Medics
and other masked people attend to a man at a hospital in Khan al-Assal in the
northern Aleppo province, as Syria's government accused rebel forces of using
chemical weapons for the first time on March 19, 2013 (AFP Photo / HO-SANA)
July 12,
2013
A team of
Russian experts recently submitted reports to the UN detailing how chemical
weapons used in Syria were not consistent with what the armed forces use,
suggesting that rebels groups were responsible for the attack.
The Obama
administration unwaveringly holds Bashar Assad’s forces responsible for using
sarin nerve gas against civilians, and is now using these allegations to
justify a military escalation of the conflict.
When a crude
chemical weapon containing sarin nerve gas killed 30 people after it was set
off near Aleppo on March 19, the Syrian government immediately called for an
investigation into the incident, prompting accusations and speculation from all
sides.
President
Obama immediately cast doubt over concerns that the rebels could have been
behind the attack and, despite the lack of any compelling evidence, the US
concluded in June that Syrian government forces were the perpetrators.
The use of
chemical weapons signified the crossing of Obama’s much-touted ‘red line’ by
government forces, prompting Washington to announce that it would now openly
supply the rebels with arms. Meanwhile, Russia made it clear that they were not
convinced by Washington’s claims as prominent Russian political figures made
comparisons between Obama’s unverified claims of chemical weapons in Syria and
Bush’s fabricated claims of WMDs in Iraq.
The results
of a test recently conducted by a Russian team directly contradict US
assertions that Assad used chemical weapons. Russian experts claim that the missile used in the chemical weapons attack
was not factory made, and that the chemical components found
were not consistent with what the Syrian military uses.
Damascus
initially asked the UN to investigate, but protested when Russian and Chinese
experts were excluded from the investigation team over
concerns of bias. Previous statements by Carla Del Ponte, head of a UN
commission of inquiry that looked into the March 19 incident, suggested that
the rebels used chemical weapons, not the Syrian government.
A man injured by chemical weapons smiles during the visit of Syrian government officials at a hospital in Aleppo, March 21, 2013 (Reuters / George Ourfalian)The way the Syrian conflict is played out on the international stage displays the stranglehold that Washington enjoys over the United Nations, as investigation and testimony seen to be unfavourable to the US position has been suppressed, overlooked or outright blocked.
Why is the tail wagging the dog?
The fact
that the Obama administration intends to overtly arm non-state actors in Syria
isn’t all that significant, given that the CIA has covertly been siphoning arms
to ‘moderates’ (non-cannibals presumably) for the greater duration of
the conflict. The White House has been trying to distance itself from hard-line
jihadist brigades, which should be seen as completely disingenuous, given that
the biggest suppliers of arms to Syria have been Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which
are among the biggest purchasers of American weapons ~ there is no way that
Washington can deny its hand in enabling terrorism in Syria.
The timing
of Obama’s statement accusing Assad’s forces of using chemical weapons begs
comparison to the 1997 black comedy flick ‘Wag the Dog’, starring Robert
De Niro and Dustin Hoffman. The plot revolves around De Niro, a PR-spin doctor,
and Hoffman, a Hollywood director, who are tasked with channelling public
opinion away from a presidential sex scandal just days before elections.
De Niro and
Hoffman accomplish this by staging an entirely fabricated war against Albania, playing
up the “Albanian threat” and the alleged crimes taking place there,
which then claim all the headlines and earn the president another term. In
other words, attention was diverted away from an issue of significance to
something entirely baseless and fabricated.
It’s no
coincidence that Obama publicly charged Assad with using chemical weapons in
the fallout of the PRISM leaks and the ongoing Edward Snowden saga, which
continues to dominate headlines, much to the embarrassment of the US.
Those who have
been sceptical of the Russian position on Syria should ask themselves, what
does Assad have to gain from using chemical weapons and crossing the proverbial
red line?
On the other
hand, do the rebels, who have used every opportunity to call for more foreign
intervention and aid, have anything to gain from using chemical weapons? The
answer is abundantly clear for anyone looking at the situation impartially.
A
boy, affected in what the government said was a chemical weapons attack, is
treated at a hospital in the Syrian city of Aleppo March 19, 2013 (Reuters /
George Ourfalian)
.
.
Is there still hope for Geneva talks?
Russian
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov hit the nail on the head when he called for the
US to either choose to stage a peace conference or continue to channel arms to
militants and non-state actors in Syria ~ obviously, it cannot do both.
The
possibility of peace talks between the Syrian government and representatives of
the fragmented array of armed groups is again uncertain, as Moscow accuses
Washington of encouraging the rebels not to cooperate or negotiate. The
situation on the ground in Syria shows that Assad has claimed the upper hand,
following the recapturing of the strategic town of Qusair by government forces.
The recent
resignation of Ghassan Hitto, the ‘interim prime minister’ of the Syrian
Opposition Coalition further illustrates the ineptitude of the foreign-funded
opposition, which has been created solely to secure the interests of its
US-Qatari-Saudi sponsors in a post-Assad scenario.
In light of
the changing situation on the ground, the US has increased the number of
combat-ready troops to almost 1,000 in neighbouring Jordan following an earlier
announcement that it will leave Patriot missiles and warplanes in the country.
Following
the recent Russian studies of chemical weapons use by the rebels, Damascus has
invited chief UN chemical weapons investigator Ake Sellstrom and UN disarmament
chief Angela Kane for talks following announcements that a rebel-linked storage
site containing copious amounts of dangerous chemicals had been discovered.
It’s clear
that Western-Gulf efforts to topple the government of Syria have been nearly
exhausted, and as these parties get more desperate to bring about the outcome
they would like to see, a final push into Syria can still be in the
cards.
The only
certainty at this point is that if peace talks ever come to fruition, the
catering company is going to have a difficult time putting together a menu to
appease the exotic taste buds of those in the Farouq Brigade and their friends
in the Al-Nusra Front.
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