Neil Clark writes:
It was the chemical weapons
attack that so nearly led to direct war between the US, the UK, France and the
Syrian government; a war which most likely would have delivered the whole of
Syria to IS and Al-Qaeda extremists.
The horrific Ghouta attack of August 21, 2013, which killed hundreds of
civilians, including many children, was blamed on
President Assad and his government by Western political leaders and elite media
commentators.
Those who dared to question this version of events were
predictably denounced as ’conspiracy theorists’ and/or ’Assad apologists’.
Today, however, new evidence has emerged that questions the
‘official’ narrative.
Could it be that, as was the case with Iraqi WMDs, we
were lied to again by those individuals desperate to launch another ‘regime
change’ war in the Middle East?
Interestingly, the US and its allies never publicly
produced any hard evidence showing that Syrian government forces had carried
out the attacks, but told us that it had to be them because no one else
possessed or had the capability to use chemical weapons.
But now Turkish MP Eren Erdem
has told RT that
Islamic State terrorists, then going under the name of Iraqi Al-Qaeda, received
all the necessary materials to produce deadly sarin gas via Turkey.
Erdem, who is now being charged with treason for his
comments, revealed that an investigation by Turkish police was started but then
the case was closed, and all the suspects were released near the Turkish/Syrian
border. He accused the Turkish authorities of a high-level cover up.
The Turkish MP says the evidence shows that IS, and not the
Syrian government, was responsible for the Ghouta attacks.
“This attack was conducted just
days before the sarin operation in Turkey. It’s a high probability that this
attack was carried out with those basic materials shipped through Turkey.
“It is
said the regime forces are responsible, but the indictment says it’s ISIS. UN
inspectors went to the site but they couldn’t find any evidence. But in this
indictment, we’ve found the evidence.
“We know who used the sarin gas, and our
government knows it too,” Erdem said.
It’s not just Erdem’s testimony that challenges the
official version of events.
US experts do, too.
A Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT) report by former UN weapons inspector Richard Lloyd and Professor Theodor
Postol challenged the intelligence on which US claims against the Syrian
government were made.
They revealed that the range of the rocket which was
supposed to have carried the nerve gas was too short to have been launched from
government-controlled areas.
“The Syrian improvised chemical
munitions that were used in the August 21 nerve gas attack in Damascus have a
range of about two kilometers.
“This indicates that these munitions could not
possibly have been fired at East Ghouta from the ‘heart’ or the eastern edge of
the Syrian government controlled area in the intelligence map published by the
White House on August 30th 2013,” the report concluded.
The report pointed out that all the possible launching
points for the rocket were in rebel-controlled areas.
“My view when I started this
process was that it couldn’t be anything but the Syrian government behind the
attack,” said the
report's co-author, Professor Postol.
“But
now I’m not sure of anything. The administration narrative was not even close
to reality. Our intelligence cannot possibly be correct.”
Award-winning investigative
journalist Seymour Hersh also countered the
‘administration narrative’ in articles published in the London Review of Books.
“Most significant, he (President
Obama) failed to acknowledge something known to the US intelligence community:
that the Syrian army is not the only party in the country’s civil war with
access to sarin,” Hersh wrote
in a piece entitled ’Whose Sarin?’ in December 2013.
Logic and sheer common sense also suggests that President
Assad was not responsible for the attacks. Imagine you were Bashar al-Assad in August 2013.
You know
that some of the most powerful nations on earth are desperately looking for an
excuse to bomb you, as they know that the 'rebels' they've been backing aren't
strong enough to topple you and your government without air support.
So what do you do?
Well, at the very moment when a team of
UN chemical weapons inspectors are in Damascus, you order a chemical weapons
attack just 12 kilometers from the center of the capital.
Does that sound logical?
If we think that's what Assad did,
then we must believe that he is not only a brutal leader but a foaming at the
mouth madman.
But what evidence do we have that a man who has ruled Syria since
2000 is actually insane?
That's effectively what the neocons/pro-war lobby are
expecting us to believe i.e. that Assad would, right when the UN are in town,
do the very thing that the US/UK and others want him to do in order to provide
them with a pretext for an attack.
What a very obliging fellow that Mr. Assad
is!
The faulty logic behind the war
lobby’s claims was highlighted by George Galloway MP in his memorable speech
against bombing Syria in the British Parliament.
“To launch a chemical weapons
attack in Damascus on the very day a UN chemical weapons team arrives in
Damascus must be a new definition of madness,” Galloway declared.
It’s worth noting where the ‘evidence’ that Assad’s forces were responsible for the attack originated.
“The bulk of evidence proving the
Assad regime's deployment of chemical weapons, which would provide legal
grounds essential to justify any Western military action, has been provided by
Israeli military intelligence, the German magazine Focus has reported,” announced
the Guardian on August 28, 2013.
According to Fox News, an Israeli military intelligence
listening unit, called number 8200 “helped
provide the intelligence intercepts that allowed the White House last weekend
to conclude that the Assad regime was behind the attack.”
Israel did not publicly release these so-called intercepts,
and of course that country had, and still has, a very obvious vested interest
in toppling a government allied to Hezbollah and Iran.
The Ghouta chemical attack looked as if it would be the
shocking event that would give the war-hawks the chance to bomb Syria and
topple the Assad government.
But, unexpectedly, the British
Parliament threw a spanner in the works and voted against war.
It probably
didn’t help that even Prime Minister David Cameron admitted that there was “no 100 percent certainty” about who was responsible for Ghouta.
The bitterness and anger of the
neocons afterwards, which I detailed here, told us how badly they had wanted their
’regime change’.
Ex-CIA analyst Ray McGovern revealed how
he had been in a TV studio with two uber-hawks, Paul Wolfowitz and Joe Lieberman,
and remarked on the “distinctly
funereal atmosphere.”
“I felt I had come to a wake
with somberly dressed folks (no pastel ties this time) grieving for a recently,
dearly-departed war.”
Over two years on, it’s frightening to think what would
have happened if the neocons had got their war in 2013.
The RAF would
effectively have become the air force of Al-Qaeda and ISIS. If the Syrian
government had fallen in late 2013 or early 2014, radical Islamists and not
non-existent ‘moderate rebels‘ would have been the beneficiaries.
The black
flag of ISIS would be flying high in Damascus and religious executions would be
commonplace.
Yet incredibly, those who pressed
so hard for war against a secular government fighting the Islamic State and
al-Qaeda in 2013, are still upset that they didn't get their way.
UK Chancellor
of the Exchequer and fanatical war-hawk George Osborne, said in
September that Parliament voting not to bomb Syria in 2013 was “one of the worst decisions ever
made.”
In the New Statesman magazine this
week, Blairite Labour MP Mary Creagh called the failure to bomb the Syrian government
post-Ghouta, “an
understandable but unforgivable mistake and the one vote that I deeply regret.”
Yes, you read it right; an MP who voted to bomb ISIS two
weeks ago deeply regrets not voting to bomb the government fighting ISIS and
al-Qaeda affiliates two years ago.
Despite the official narrative on Ghouta unraveling before our
eyes, some pro-Establishment Western media, including the BBC’s flagship
current affairs program Newsnight, continues to assert that the chemical attack
in Ghouta was carried out by the Assad government, as if it was all 100 percent
proven.
My fellow RT Op-Edge columnist Dan
Glazebrook lodged an official complaint with the BBC over its broadcasting “without comment,” and with an omission of the word “allegedly,” that President Assad had used chemical
weapons at Ghouta.
The BBC replied: “You are right to point out that
the UN did not establish that the Syrian government was responsible….
Nevertheless a number of governments concluded that the Syrian government was
responsible.”
The governments the BBC referred to were
of course those who were itching for an excuse to bomb Syria, namely the US,
the UK and France.
We will probably never know for sure who were the evil
people who fired the rockets on 21st August 2013, but taking everything into
consideration, the likeliest explanation of Ghouta is that it was a ‘rebel’
operation, designed to pave the way for Western bombing of the Syrian
government.
“As the months have
passed…scientific studies amassing an impressive body of evidence have shown
that, not only were Washington’s claims of “certainty” that Assad’s forces had
used chemical weapons in their war with extremist fighters utterly baseless,
but in fact the reality was quite the opposite, the rebels were the most likely
culprits of the attack,” wrote Eric
Draitser on the first anniversary of the attacks.
Now we have the explosive testimony of Eren Erdem, too.
As was the case with Iraq’s non-existent WMDs, and Iran’s
unproven nuclear weapons program, it looks, once again, as if the real
conspiracy theorists were those at the top, and not those plucky souls who
dared to question the war party line.
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