Showing posts with label Al Nusra Front. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Al Nusra Front. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

UPDATED!! HERSH CHOPS DOWN A CHERRY (PICKING) TREE


Sy Hersh has done it again, published a devastating report on what he calls the manipulation of intelligence by the Obama Administration to support its short-lived plan to intervene militarily in Syria and to delude Congress and the American public on real and dangerous question of who might have used, and who might still retain CW capability there.


The piece, published by the London Review of Books (a.k.a. LRB) on December 8, was called to my attention by stalwart reader Tobe Berkovitz of the Boston University School of Communications (and my revered brother-in-law).

In his report, Hersh, citing sources within America’s military and intelligence communities, makes at least 5 important assertions.

1)     That military forces loyal to President Bashar-all Assad are not the only ones in Syria capable of manufacturing the lethal chemical weapon Sarin, and arming munitions with it.

2)     That President Obama cherry-picked the intel to create a falsely air-tight public case against Assad.

3)     That Obama and his representatives misled the American news media into thinking the Administration had real-time evidence that tied Assad’s forces to the war crime, rather than deductive assumptions based on back-tracking communications intercepts which could, at best, suggest rather than prove the Administration’s case.

4)     That, even after Administration sources corrected this mis-impression (in response to angry charges from Syrian rebel allies that the US had stood by and watched the build-up to the chemical weapons attack on innocent civilians), major organs, including specifically the Washington Post, continued to sell the Administration’s “rock-solid” case against Assad.

5)     That the net-net of Obama’s eventual policy, to collaborate with the Russians and, later the UN, to disarm the Syrian government forces of their chemical weapons, could be to leave the Al-Nusra Front, allegedly closely allied with Al Qaeda, as the only sarin-capable forces in the Syrian war zone.

 

Below are some crucial citations from Hersh’s piece, but I urge you to real the whole, scathing report.

1)  “Barack Obama did not tell the whole story this autumn when he tried to make the case that Bashar al-Assad was responsible for the chemical weapons attack near Damascus on 21 August. In some instances, he omitted important intelligence, and in others he presented assumptions as facts. Most significant, he 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.…  [B]y late May, the senior intelligence consultant told me, the CIA had briefed the Obama administration on al-Nusra and its work with sarin, and had sent alarming reports that another Sunni fundamentalist group active in Syria, al-Qaida in Iraq (AQI), also understood the science of producing sarin. At the time, al-Nusra was operating in areas close to Damascus, including Eastern Ghouta,” [the area from which the sarin attack is believed to have come.]

2) “[I]n recent interviews with intelligence and military officers and consultants past and present, I found intense concern, and on occasion anger, over what was repeatedly seen as the deliberate manipulation of intelligence. One high-level intelligence officer, in an email to a colleague, called the administration’s assurances of Assad’s responsibility a ‘ruse’. The attack ‘was not the result of the current regime’, he wrote. …  The distortion, he said, reminded him of the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident.”

3)  “A former senior intelligence official told me that the Obama administration had altered the available information – in terms of its timing and sequence – to enable the president and his advisers to make intelligence retrieved days after the attack look as if it had been picked up and analysed in real time, as the attack was happening. … A keyword or two would be selected and a filter would be employed to find relevant conversations. ‘What happened here is that the NSA intelligence weenies started with an event – the use of sarin – and reached to find chatter that might relate,’ the former official said. ‘This does not lead to a high confidence assessment, unless you start with high confidence that Bashar Assad ordered it, and began looking for anything that supports that belief.’ The cherry-picking was similar to the process used to justify the Iraq war.”

4)  A spokesman for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence responded to the complaints. A statement  to the Associated Press said that the intelligence behind the earlier administration assertions was not known at the time of the attack, but recovered only subsequently: ‘Let’s be clear, the United States did not watch, in real time, as this horrible attack took place. ... But since the American press corps had their story, the retraction received scant attention. On 31 August the Washington Post, relying on the government assessment, had vividly reported on its front page that American intelligence was able to record ‘each step’ of the Syrian army attack in real time, ‘from the extensive preparations to the launching of rockets to the after-action assessments by Syrian officials’. It did not publish the AP corrective, and the White House maintained control of the narrative.”

5)  While the Syrian regime continues the process of eliminating its chemical arsenal, the irony is that, after Assad’s stockpile of precursor agents is destroyed, al-Nusra and its Islamist allies could end up as the only faction inside Syria with access to the ingredients that can create sarin, a strategic weapon that would be unlike any other in the war zone.”

A footnote:  Seymour Hersh’s report in length and style strongly resembles past reports published by The New Yorker.  So far, I haven’t heard back from Hersh as to whether this article had been offered to the New Yorker before its publication by LRB.  I hope to be able to update you on this issue.


UPDATE:  Eliot Higgins, on the Foreign Policy magazine website, offers a refutation of (one part of) Seymour Hersh’s report, that the munitions used against civilians could have been made and launched, not by President Assad’s military, but rebel forces, most-likely the Al Qaeda affiliated Al-Nusra Front.


Most of Higgins’ evidence is culled from YouTube videos, and raises a lot of good questions, although his challenge to MIT expert Ted Postol seems pretty labored to me.

“Theodore Postol, a professor of technology and national security at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, told Hersh that the Volcano is "something you could produce in a modestly capable machine shop" -- in other words, a weapon the rebels could make. Postol also stated that various organizations' flight path analysis of the Aug. 21 Volcanoes, which put the point of origin of the munitions at a Syrian military base more than nine kilometers away from the impact locations, were "totally nuts." Postol's analysis, Hersh wrote, had "demonstrated that the range of the improvised rockets was 'unlikely' to be more than two kilometres." 

All of this is presented as an argument that perhaps the Syrian government wasn't responsible for the Aug. 21 sarin attack, despite the claims of U.S. President Barack Obama's administration. But during my ongoing discussions with Postol's colleague, Richard M. Lloyd, Lloyd has told me he believes the evidence collected so far would suggest the Volcano has a range of at least 2 to 2.5 kilometers. It's worth noting that some examples of the larger Volcano rocket have been recorded with a basic nose cone, which increase the range of the munition by more than one kilometer.”

 

But, if I’m remembering correctly, the Administration’s analysis claimed the sarin-filled missile had been fired by Syrian troops based 9 km away.

More troubling is Higgins’ expert’s argument that Al-Nusra lacks the capability to build weapons of the sort used in Eastern Ghouta.

“I asked chemical weapons specialist Dan Kaszeta for his opinion on that. He compared the possibility of Jabhat al-Nusra using chemical weapons to another terrorist attack involving sarin: the 1996 gassing of the Tokyo subway by the Aum Shinrikyo cult.

‘The 1994 to 1996 Japanese experience tells us that even a very large and sophisticated effort comprising many millions of dollars, a dedicated large facility, and a lot of skilled labor results only in liters of sarin, not tons,’ Kaszeta said. ‘Even if the Aug. 21 attack is limited to the eight Volcano rockets that we seem to be talking about, we're looking at an industrial effort two orders of magnitude larger than the Aum Shinrikyo effort. This is a nontrivial and very costly undertaking, and I highly doubt whether any of the possible nonstate actors involved here have the factory to have produced it. Where is this factory? Where is the waste stream? Where are the dozens of skilled people -- not just one al Qaeda member -- needed to produce this amount of material?’"

 

It does make one want to ask Sy’s sources what made them confident that Jihadist rebel groups were sarin-capable.

But, as I noted earlier, Higgins, whose piece is headlined “St Hershe’s Chemical Misfire,” concentrates on the ballistics question, real and important, but just a fraction of a report that concentrates on the Obama Administration’s alleged “manipulation” of intelligence.  Of that, Higgins says only this, in his closing paragraph: “Hersh rightly expresses concern about the way in which the U.S. government's narrative of the Aug. 21 was built.”

“Rightly,” indeed.  Hersh says the Administration cherry-picked its evidence, misdescribed its methodology, and may well have misjudged the whole situation.  Video clips of various missiles, valuable as they are, are only part of the evidence for part of the story.

And thanks to David Isenberg for pointing me to the FP report.

 

 

 

 

Thursday, September 5, 2013

SYRIA: BITS, PIECES, MORE


Some random thoughts on Syria and related topics. 

Did you see Der Spiegel's report of the Trifecta -- a German listening ship off Syria reportedly picked up a conversation between a top Hizbullah guy, and someone at an Iranian Embassy, talking about how Bashar done it? Perfect or too perfect?

Meanwhile, these could be perilous times for Hizbullah. I wonder if, under cover of our attacks in Syria, we or somebody else will take a few swipes at the Big H. Without outside interference they will continue to dominate and distort life in Lebanon, while pressing an essentially sectarian, completely anti-American agenda (three things not to like). Somebody's money (us, Israel, Qatar, Saudi???) could surely buy a Sunni fighting force to do the dirty work. Of course, that would mean/has already meant "our side" arming Al Qaeda.

Obviously, these are also perilous times for Israel, but salutary, if the threat wakens Israelis to their reality -- they are isolated and surrounded. They gotta make peace, if it's not too late already, and they gotta stop screwing the Palestinians to get it.  President Shimon Peres knows this.  He told me as much 17 years ago.  It’s still true.  But things are getting worse, not better, for Israel.

I hope, pray and believe the American attack on Assad will not unleash some kind of Hizbullah/Syrian/Iranian/Al Qaeda attack on Israel.  But it could.  And among Israel’s many enemies there are both chemical and biological weapons, and munitions to carry them, not to mention tons of conventional missiles, rockets and bombs.  I think, right now, those enemies lack the co-ordination or the will to launch significant attacks on Israel.  But they get closer on both fronts every day, month and year.  Only peace can pre-empt these trend lines from reaching a disastrous conclusion.

I've always thought that Syria was supposed to be a more modern, urban and urbane culture than Iraq, with more of a national concept and a favorable balance between modernist/secular moderation and Islamist fanaticism. Recently, several reporters say, the Sunni nuts – Al Qaeda’s al-Nusra front and others, have the edge. This matters a lot. We can't achieve anything more than destruction without substantial inside support of the sort Iraq was never gonna provide.

If, over the past 2 years of warfare, our intelligence agencies have not identified that Syrian support and solidified it, our mission to turn the tide against Assad, while keeping the rest of the region stable, will fail.  The means, either that Assad will survive at great cost to our national dignity, or that Syria will wind up in the hands of our most fanatic enemies, or -- best case -- simply dominated by a different, hopefully less toxic version of the incumbent Nationalist dictator.

Or we can link to a sufficient fighting force and political leaders who will put Syria on a more civilized path, and our push at the tipping point will have been a masterstroke.  It’s a lot to hope for, and makes one wish we coulda (but never that we shoulda, or woulda) given this whole mess a pass. But, if Der Spiegel’s sources are right, a petulant, murderous rage by Bashar al-Assad has pushed us, and his region, to a very dangerous place.

In Afghanistan, (to finish an earlier thought) we have, despite mighty, costly, and sincere efforts, not accomplished much we believe will last. We have found and developed some steady allies who subscribe to the ideals behind our presence – a free economy, a functioning democracy, and a national concept based on religious and ethnic and tribal tolerance.  This, in spite of our many mistakes, including the reckless killing of civilians and recurrent signs of personal ignorance or disrespect for Afghan people and culture.   

But., the most those supporters can achieve, I fear, is a paralyzing, unchanging, balance of power between sometimes corrupt, sometimes progressive, modernizing urbanites, and radically retrograde, fundamentalist tribalists in the considerable countryside.

And what are in Putin's "plans" for after the Syria attack?

Yesterday's House Foreign Affairs Committee hearings offered yet another awkward airing of John Kerry's indiscreet, mindless babblings.  This from

"'With respect to Arab countries offering to bear costs and to assess, the answer is profoundly yes," Kerry said. "They have. That offer is on the table.  Some of them have said that if the United States is prepared to go do the whole thing the way we've done it previously in other places, they'll carry that cost," Kerry said. "That's how dedicated they are at this. That's not in the cards, and nobody's talking about it, but they're talking in serious ways about getting this done.'

"Kerry also gamely insisted that so many U.S. allies wanted to take part in a potential strike on Syria that the Pentagon couldn't find a role for all of them. That seems unlikely, since Turkey and France are to date the only major powers to publicly express a willingness to use military force against Assad. But Kerry may have an elastic definition of "participation." Albania, he said later in the hearing, was willing to provide political support for a strike. He didn't say anything about Albania being willing to do much else."
 
Not since the "glory days" of Leon Panetta's probably unintentionally hilarious "I'm now the Defense Secretary," tour have so many hi-ranking words ranked so low for logic and mental discipline.  Panetta was 75.  What's Kerry's excuse?

So much to worry about.