Obscuring the Details: A Panoramic Look at America’s Case Against Syria
By Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya
The US federal government and the various agencies, media
organizations, individuals, foreign governments, non-governmental
organizations, lobbies, forces, and other entities that are tied to it
have done everything in their power to obscure the details involving the
chemical attacks that took place in Syria on August 21, 2013. The aim
has been to justify the US-led foreign campaign that was launched
against Syria in 2011 by making the Syrian government appear culpable of
grievous crimes. The chemical attack on Ghouta has now come to represent the crux of the matter.
From the very start there was double-speaking coming from Washington
and its cohorts about what happened in Ghouta. The Obama Administration
and America’s allies deliberately ignored that chemical weapons were
used in Syria prior to August 21, 2013. They have pretended that the
United Nations investigation team that had arrived in Syria when
chemical weapons were used in Ghouta had just stumbled there
coincidentaly or with the purpose of «inspecting» the Syrian
government’s chemical weapon depots.
Ignoring the Original Mandate of the UN Investigators
In reality, the UN team that arrived in Syria in August was not a
team of weapons inspectors. It was a team of «investigators.» Even more
importantly, the Syrian government had invited the UN investigation team
to Syria in March 2013. This was because the insurgents had launched
chemical attacks on March 19, 2013. The US and its allies tried to blame
Syria, but they were embarrassingly contradicted by Carla Del Ponte,
one of the UN investigators responsible for Syria, that said all the
evidence pointed to the insurgents and not the Syrian government.
Although she backed her conclusion with facts, Del Ponte was dismissed
by the US, and NATO even abnormally took the time to make a statement
against here. Moreover, the insurgents were even caught trying to sneak
sarin gas into Syria from Turkey by Turkish security forces in May 2013.
Because the insurgents were behind the chemical attacks in March
2013, Syria’s government originally wanted the UN investigators to have
the authority and mandate to officially assign blame on which party used
the chemical weapons. The US, however, put all types of obstacles in
place to prevent the UN from issuing a report that the US-supported
insurgents were using chemical weapons. It was the US, Britain, and
France that prevented an UN investigation that could assign
responsibility for any chemical weapon attacks from taking place.
Instead they wanted a politicized inspection team that would try to
demonize Syria and write reports against Damascus. This led to a
deadlock in the United Nations over the type of team that the UN would
send to work in Syria. A settlement was eventually reached. The US and
its allies eventually reduced the mandate of the UN inspectors to one of
only determining if chemical weapons were used.
The United Nation’s team even spells out the fact that they had
originally entered Syria to investigate the March 2013 chemical attacks
all in their September 2013 report’s Letter of Transmittal signed by Ake
Sellstrom, the head of the UN mission, Scott Cairns, the head of the
OPCW (Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons) component of
the UN mission, and Maurizio Barbeschi, the head of the World Health
Organization (WHO) component of the UN mission. The UN team states the
following on the report’s third page: «Having arrived in the Syrian Arab
Republic on 18 August 2013, we were in Damascus on the 21 August
preparing to conduct on-site inspections in connection with our
investigation into the allegations concerning the use of chemical
weapons in Khan al-Asal and in Sheik Maqsood and Saraqueb. Based on
several reports of allegations on the use of chemical weapons in the
Ghouta area of Damascus on 21 August 2013, you instructed us to focus
our investigation efforts on the Ghouta allegations. We, therefore,
proceeded to conduct on-site inspections in Moadamiyah in West Ghouta
and Ein Tarma and Zamalka in East Ghouta».
Cooked US Intelligence and Implausible White House Stories
The narrative that the US government and its allies present about
Ghouta is contradictory to logic and highly implausible. Added to the
fact that the US has a track record of lying to create pretexts for
aggression, Washington’s claims should be heavily scrutinized. So should
the same group of non-governmental organizations that have consistently
backed American wars and conjured instant reports to justify US foreign
policy and war.
President Obama and
John Kerry claimed that the Syrian military used chemical weapons while
it was advancing militarily in Ghouta. This is contrary to any
procedure that would be followed by an organized military force. An
advancing military would not gas an area when it was entering it with
its forces. Obama and Kerry might as well have claimed that the Syrian
military had decided to reduce the number of its own troops by killing
them.
Furthermore, there was no tactical need to use chemical weapons in
Ghouta whatsoever. Ghouta did not have a large amount of anti-government
fighters. Nor was Ghouta under the full control of the insurgents.
Despite being in worse situations, the Syrian military never bothered
using chemical weapons earlier in the conflict when things were dire for
the Syrian government.
On the contrary, using chemical weapons would be a self-defeating and
suicidal move by the Syrian government. Why would the Syrian government
use chemical weapons when the combined UN team of OPCW and WHO
investigators arrived in Syria to investigate the use of chemical
attacks? Moreover, why would the Syrian military decide to use chemical
weapons unnecessarily?
No evidence has been provided that the Syrian government was
responsible for the chemical attack on Ghouta. On the contrary the US
has only made claims and a series of contradictory statements. Using
cooked Israeli evidence, Washington has claimed that the orders to use
chemical weapons were intercepted, but has failed to provide the
transcripts or to give any names of Syrian officials. In its own
intelligence report the US government has also said that it knew in
advance that the chemical attacks were going to happen. If the US
government is to be believed, this would mean that the Obama
Administration did not mention it and did nothing to prevent the use of
chemical weapons from happening.
It turns out that the US government was given some type of advanced
warning by the Iranian government about a chemical attack in Syria. The
warning, however, was that the insurgents planned on using chemical
weapons. This has been matched by statements from insurgents themselves
that Saudi Arabia had provided the chemical weapons to the insurgents.
Russian officials have also assessed that the chemical attacks in Ghouta
were part of an intelligence operation conducted by Saudi Arabia.
Chemical Weapon Hypocrisy
It is not true either that the Syrian government lied about not
having chemical weapons. Even though it was widely known, Damascus never
denied or acknowledged that it had chemical weapons. The Syrian
government always strategically applied a policy of deliberate ambiguity
that neither confirmed nor denied that Syria had chemical weapons in
its military arsenal. Anyhow, there was acknowledgement from Syrian
officials that Syria possessed chemical weapons when Syrian officials
said that they were worried that the insurgents would try to get their
hands on the chemical weapon stocks inside Syria or use chemical weapons
to frame the government.
Aside from Prime Minister Ehud Olmert admitting that Israel has
nuclear weapons in 2006, the deliberate ambiguity of Syria is the same
policy that Israel has
tried to apply in regards to its biological, chemical, and nuclear
weapons of mass destruction. Despite the same policy being used by both
Damascus and Tel Aviv, the US government and media apply double
standards by falsely accusing Syria of lying about its possession of
chemical weapons while they say nothing about Israel. Instead both the
US government and media refuse to admit or recognize the fact that Syria
was applying a policy of ambiguity.
President Obama even had the audacity to call the August 2013 use of
chemical weapons in Syria the worst chemical weapon attack of the 21st
Century. He ignored the use of chemical weapons against Iraqi combatants
and civilians in Fallujah and Israeli chemical weapon attacks on
Lebanon and Gaza. As heinous a crime as the chemical attacks on Ghouta
were, more Iraqis were killed by the United States in its chemical
attacks on Fallujah.
Even looking back at the last century, it was the United States and
its British allies that armed Saddam Hussein with chemical weapons by
knowingly providing him the materials and technology needed to gas both
the Iraqi Kurds and Iran. Not once did the US condemn the use of
chemical weapons by the Iraqi government in the 1980s while Baghdad was
aligned with Washington. The British Defence Ministry was even directly
helping Saddam Hussein’s government develop his chemical and biological
weapons in Iraq while the Pentagon helped the Iraqis organize their attacks on Iran and
sent US military officers to examine the success of Iraqi chemical
warfare against the Iranians. Instead the US deliberately went out of
its way to blame the Iranian victims of being responsible for the
chemical weapon attacks.
Making Self-Serving Interpretations of the UN Report
It is clear from the radically different interpretations that the US
and Russia have about the Final Communiqué of the Action Group for Syria
that was made in Geneva on September 30, 2012 that Washington
deliberately makes self-serving interpretations of anything from its
agreements to international law and multilateral deals. While the
consensus that was reached in the final communiqué at Geneva in 2012
called for a peaceful and democratic solution to the conflict in Syria,
the US and its allies deliberately choose to pretend that their agenda
was adopted by Russia, China, and the rest of the world. By this
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and the league of foreign ministers
supporting regime change in Damascus falsely claimed the Action Group
for Syria called for a transitional government that would not include
any role for President Bashar Al-Assad.
The case has been the same in regards to the UN team’s September 2013
report about the nature of the chemical weapon attacks in Ghouta. The
initial UN report has been interpreted in self-serving ways by the US
and its cohorts. The fact that an old Soviet-manufactured projectile was
used on August 21 is being highlighted as an indicator of the Syrian
government’s guilt, because the Syrian military uses Soviet-made and
Russian-made weapons.
Just because a Soviet weapon was used does not mean that the Syrian
military was behind the attack. Old Soviet weapons are in wide use,
including by the insurgents in Syria. Even more importantly, the
Soviet-made BM-14 series projectile is not in use in the Syrian
military’s arsenal. Moreover, the Soviet Union never exported this model
to Syria nor did Soviet officials ever supply any sarin gas warheads to
any country. It has also been reported that the three Arab countries
that received this projectile were Egypt, South Yemen, and Libya.
Human Rights Watch (HRW), which has been actively lobbying for a war
against Syria, has even produced a map to indict the Syrian government
as being responsible for the attack. The map, which is featured in a
report published by HRW in September 2013, points the finger at 104
Brigade of the Syrian Republic Guard for the chemical attacks. This has
been refuted, because only special military units can use or launch
chemical weapons in Syria and 104 Brigade is not one of them.
Furthermore, there is chain of command that needs to be followed;
chemical weapons can only be used with a high-level clearance and
approval from Syria’s upper echelons.
The US government has fallaciously tried to equate the UN’s
verification that sarin gas was used as some type of evidence that the
Syrian government was responsible. While sarin samples have been
verified by the United Nations, the authenticity of the evidence that
has been provided by the US that the Syrian government is guilty needs
to be examined. The US-supported insurgent’s videos that were appraised
as real by US intelligence and presented to the world by the Obama
Administration as evidence have not been verified. On the contrary,
these videos have dubious scenes where the same bodies reappear in
different locations.
From Strategic Deterrence to Liability
The Obama Administration has deliberately hidden behind the word
«norm» and its plural («norms») as a means of trying to substitute it
for an aura and façade of legality when it claims that Syria is in
violation of international norms. Norms are expected patterns of
behavior and not compulsory laws that must be enforced by the
international community. Moreover, if the US wanted to follow
international law it would obey what the Chemical Weapons Convention
stipulates clearly, which says that when there is a violation all the
signatories of the Chemical Weapons Convention must gather and then
collectively decide what to do. There is no international law in place
that allows the United States to unilaterally decide what to do or
present itself as the enforcer of international agreements.
Syria was never in violation of international law through it position
of chemical weapons either. This is because, like Egypt, Syria never
signed the Chemical Weapons Convention. The reason behind this decision
was that both the Egyptian and Syrian militaries decided to hold on to
their chemical arms as strategic deterrents against Israel’s biological,
chemical, and nuclear weapons of mass destruction. Although Israel
became a signatory state to the Chemical Weapons Convention in 1993,
just like Myanmar, the Israelis did not ratify the Chemical Weapons
Convention. This is why Syria chose not to sign the Chemical Weapons
Convention until after the chemical attack in Ghouta.
It became clear to the Syrian government in 2013 that the liability
of Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal outweighed its use as a strategic
deterrent. As a result of the Syrian conflict, Syria’s chemical weapons
have become less likely to prevent a foreign attack or invasion of
Syria. The liability has become too great and as a result the Syrian
government decided to give them up. This has pleased both the US and
Israel, because it has given them a strategic advantage over Syria and
its regional allies.
Now that Damascus has joined the Chemical Weapons Convention it
should be noted that the Syrian government is not responsible for
destroying its chemical weapons stock either under the agreement it has
with the OPCW. It is the OPCW and the United Nations that are the
responsible parties. The responsibility of Syria is to identify and
declare all of its chemical weapons stock and to provide the OPCW access
to them for destruction. It is possibly that the US may also try to
obscure these facts as well to manipulate the situation.
America’s Goal is to Crush the Syrian Nation in an Indirect War of Attrition
The US government does not care about making the world a safer place.
Syria’s chemical weapons have been a smokescreen all along. Speaking to
Perviy Kanal (Channel One/First Channel), Russia’s largest network,
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov let it be publicly known that the
US was threatening to end working with the OPCW and to sabotage the
agreement to destroy Syria’s stockpile of chemical weapons if the
Russians refused to give political compensations to the US. What
Washington has wanted in return for an agreement to destroy Syria’s
chemical weapons is that Russia and China allow a United Nations
Security Council resolution that authorizes the use of force to be
passed.
Before the chemical attacks on Ghouta, the anti-government forces in
Syria were suffering one major defeat after another at the hands of the
Syrian military. As the internal pressure against Syria began declining,
the external pressure began increasing. The Israeli aerial assaults on
Syria and the Turkish border incidents and threats were meant to bring
the Syrian military’s winning momentum to an end. These Israeli and
Turkish moves were meant to change the balance of power and direction of
battle momentum in Syria. Their aim was to do this by psychologically
disorienting and weakening the Syrian military and government with
crippling doses of fear while motivating and encouraging the
anti-government militias to intensify their attacks.
The psychological attempts to bolster the anti-government militias
against the Syrian military and its supporters failed. The Syrian
military’s victories continued throughout 2013. The anti-government
militia incursions into Latakia were blocked and their offensive surge
from the Jordanian border was beaten by the Syrian military. Hezbollah
also intervened to help purge the anti-government forces from the
Lebanese-Syrian borders.
This has brought the US and its allies closer and closer into direct
confrontation, in some form or other, instead of indirectly attacking
Syria via their proxies. The US government, however, prefers to secure
its objectives without using its own resources or exerting itself in any
costly ventures. This is why Washington’s initial option has been to
threaten and to give the perception of being ready to use military force
before actually using military force.
The US strategy in Syria is that of an indirect war of attrition.
America loses the conflict in Syria if either combating side in Syria
wins. The US government and Israel want the fighting in Syria to
continue as long as possible between all combating sides. Washington and
Tel Aviv do not want to see anyone coming out totally victorious. This
is even acknowledged by US analysts with high-level ties to the Pentagon
and US government. This objective is candidly outlined in an article
written on August 24, 2013 by Edward N. Luttwak, a military analyst and
senior associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies,
in the New York Times.
The real target of the US-led campaign in Syria is the Syrian nation
and not merely the government in Damascus. The government could matter
less. The US and Israeli objectives in Syria are to crush Syria as a
nation-state, even if their own insurgent allies or Syrian National
Coalition clients win and form the government in Damascus.
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