to the Jihadis who were simply the best
financed groups. Because the CIA program was secret
Dempsey of course could not say so in a public
Congress hearing. But Dempsey wanted to give arms to
"carefully vetted Syrian rebels" to replace
the CIA program with a Pentagon program under his
command. He would then have been able to direct the
weapon flow and to prevent a further arming of the
Islamist terrorists. Dempsey supported a
Pentagon program arming the rebels so he could
control the arming of the rebels that was
already happening under a CIA program but was
creating long term trouble.
When the
hostile takeover of the CIA arming program failed,
Dempsey and the JCS tried to sabotage it by
providing old Turkish weapons to the CIA.
Only
much later was the Pentagon allowed to run its own
training program and to arm its own groups of Syrian
rebels. But that program was running in parallel to
the ongoing CIA program and was thereby useless for
the purpose Dempsey had originally intended. It did
not replace the dangerous CIA program. The Pentagon
then sabotaged its own program by training only a
few rebels and sending them into a Jihadi infested
area where they promptly gave their arms up to
Jabhat al-Nusra. This
publicly proved Dempsey's main critic point of the
long running CIA program: any arms going into Syria
ended up in the hands of long term U.S. enemies.
I
understand that Hersh's sourcing is rather weak. His
main and sole direct source for the JCS story is a
"former senior adviser to the Joint Chiefs". That
could be a military or a civilian source. Colonel
Pat Lang, one of Hersh's named sources for other
points in the piece,
thinks the main source is real and the story
true. Lang, who sometimes still consults the
military, surely has enough insider connections to
have a quite clear picture of this issue.
It is fine
to criticize Hersh. His reporting often relies on
anonymous sources. But throughout his career Hersh's
reporting was proven right more often than his
critics criticism of it. Here the criticism of Hersh
relies on a small tunnel vision of what Dempsey
claimed he wanted in a public hearing without regard
of the context of Dempsey's claim. Dempsey wanted to
replace the then still secret CIA arming program
that the DIA and other parts of the military had
rightly found to be on a very dangerous path.
The
Pentagon under Dempsey, fearing the CIA was
repeating old errors, was turf fighting against the
CIA under neocon Petraeus and later under the great
friend of Saudi Arabia John Brennan. Unfortunately
the White House backed the CIA and thereby, more or
less willfully,
allied with the Islamic State and the other
assorted Jihadi organizations (pdf) in Syria. |