John Chuckman
September 13, 2013
I read that an American Senator, Bob Menendez, wanted “to vomit” when he was
supplied with a copy of Vladimir Putin’s New York Times’ op-ed piece about
Syria.
Well, I’m sure it wasn’t just a matter of Sen. Menendez’s delicate stomach:
there have been many times in the past I wanted to vomit over something in The
New York Times.
It is, after all, an impossibly pretentious, often-dishonest publication
faithfully serving America’s military-industrial-intelligence complex, one which
never fails to support America’s countless wars, insurgencies, dirty tricks, and
coups – all this while publicly flattering itself as a rigorous source of
journalism and even a newspaper “of record.” Many regard The Times as simply the
most worn-out key of that thunderous public-relations instrument an ex-Agency
official once called his “mighty Wurlitzer.” Only in the antediluvian political
atmosphere of America could The Times manage to have something of a reputation
for being “liberal.”
Mr. Menendez, as head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, holds a
powerful position, one he has used in lockstep with President Obama and
Secretary of State Kerry to promote illegal war. Like them he blubbers about
rights and democracy and ethics while planning death and destruction to people
who have done nothing against the United States except disagreeing with it and
being hated by that greatest single outside determinant of American foreign
policy, Israel.
Sen. Menendez’s personal anecdote actually provides a perfect miniature
replica of the entire operation of America’s foreign affairs. American officials
never fail to invoke words about democracy or human rights when addressing their
next piece of dirty work or effort to pressure another people into doing what
America wants.
So naturally the Senator might be a bit upset over Putin’s upstaging the top
officials of the United States and proving himself the superior statesman and
rational politician in every detail.
First, every honest, well-read person, not trying to promote American special
interests, knows there is no proof that Assad used chemical weapons. Absolutely
none. Even as I write, an Australian newspaper, The Sydney Morning Herald,
reports that the UN inspection team could find no evidence of chemical weapons
used in the place cited by Syria’s rebel army.
A video which made the rounds among American allies and which purported to
show the attack has been declared a fake by the UN. Russia’s secret services
also declared it a fake.
The only other bit of “evidence” worth mentioning is a supposed recording of
Syrian officials provided to American officials by Mossad. Yes, that’s Mossad,
the very people who pride themselves on deception and who have a long track
record of expertly using it, even in several cases successfully against the
United States.
You do not kill thousands of people and destroy a country’s infrastructure
citing rubbish like that.
Again, as I write this, a former British Ambassador, Craig John Murray,
states that the United States has been deceived by Mossad with its purported
recording and that Britain’s super-sensitive listening post in Cyprus, vastly
superior to Israel’s listening assets, had picked up no such information.
Germany, based on its secret service operations, also has publicly stated
that Assad did not use chemical weapons.
And, of course, after all America’s huffing and blowing and threatening in
recent months, Assad and his senior associates would have to have been genuinely
mad to use them, but there is no sign of madness. Assad remains a calm and
thoughtful person whose voice is largely silenced in the West by his having been
declared arbitrarily not an acceptable head of state.
Second, there is significant proof that ugly elements of the rebellion – the
substantial al Qaeda-like components who hate Assad for his tolerance towards
all religions in Syria – did indeed use limited amounts on more than one
occasion, hoping, undoubtedly to create a provocation for American entry. The UN
has said so and so have other agencies.
We have incidents, reported reliably, of rebel elements receiving small
canisters of chemical weapons, likely from Saudi agents working on behalf of
American policy. We also have an incident of a canister caught by authorities
moving across the Turkish border in the hands of rebel fighters, the Turkish
border having been used extensively since the beginning of the rebellion as a
way to inject weapons and lunatic fighters into Syria and as a refuge for rebels
when corned by Syria’s army. Even the American military confirms this last
event.
Third, we absolutely know that Israel has a stockpile of this horrible stuff,
Sarin, but not a word is said about it. This stockpile has been confirmed by CIA
sources recently. Even before CIA sources, we knew of Israel’s chemical weapons
from the 1992 crash of an El Al cargo plane in Amsterdam, a plane whose illegal
cargo proved to be precursor chemicals for such weapons.
Now, if you were regarded as an enemy by Israel, the most ruthless country in
the Mideast when simply measured by the number of times it has attacked its
neighbors, wouldn’t you want weapons to counteract theirs? And, of course, to
counteract not just Israel’s chemical weapons but secret nuclear ones? So it is
hardly a terrible thing for Assad’s military to posses them.
Perhaps most importantly, the United States is in no position to draw lines
or make public judgments about the behavior of anyone with regard to such
weapons.
It stands as likely the greatest user of various chemical weapons over the
last four or five decades. Napalm and Agent Orange were used on a colossal scale
in Vietnam, a true holocaust in which the United States killed about three
million people. The residue from millions of pounds of Agent Orange still causes
horribly mangled babies to be born in Vietnam, and the United States has never
lifted a finger to clean the mess or treat its victims.
In the terrible Iran-Iraq War of 1980-88, the United States supplied Iraq –
the clear aggressor in the war – with the materials for chemical weapons which
eventually killed many thousands of Iranian soldiers.
In the illegal invasion of Iraq – where the United States killed upwards of
half a million people and created millions of refugees – it employed white
phosphorus (a good substitute for napalm), flame-throwers, depleted-uranium
(cancer-inducing) ammunition, and hideous child-crippling cluster bombs. The
children of Iraq today suffer a plague of cancer caused by breathing tons of
vaporized depleted-uranium the United States dumped there.
In the unnecessary invasion of Afghanistan, the United States used massive
carpet bombing to support the thugs of the Northern Alliance, who happened to be
old enemies of the Taleban, though often being equally horrible in behavior.
This was one of the first instances of the strategy America employed in Libya
and wants to employ in Syria: local rebels on the ground, supplied with money
and intelligence and weapons, are supported by high-tech hell from the air,
yielding the needed results with minimum American casualties.
Thousands of Taleban prisoners of war were “disappeared’ by members of the
Northern Alliance by sealing them in trucks, driving them out to the desert to
suffocate, and then dumping their bodies in mass graves – all this while
American soldiers looked on and picked their noses.
Nothing which has happened in recent years so horrifyingly recalls the work
of Hitler’s Einsatzkommandos using mobile killing-trucks before the death camps
were built, yet there can be no question that senior American commanders and the
White House were aware of these events.
And of course, the only nation on earth ever to actually use atomic weapons –
twice, and both times on civilian, non-military targets – is the United States,
a country which also seriously planned to use them in Cold War pre-emptive
strikes against Russia and China and later in Vietnam.
The voice of the United States today is shrill with hypocrisy and dishonesty
and self-interest when it is heard condemning Syria, or anyone else, for using
unacceptable weapons. Where was that voice when its ally, Israel, committed
atrocities, as it did in Lebanon and in Gaza and on the high seas against
unarmed humanitarians or when it steals the land of defenceless occupied people?
Indeed, the white phosphorus and cluster bombs Israel used in some of Israel’s
attacks were supplied by the United States, as were the planes and artillery
used to deliver them.
And this brings us to the real cause of the rebellion in Syria. Israel would
like Assad gone and Syria reduced to a broken state the way Iraq was reduced. It
does not want to do this directly because Syria is a serious military opponent
and not easy prey, and Israel’s doing so would arouse new waves of anger in the
Mideast and new difficulties for the United States.
So the United States has had a long-term program of creating a kind of cordon
sanitaire around Israel, breaking all of its potential opponents for many
hundreds of miles around, but doing so always under contrived circumstances of
supporting peoples’ revolts or removing dictators. It surreptitiously supplies
large amounts of money and useful intelligence to the genuinely disaffected
peoples of various states, encouraging them to revolt, indicating air and other
support once things are underway. This is reminiscent of the dirty work of Henry
Kissinger carried out with Iraq’s Kurdish population in 1975, promising them
anything if they revolted but failing to deliver and leaving them to face a
massive slaughter by Saddam Hussein’s troops.
Today’s is a complex black operation using a bizarre collection of
intermediaries and helpers. Events in Benghazi, Libya, never explained in the
United States, were certainly one little corner of this with the CIA operating
there to collect weapons and jihadist types for secret entry into Syria through
Turkey.
Saudi Arabia too plays a large role, surprising as that may seem to some
given that Israel is a major beneficiary. Saudi Arabia’s ruling family plays the
anti-Israel card just enough to keep its own fundamentalist Wahhabi population
from revolting. But in truth, the wealthy Saudi elites have always had more in
common with American and Israeli elites than with popular leaders in the
Mideast.
Those Saudi elites were rendered extremely vulnerable to American pressures
during 9/11. George Bush, always a good friend and beneficiary of Saudi largess,
secretly rounded up a number of them who were in the United States (at places
like Las Vegas casinos) and shipped them back to Saudi Arabia for their safety.
As it proved, the greatest number of perpetrators of 9/11 were Saudi extremists,
and it was discovered, though not publicly announced, that bin Laden’s movement
regularly received bribes from the royal family to keep his operations out of
Saudi Arabia. Thus the royal family financed bin Laden. All this made the Saudis
extremely nervous and willing to be of more conspicuous future assistance in the
Mideast.
And so they are, supplying money and weapons through various routes to the
rebels. There is also a report of the Saudis releasing more than twelve hundred
violent prisoners from death row in return for their training and going to Syria
to fight as jihadist volunteers.
American officials know all these things while they stand and blubber about
democratic rebels and “red lines” and other fairy stories. They want to bomb
Syria because the recent success of Assad’s army has begun to endanger the huge
effort to have him overthrown. Just as their planes and missiles tipped the
scales in Libya with a phony zero-fly zone, they want to repeat that success in
Syria.
Now, Putin appears to have upset the plan with admirable statesmanship, and
Sen. Menendez will just have to console himself with Pepto-Bismol.
But then the Russians have always been great chess players.
Friday, September 13, 2013
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