Hersh's Latest
Bombshell:
U.S. Military Undermined Obama on Syria with Tacit
Help to Assad
By Democracy Now!
Seymour Hersh
says the Joint Chiefs of Staff has indirectly
supported Bashar al-Assad in an effort to help him
defeat jihadist groups. Hersh reports the Joint
Chiefs sent intelligence via Russia, Germany and
Israel on the understanding it would be transmitted
to help Assad push back Jabhat al-Nusra and the
Islamic State.
Posted
December 22, 2015
Transcript
AMY
GOODMAN:
The United Nations Security Council’s passage of a
peace plan for Syria has been called perhaps the
best chance yet to end the country’s civil war. The
measure, approved Friday, calls for a ceasefire,
talks between the government and opposition, and a
roughly two-year timeline to form a unity government
and hold elections. Secretary of State John Kerry
outlined the terms.
SECRETARY
OF STATE
JOHN
KERRY:
Under the resolution approved today, the purpose
of those negotiations between the responsible
opposition and the government is to facilitate a
transition within Syria to a credible,
inclusive, nonsectarian governance within six
months. The process would lead to the drafting
of a new constitution and arrangements for
internationally supervised election within 18
months.
AMY
GOODMAN:
The resolution is silent on the fate of Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad. The U.S. has insisted on
excluding Assad from a political transition,
pointing to the mass killings of his own people
throughout the more than four-year war. But Russia
and China have staunchly backed Assad. The world
powers’ impasse has fueled U.N. inaction amidst a
death toll of more than 250,000 and the world’s
worst refugee crisis. Although the U.S. remains
opposed to Assad, his omission from the Security
Council resolution signals a softening stance and a
potential diplomatic turning point. The Obama
administration has quietly backed off its public
insistence that Assad must go, claiming it’s no
longer seeking regime change in Syria.
Now an
explosive new
report says U.S. military leadership in the
Joint Chiefs of Staff has held that view all along
and has taken secret steps to move U.S. policy in
that direction. According to award-winning veteran
investigative journalist Seymour Hersh, the Joint of
Chiefs of Staff has tacitly aided the Assad regime
to help it defeat radical jihadists. Hersh reports
the Joint Chiefs sent intelligence via Russia,
Germany and Israel, on the understanding it would be
transmitted to help Assad push back Jabhat al-Nusra
and the Islamic State. Hersh also claims the
military even undermined a U.S. effort to arm Syrian
rebels in a bid to prove to Assad it was serious
about helping him fight their common enemies. At the
Joint Chiefs’ behest, a CIA
weapons shipment to the Syrian opposition was
allegedly downgraded to include obsolete weapons.
Hersh says the Joint Chiefs’ maneuvering was rooted
in several concerns, including the U.S. arming of
unvetted Syrian rebels with jihadist ties, a belief
the administration was overly focused on confronting
Assad’s ally in Moscow, and anger the White House
was unwilling to confront Turkey and Saudi Arabia
over their support of extremist groups in Syria.
Hersh’s
report in the London Review of Books
follows his controversial
story in May challenging the Obama
administration’s account of the killing of Osama bin
Laden. Like that story, his latest piece relies
heavily on a single source, described as a "former
senior adviser to the Joint Chiefs." And while
critics have dismissed both stories as conspiracy
theories, it turns out that key aspects of the bin
Laden report have since been corroborated. After the
bin Laden story came out, U.S. and Pakistani
intelligence sources confirmed Hersh’s reporting
that the U.S. discovered bin Laden’s location when a
Pakistani officer told the CIA,
and that the Pakistani government knew all along
where bin Laden was hiding.
For more,
we’re joined by Seymour Hersh. He won the Pulitzer
Prize for exposing the 1968 My Lai massacre in
Vietnam, when U.S. forces killed hundreds of
civilians. In 2004, Sy Hersh broke the Abu Ghraib
prisoner abuse scandal. His latest
piece in the London Review of Books is
headlined "Military to Military: US Intelligence
Sharing in the Syrian War." Hersh is working on a
study of Dick Cheney’s vice presidency.
We welcome
you back to Democracy Now!, Sy Hersh. Why
don’t you lay out this very controversial report
that you have just published in the London
Review of Books. What did you find?
SEYMOUR
HERSH:
Well, it began, actually, as I wrote, with a very
serious, extensive assessment of our policy, that
was completed by June—let’s say by middle of 2013,
two-and-a-half years ago. It was a study done by the
Joint Chiefs and the Defense Intelligence Agency
that came to three sort of conclusions, that may
seem obvious now but were pretty interesting then.
One is that
they said Assad must stay, at least through—through
the resolution of the war, because, as we saw in
Libya, once you get rid of a leader, like
Gaddafi—same, you can argue, in Iraq with the demise
of Saddam Hussein—chaos ensues. The second—so that
was an issue, that there—the point being, elections
at some point, certainly, but for the short term,
while we’re still fighting, he has to stay. And that
wasn’t the American position then. And, I would
argue with you, I still think the American position
is very muddled, although they have seemed to soften
it.
Secondly,
the other point they made is that their
investigation showed this notion of a moderate force
just was a fiction, was just a fantasy, that most of
the Free Syrian Army, by the summer, by mid-2013,
were in some sort of an understanding with al-Nusra,
or, as you put it, ISIL,
the Islamic State. There was a lot of back-and-forth
going—arms going into the Free Syrian Army and other
moderates were being peddled, sold, or transferred
to the more extremist groups.
And the
third major finding was about Turkey. It said we
simply have to deal with the problem. The Turkish
government, led by Erdogan, was—had
opened—basically, his borders were open, arms were
flying. I had written about that earlier for the
London Review, the rat line. There were arms
flying since 2012, covertly, with the CIA’s support
and the support of the American government. Arms
were coming from Tripoli and other places in
Benghazi, in Libya, going into Turkey and then being
moved across the line. And another interesting point
is that a lot of Chinese dissidents, the Uyghurs,
the Muslim Chinese that are being pretty much
hounded by the Chinese, were also—another rat line
existed. They were coming from China into
Kazakhstan, into Turkey and into Syria. So, this was
a serious finding.
It was not
the first time some of these points had been raised.
And there was simply no echo. Once you pass this
stuff on to the White House or into the other
agencies—the Defense Department does this routinely.
These are very highly secret. This study was
composed of overhead satellite intelligence, human
intelligence, etc., very compartmentalized stuff.
But it did go to the State Department and to a lot
of offices in the White House and National Security
Council. No response, no change in policy.
So, at this
point, as I wrote, the Joint Chiefs, then headed by
an Army general named Dempsey, Martin Dempsey, who
has since retired, decided that they had—that there
was a chance to do something about it without
directly contravening the policy. And that was
simply that we were aware that Germany, the German
intelligence service, the German General Staff, had
been involved pretty closely with Bashar in terms of
funneling intelligence. Russia—and it’s— a lot of
people will find this surprising, but the United
States military, the military has had a very solid
relationship with the leadership of the Russian
military since the fall of the Soviet Union in '91.
And General Dempsey, in particular, had a one-on-one
relationship with the general who now runs the
military for the Soviet Union. And so, we knew the
Russians and the Israelis were also involved in some
back-channel conversation with Syria, with the idea
being Israel, sort of very on the margin on this,
understood that if Bashar went, what comes next
would not be healthy for Israel. They share a border
with Syria, and you don't want Islamic State or
al-Nusra or any of those groups to be that close to
the Israelis. It would be a national security threat
for them.
So there
was a lot of people, a lot of other services
communicating, and so what the Joint Chiefs did is
they began to pass along some of this very good
strategic intelligence and technical intelligence we
have—where the bad guys are, you can put it; what
they might be thinking; what information we had.
That was passed not directly to Assad, but it was
passed to the Germans, to the Russians, through the
Israelis, etc. The exact process is, of course, way
beyond my ken, but there was no question that was a
transmission point. The point being that there was
no direct contact, but the information certainly got
to him, and it certainly had an impact on
Saddam’s—the Syrian army’s ability to improve its
position by the end of the year, 2013.
AMY
GOODMAN:
And talk—
SEYMOUR
HERSH:
Period. That’s the story. Go ahead.
AMY
GOODMAN:
Talk about the source that you used for this story
and the criticism of your single-source method.
SEYMOUR
HERSH:
Oh, my god. Well, you know, as you know, it’s
usually anonymous sources you get criticized for.
That’s always been traditionally, although any day
in The New York Times and Washington
Post, they’re full of anonymous sources. That’s
an easy way out. I wish I could tell you that I
haven’t been relying on this particular person for
since 9/11, but I have been. And many of the stories
I wrote for The New Yorker about what was
going on inside Iran, what was going—there was no
bombs inside Iraq, part of those early stories I was
writing, all came from one particularly
well-informed person, who, as—you know, who, for a
lot of reasons, I can’t make public. One is them is
this government would prosecute him.
So the idea
that there’s one source, that’s—I’ve done that—I
worked for The New York Times, as you know,
for eight or nine years, all during Watergate and
the Vietnam War years, and won many, many prizes
based on stories based on one source. I don’t know
what the public think goes on, but, you know, if you
get a very good source who over many years has been
totally reliable, I’m not troubled by it at all. And
neither—you know, the London Review, as
many in America know, is a very, very seriously
edited magazine, who did the same amount of very
intense fact checking as happened when I worked at
The New Yorker, which is famous for its
fact checking, and the editing was certainly as
competent and as good as you get in The New
Yorker. I’m very happy working for them. And
so, it’s not as if I’m not put to the same question
that you’re putting, that critics may put, by the
editors of the magazine. And they get—they have
direct contact. They know who the person is. They
have discussions with him, and with me not present.
All of these standards are met.
AMY
GOODMAN:
Well—
SEYMOUR
HERSH:
Yes, go ahead.
AMY
GOODMAN:
Let me share with you some of the criticism of your
piece—
SEYMOUR
HERSH:
Oh, oh, spare me.
AMY
GOODMAN:
—like Max Fisher’s writing in Vox—but let me
share it with our audience, as well—who, you know,
talks about your relying entirely on one unnamed
source for your principal allegation that U.S.
defense officials bypassed the Obama administration
and shared intelligence with allies, who
subsequently shared it with the Assad regime. Fisher
goes on to conclude,
quote, "We are required to believe that the
senior-most leaders of our military one day in 2013
decided to completely transform how they behave and
transgress every norm they have in a mass act of
treason, despite never having done so before, and
then promptly went back to normal this September
when Dempsey retired." Can you respond to that?
SEYMOUR
HERSH:
Well, there’s—it’s so many instances where the
military disagree with a president. We’ve seen this
in World War II, MacArthur. I mean, the idea that
the Joint Chiefs of Staff—let me just say, in
general, when you’re at that level, at the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, you make an oath of office not to the
president of the United States, but to the
Constitution. And there’s been many times the
military objects. There were times just in the last
couple of years, in congressional testimony, that
General Dempsey has made it clear he disagrees with
the policy.
Specifically about some of the matters that were
raised in that article—and I did look at it, of
course—is that, for example, Dempsey agreed in
testimony that we should arm the moderates—the
opposition, rather. And, in fact, what he agreed
to—this is with the head of the
CIA, Leon Panetta, at the time—when this
discussion came up of arming dissident groups,
opposition groups inside Syria, Panetta and the
chairman both made a point of saying "vetted
groups." They said only those groups we really know
are reliable, and not wackos and not jihadist groups
that want to exclude anybody except those who share
their particular beliefs in the future state, if
they were to take it over. So there’s a lot
of—there’s a lot of contradictory evidence about it.
And there are—there certainly can be more
sophisticated arguments to make than this has never
happened before. This is certainly unusual that, in
a time like this, the military would give
information to allies, our allies, at their request,
that differ from the official policy. Sure, that’s a
very complicated thing, and it was a tough thing to
do, but it happened.
AMY
GOODMAN:
Was there direct communication between the United
States and Syria?
SEYMOUR
HERSH:
I’m going to stand by what I wrote in the article.
AMY
GOODMAN:
Which was?
SEYMOUR
HERSH:
I wrote in the article that there was no direct
contact, that the whole purpose was to use the
cutouts, that there was no attempt to directly
engage with Bashar al-Assad or his regime.
AMY
GOODMAN:
And what—
SEYMOUR
HERSH:
But there—yes?
AMY
GOODMAN:
What did the U.S. get in return?
SEYMOUR
HERSH:
Well, there was an understanding, obviously,
conveyed by our allies. And the understanding was
that we were going to give this stuff, and if Bashar
would, among other things, agree to an election, a
monitored election, once the war was over, and
presumably he had re-established—you know, Bashar—there’s
a lot of talk about the success of the Islamic
groups, but Bashar right now, although he doesn’t
control 100 percent—much less, 60—I’m not sure of
the number, but it was more than 50 percent, less
than—the opposition groups controlled large swaths,
30 percent, 40 percent. But he does control as much
as—I’ve seen estimates of 86 percent of the
population. And the notion that everybody in Syria
despises him, etc., all these things you hear,
that’s not true. He has a lot of native support, and
even from Muslims, because every Muslim in Syria is
not a Wahhabi or a Salafist, an extremist. Many are
very moderate people who believe they would be in
trouble if the Islamic force, the Islamic groups,
came into power, because they would go and seek out
those fellow Muslims that don’t agree with their
extreme views. So he does have an awful lot of
support, more than most people think. This is not to
say he’s a good guy or bad guy. We’re just talking
about reality.
And don’t
forget, we are a country that, in World War II, a
year after the Russians had done—were in a pact with
Hitler, we joined with the Russians against Hitler.
So, you know, you sometimes overlook—one of the
points also made by—in this article is this
incredible hostility towards Russia and these
allegations, time and time again, that Russia is not
really serious about going after the Islamic State.
And there—even just in the debate over at the U.N.,
a statistic suggesting that 80 percent of the
Russian attacks have nothing to do with
ISIS, but they’re
attacking the ISIS
opposition, the moderates. And you just have to say
to yourself, "Well, why then did
ISIS bomb, as we all believe and the Russians
believe, destroy a Russian airliner? Why was
ISIS upset with Russia, if
Russia was basically bombing their enemy, the
moderates?" It doesn’t—it just—the logic in some of
the American thinking and the thinking around the
world on this, it doesn’t make much sense to me.
AMY
GOODMAN:
We’re going to break and then come back to this
discussion. Sy Hersh is our guest, the Pulitzer
Prize-winning journalist. His latest
piece is in the London Review of Books;
it’s headlined "Military to Military: US
Intelligence Sharing in the Syrian War." This is
Democracy Now! Back in a minute.
[break]
AMY
GOODMAN:
That’s Pete Seeger singing "If I Had a Hammer." And
in our next segment, we’ll be talking about the U.S.
government spying on Pete Seeger for close to 30
years. New documents have been released by the
government, over 1,700 of them.
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