April 23, 2018
MY CORNER by Boyd
Cathey
Connecting the Dots
on the English Poisoning Event, Syria, and the Zeal for War—Deep State At Work
Friends,
Tying
up some loose ends today, hopefully to provide context and a summarization of
recent occurrences in foreign affairs….
The
three items I pass on add fascinating perspective and background to what appears
to have been a very unsavory manipulation aimed at getting the United States
back into war in the Middle East, just one week after President Trump
had announced a winding down of American involvement in Syria—his attempt to
comply with his oft-enunciated promise to disengage the country from conflict
areas where no direct foreign policy interests exist.
After
all, the ISIS Islamist jihadists had all but been defeated in that country,
their members now dispersed elsewhere in the Middle East. And the Syrian
government of Bashar al-Assad was winning—had almost won—its civil war against
the jihadi extremists.
But
such a result did not fit well with the geopolitical plans of the zealous war
hawks, the Neoconservatives. But it is not
only the Necons who have pressed for boots on the ground and actions that could
bring us face to face with the Russian military, but also almost the entirety
of the Democratic Party, which now nearly outdoes the Neocons and GOP
establishment in bloodcurdling calls for more involvement, more war, and,
potentially, more conflict with Russia.
And
also Israel, which sees Assad as an ally of Iran, and thus supports Islamist
rebels against his government, even if that means supporting radical terrorists
and vicious butchers of Christians (who strongly support President Assad).
For
the Neoconservatives, a broader conflict in Syria, more American offensive involvement
and eventual forced regime change (despite the inherent dangers), form a
central platform of their globalist philosophy of essentially imposing “democracy
and equality” across the face of the globe: in a real sense, such a program partakes
of a quasi-religious zeal, a kind of unleashed desire to create and install a
secular global utopia founded on their delusional conceptions of equality and
democracy.
For
the Democrats and the “farther Left” and hard core Marxists, greater American
involvement in Syria demonstrates, as well, their commitment to equality and
democracy (as they define them), but is also seen as a means to eventually injure
and weaken President Trump, undermine his domestic agenda, while pushing their
newfound Russophobia and template of Russian responsibility for everything bad
that has happened to…Hillary, the Democratic Party, the DNC, Facebook, Twitter,
the Internet, and almost any other suspicious event that can be cobbled
together needing a convenient culprit.
Ambassador
Craig Murray is a prominent British diplomat and has for some time raised
doubts about the sequence of events in the Middle East, as well as the
Wikileaks controversy from last year.
The first item I pass on is a long, comprehensive chronology and a “fitting-of-the-pieces-of-the-puzzle-together”
narrative that merits wider distribution. Effectively, he ties in the poisoning
of the Skripals in England with the purported gassing in the Syrian village of
Douma. There is, states Murray, a direct nexus, a direct correlation and
rationale for what happened and why it happened.
Murray, let it be said, is no right winger;
nevertheless, he has captured the overall and overarching picture and context
of events which should cause every patriotic American AND Briton extreme
discomfort and anger. The international Deep State is exposed in its
machinations…and that should elicit protests and action in the voting booth for
us all.
Two
additional pieces, both shorter, address the media attention to the Douma
gassing and the mounting skepticism concerning it, and evidence pointing to
non-Russian responsibility for the Skripal attack.
All
three items are valuable, useful information as events continue to develop. The
New World Order is still on the march with its frenzied Deep State minions
never sleeping.
================================================================
Tracing the
Rush to War
[Ambassador Murray is
a British diplomat, author and journalist]
April 9th • The Rush to War
I have never ruled out the
possibility that Russia is responsible for the attack in Salisbury, amongst
other possibilities. But I do rule out the possibility that Assad is dropping
chemical weapons in Ghouta. In this extraordinary war, where Saudi-funded jihadist
head choppers have Israeli air support and US and UK military “advisers”, every
time the Syrian army is about to take complete control of a major jihadist
enclave, at the last moment when victory is in their grasp, the Syrian Army
allegedly attacks children with chemical weapons, for no military reason at
all. We have been fed this narrative again and again and again.
We then face a propaganda
onslaught from neo-conservative politicians, think tanks and “charities” urging
a great rain of Western bombs and missiles, and are accused of callousness
towards suffering children if we demur. This despite the certain knowledge that
Western military interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya have had
consequences which remain to this day utterly disastrous.
I fear that the massive
orchestration of Russophobia over the last two years is intended to prepare
public opinion for a wider military conflict centred on the Middle East, but
likely to spread, and that we are approaching that endgame. The dislocation of
the political and media class from the general population is such, that the
levers for people of goodwill to prevent this are, as with Iraq, extremely few
as politicians quake in the face of media jingoism. These feel like extremely
dangerous times.
April 11th • The Four Horsemen Gallop By
The media onslaught has moved
past the attack in Salisbury by a “weapon of mass destruction” (quoting Prime
Minister Theresa May) which could only be Russian, except that was untrue, and
was extremely deadly, except that was untrue too. It now focuses on an attack
by chemical weapons in Douma which “could only be” by the Russian-backed Assad
regime, except there is no evidence of that either, and indeed neutral verified
evidence from Douma is non-existent. [The ONLY evidence comes from anti-Assad
jihadists—the Army of Islam—on the ground.] The combination of the two events is
supposed to have the British population revved up by jingoism, and indeed does
have Tony Blair and assorted Tories revved up, to attack Syria and potentially
to enter conflict with Russia in Syria.
The “Russian” attack in
Salisbury is supposed to negate the “not our war” argument, particularly as a
British policeman was unwell for a while. Precisely what is meant to negate the
“why on earth are we entering armed confrontation with a nuclear power”
argument, I do not know.
Saudi Arabia has naturally
offered facilities to support the UK, US and France in their attempt to turn
the military tide in Syria in favour of the Saudi sponsored jihadists whom
Assad had come close to defeating. That the Skripal and Douma incidents were
preceded by extremely intense diplomatic activity between Saudi Arabia,
Washington, Paris and London this year, with multiple top level visits between
capitals, is presumably supposed to be coincidence.
I am not a fan of Assad any
more than I was a fan of Saddam Hussein. But the public now understand that
wars for regime change in Muslim lands have disastrous effects in dead and
maimed adults and children and in destroyed infrastructure; our attacks unleash
huge refugee waves and directly cause terrorist attacks here at home. There is
no purpose in a military attack on Syria other than to attempt to help the
jihadists overthrow Assad. There is a reckless disregard for evidence base on
the pretexts for all this. Indeed, the more the evidence is scrutinised, the
dodgier it seems. Finally there is a massive difference between mainstream
media narrative around these events and a deeply sceptical public, as shown in
social media and in comments sections of corporate media websites.
The notion that Britain will
take part in military action against Syria with neither investigation of the
evidence nor a parliamentary vote is worrying indeed. Without Security Council
authorisation, any such action is illegal in any event. It is worth noting that
the many commentators who attempt to portray Russia’s veto of a Syria
resolution as invalid, fail to note that last week, in two separate 14 against
1 votes, the USA vetoed security council resolutions condemning Israeli
killings of unarmed demonstrators in Gaza.
The lesson the neo-cons learnt
from the Iraq war is not that it was disastrous. It was only disastrous for the
dead and maimed Iraqis, our own dead and maimed servicemen, and those whose
country was returned to medievalism. It was a great success for the neo-cons,
they made loads of money on armaments and oil. The lesson the neo-cons learned
was not to give the public in the West any time to mount and organise
opposition. Hence the destruction of Libya was predicated on an entirely false
“we have 48 hours to prevent the massacre of the population of Benghazi”
narrative. Similarly this latest orchestrated “crisis” is being followed
through into military action at a blistering pace, as the four horsemen sweep
by, scything down reason and justice on the way.
April 11th • Yulia Skripal Is Plainly Under Duress
Only the Russians have allowed
us to hear the actual voice of Yulia Skripal, in that recorded conversation
with her cousin. So the one thing we know for certain is that, at the very
first opportunity she had, she called back to her cousin in Russia to let her
know what is going on. If you can recall, until the Russians released that
phone call, the British authorities were still telling lies that Sergei was in
a coma and Yulia herself in a serious condition.
We do not know how Yulia got to
make the call. Having myself been admitted unconscious to hospital on several
occasions, each time when I came to I found my mobile phone in my bedside
cabinet. Yulia’s mobile phone plainly had been removed from her and not
returned. Nor had she been given an official one – she specifically told her cousin
that she could not call her back on that phone as she had it temporarily. The
British government could have given her one to keep on which she could be
called back, had they wished to help her.
The most probable explanation
is that Yulia persuaded somebody else in the hospital to lend her a phone,
without British officials realising. That would explain why the first instinct
of the British state and its lackey media was to doubt the authenticity of the
call. It would explain why she was able to contradict the official narrative on
their health, and why she couldn’t get a return call. It would, more
importantly, explain why her family has not been able to hear her voice since.
Nor has anybody else.
It strikes me as inherently
improbable that, when Yulia called her cousin as her first act the very moment
she was able, she would now issue a formal statement through Scotland Yard
forbidding her cousin to be in touch or visit. I simply do not believe this
British Police statement:
“I was discharged from Salisbury
District Hospital on the 9th April 2018. I was treated there with obvious
clinical expertise and with such kindness, that I have found I missed the staff
immediately. I have left my father in their care, and he is still seriously
ill. I too am still suffering with the effects of the nerve agent used against
us.
“I find myself in a totally different life than the ordinary one I left just over a month ago, and I am seeking to come to terms with my prospects, whilst also recovering from this attack on me.
“I have specially trained officers available to me, who are helping to take care of me and to explain the investigative processes that are being undertaken. I have access to friends and family, and I have been made aware of my specific contacts at the Russian Embassy who have kindly offered me their assistance in any way they can. At the moment I do not wish to avail myself of their services, but, if I change my mind I know how to contact them.
“Most importantly, I am safe and feeling better as time goes by, but I am not yet strong enough to give a full interview to the media, as I one day hope to do. Until that time, I want to stress that no one speaks for me, or for my father, but ourselves. I thank my cousin Viktoria for her concern for us, but ask that she does not visit me or try to contact me for the time being. Her opinions and assertions are not mine and they are not my father’s.
“For the moment I do not wish to speak to the press or the media, and ask for their understanding and patience whilst I try to come to terms with my current situation.”
“I find myself in a totally different life than the ordinary one I left just over a month ago, and I am seeking to come to terms with my prospects, whilst also recovering from this attack on me.
“I have specially trained officers available to me, who are helping to take care of me and to explain the investigative processes that are being undertaken. I have access to friends and family, and I have been made aware of my specific contacts at the Russian Embassy who have kindly offered me their assistance in any way they can. At the moment I do not wish to avail myself of their services, but, if I change my mind I know how to contact them.
“Most importantly, I am safe and feeling better as time goes by, but I am not yet strong enough to give a full interview to the media, as I one day hope to do. Until that time, I want to stress that no one speaks for me, or for my father, but ourselves. I thank my cousin Viktoria for her concern for us, but ask that she does not visit me or try to contact me for the time being. Her opinions and assertions are not mine and they are not my father’s.
“For the moment I do not wish to speak to the press or the media, and ask for their understanding and patience whilst I try to come to terms with my current situation.”
There is also the very serious
question of the language it is written in. Yulia Skripal lived part of her
childhood in the UK and speaks good English. But the above statement is in a
particular type of formal, official English of a high level which only comes
from a certain kind of native speaker.
“At the moment I do not wish to
avail myself of their services” – wrote no native Russian speaker, ever.
Nor are the rhythms or idioms
such as would in any way indicate a translation from Russian. Take “I thank my
cousin Viktoria for her concern for us, but ask that she does not visit me or
try to contact me for the time being. Her opinions and assertions are not mine
and they are not my father’s.” Not only is this incredibly cold given her first
impulse was to phone her cousin, the language is just wrong. It is not the
English Yulia would write and it is awkward to translate into Russian, thus not
a natural translation from it.
To put it plainly, as someone who has much experience of it, the
English of the statement is precisely the English of an official in the UK
security services and precisely not the English of somebody like Yulia Skripal
or of a natural translation from Russian.
Yulia is, of course, in
protective custody “for her own safety”. At the very best, she is being
psychologically force-fed the story about the evil Russian government
attempting to poison her with the doorknob, and she is being kept totally
isolated from any influence that may reinforce any doubts she feels as to that
story. There are much worse alternatives involving threat or the safety of her
father. But even at the most benevolent reading of the British authorities’
actions, Yulia Skripal is being kept incommunicado, and under duress.
April 12th • OPCW Salisbury Report Confirms Nothing But the Identity of the Chemical
The word “Russia” does not
occur in today’s OPCW report. The OPCW Report says nothing whatsoever about
the origin of the chemical which poisoned the Skripals and certainly does not
link it in any way to Russia.
The technical ability of Porton
Down to identify a chemical has never been in doubt, and the only “finding of
the United Kingdom” the OPCW has confirmed is the identity of the chemical.
10. The results of analysis by
the OPCW designated laboratories of environmental and
biomedical samples collected by the OPCW team confirm the findings of the United
Kingdom relating to the identity of the toxic chemical that was used in Salisbury and
severely injured three people.
11. The TAV team notes that the toxic chemical was of high purity. The latter is
concluded from the almost complete absence of impurities.
biomedical samples collected by the OPCW team confirm the findings of the United
Kingdom relating to the identity of the toxic chemical that was used in Salisbury and
severely injured three people.
11. The TAV team notes that the toxic chemical was of high purity. The latter is
concluded from the almost complete absence of impurities.
There are scores of countries
that chemical could have come from. For the BBC and other mainstream media
outlets to pretend that the OPCW has in any sense endorsed Boris Johnson’s
claims about Russia is to spread deliberate lies as propaganda. In fact what
they have confirmed is simply the finding of Porton Down – and that finding was
that it is a chemical which cannot be confirmed as made in Russia.
April 13th • Some Dead Children Count More Than Others
The ever excellent Campaign
Against the Arms Trade is back in the English High Court again today in its
continuing attempts to ban arms sales to Saudi Arabia. It is against UK law to
sell arms to a country which is likely to use them in breach of international
humanitarian law, and that Saudi Arabia consistently and regularly uses British
weapons to bomb schools, hospitals and civilians is indisputable.
Unfortunately the courts are an
instrument of power and control for the 1%, not an impartial resort for
justice, so I fear CAAT will not succeed despite the fact their case is undeniably correct.
Part of the British
Government’s defence is the close military support it gives to Saudi Arabia,
which it claims minimises civilian deaths (it plainly does no such
thing). Thousands of children have
died in the Yemeni war, most killed by the Saudis and their allies. These war
crimes have been documented by the United Nations despite concerted UK and US
diplomacy at the UN aimed at downplaying the Saudi crimes. Cluster bombs,
white phosphorous and other illegal weapons have frequently been used.
Yemeni dead children very
seldom make in into the mainstream media, whereas Syrian children do. But not
all Syrian children – those children killed by the jihadist head-choppers the
West and its Saudi allies have armed, funded and “advised” do not make the
corporate and state media either. Only children allegedly – and the word needs
repeating, allegedly – gassed by the Syrian armed forces are apparently worth
our attention.
If we really attack because we
care about the children, we would be attacking Saudi Arabia to halt its
atrocities in Yemen. Instead we are allying with Saudi Arabia – the child
killers, UK military support to whom is today being stressed in the High Court
– to attack Syria.
Anybody who believes this is
anything to do with “humanitarian intervention” is a complete fool.
April 14th • Just Who’s Pulling the Strings?
*March 4 2018 Sergei and Yulia
Skripal are attacked with a nerve agent in Salisbury
*March 7 2018 Crown Prince
Mohammed Bin Salman of Saudi Arabia arrives in London for
an official visit
*March 13 2018 Valeri
Gerasimov, Russian Chief of General Staff, states that Russia
has intelligence a fake chemical attack is planned against civilians in Syria
as a pretext for US bombing of Damascus, and that Russia will respond.
*March 19 2018 Crown Prince
Mohammed Bin Salman of Saudi Arabia arrives in Washington for
an official visit
*April 8 2018 Crown Prince
Mohammed Bin Salman of Saudi Arabia arrives in Paris
for an official visit
*April 8 2018 Saudi funded
jihadist groups Jaysh al Islam [Army of Islam] and Tahrir
al-Sham and UK funded jihadist “rescue group” The White Helmets claim a chemical weapons attack
occurred in their enclave of Douma the previous day – just before its agreed
handover to the Syrian army – and blame the Syrian government.
*April 14 2018 US/UK/French
attack on Syria begins.
I have always denied the UK’s
claim that only Russia had a motive to attack the Skripals. To denigrate Russia
internationally by a false flag attack pinning the blame on Russia, always
seemed to me more likely than for the Russians to do that to themselves. And
from the start I pointed to the conflict in Syria as a likely motive. That puts
Saudi Arabia (and its client jihadists), Saudi Arabia’s close ally Israel, the
UK and the USA all in the frame in having a powerful motive in inculcating
anti-Russian sentiment prior to planned conflict with Russia in Syria. Any of
them could have attacked the Skripals.
Today, Theresa May is claiming -astonishingly
– that the UK attack on Syria is “to deter chemical weapons attacks in Syria
and the UK”. I don’t think the motive for a Skripal false flag could be more
starkly demonstrated.
We do not yet know how many
children and other civilians have died so far in what the media always pretend
are magically “pinpoint” attacks on Syria. Denying the “collateral damage” is
part of the neo-con playbook. The danger is that they will not stop but
continue to push, testing how far they can go in weakening Syrian government
forces to promote their jihadist allies on the ground, before they spark a real
Russian reaction. That way madness lies.
It is also worth noting that
the most ardent supporters of this military action, outside Saudi Arabia and
Israel, are the Blairites in the UK and the Clinton Democrats in the USA. The
self-described “centrists” are actually the unhinged extremists in today’s
politics.
This attack on Syria is, beyond
doubt, a huge success for the machinations of Mohammed Bin Salman. Please do
read my post of 8 March which
sets out the background to his agenda, and I believe is essential to why we
find our nations in military action again today. Despite the fact the vast
majority of the people do not want this.
April 15th • The British Government’s Legal Justification for Bombing is Entirely False and Without Merit
Theresa May has issued a long
legal justification for UK participation in an attack on a sovereign state.
This is so flawed as to be totally worthless. It specifically claims as
customary international law practices which are rejected by a large majority of
states and therefore cannot be customary international law. It is therefore
secondary and of no consequence that the facts and interpretations the argument
cites in this particular case are erroneous, but it so happens they are indeed
absolutely erroneous.
1. This is the Government’s
position on the legality of UK military action to alleviate the extreme
humanitarian suffering of the Syrian people by degrading the Syrian regime’s
chemical weapons capability and deterring their further use, following the
chemical weapons attack in Douma on 7 April 2018.
2. The Syrian regime has been
killing its own people for seven years. Its use of chemical weapons, which has
exacerbated the human suffering, is a serious crime of international concern,
as a breach of the customary international law prohibition on the use of
chemical weapons, and amounts to a war crime and a crime against humanity.
3. The UK is permitted under
international law, on an exceptional basis, to take measures in order to
alleviate overwhelming humanitarian suffering. The legal basis for the use of
force is humanitarian intervention, which requires three conditions to be met:
(i) there is convincing
evidence, generally accepted by the international community as a whole, of
extreme humanitarian distress on a large scale, requiring immediate and urgent
relief;
(ii) it must be objectively
clear that there is no practicable alternative to the use of force if lives are
to be saved; and
(iii) the proposed use of force
must be necessary and proportionate to the aim of relief of humanitarian
suffering and must be strictly limited in time and in scope to this aim (i.e.
the minimum necessary to achieve that end and for no other purpose).
4. The UK considers that
military action met the requirements of humanitarian intervention in the
circumstances of the present case:
(i) The Syrian regime has been
using chemical weapons since 2013. The attack in Eastern Damascus on 21 August
2013 left over 800 people dead. The Syrian regime failed to implement its
commitment in 2013 to ensure the destruction of its chemical weapons
capability. The chemical weapons attack in Khan Sheikhoun in April 2017 killed
approximately 80 people and left hundreds more injured. The recent attack in
Douma has killed up to 75 people, and injured over 500 people. Over 400,000
people have now died over the course of the conflict in Syria, the vast
majority civilians. Over half of the Syrian population has been displaced, with
over 13 million people in need of humanitarian assistance. The repeated, lethal
use of chemical weapons by the Syrian regime constitutes a war crime and a
crime against humanity. On the basis of what we know about the Syrian regime’s
pattern of use of chemical weapons to date, it was highly likely that the
regime would seek to use chemical weapons again, leading to further suffering
and loss of civilian life as well as the continued displacement of the civilian
population.
(ii) Actions by the UK and its
international partners to alleviate the humanitarian suffering caused by the
use of chemical weapons by the Syrian regime at the UN Security Council have
been repeatedly blocked by the regime’s and its allies’ disregard for international
norms, including the international law prohibition on the use of chemical
weapons. This last week, Russia vetoed yet another resolution in the Security
Council, thwarting the establishment of an impartial investigative mechanism.
Since 2013, neither diplomatic action, tough sanctions, nor the US strikes
against the Shayrat airbase in April 2017 have sufficiently degraded Syrian
chemical weapons capability or deterred the Syrian regime from causing extreme
humanitarian distress on a large scale through its persistent use of chemical
weapons. There was no practicable alternative to the truly exceptional use of
force to degrade the Syrian regime’s chemical weapons capability and deter
their further use by the Syrian regime in order to alleviate humanitarian
suffering.
(iii) In these circumstances,
and as an exceptional measure on grounds of overwhelming humanitarian
necessity, military intervention to strike carefully considered, specifically
identified targets in order effectively to alleviate humanitarian distress by
degrading the Syrian regime’s chemical weapons capability and deterring further
chemical weapons attacks was necessary and proportionate and therefore legally
justifiable. Such an intervention was directed exclusively to averting a humanitarian
catastrophe caused by the Syrian regime’s use of chemical weapons, and the
action was the minimum judged necessary for that purpose.
***
The first thing to note is that
this “legal argument” cites no authority. It does not quote the UN Charter, any
Security Council Resolution or any international treaty or agreement of any
kind which justifies this action. This is because there is absolutely nothing
which can be quoted – all the relevant texts say that an attack on another
state is illegal without authorisation of the UN Security Council under Chapter
VII of the UN Charter.
Nor does the government quote
any judgement of the International Court of Justice, International Criminal
Court or any other international legal authority. This is important because
rather than any treatment, the government makes a specific claim its actions
are justified by customary international law, which means accepted state
practice. But the existence of such state practice is usually proven through
existing court judgements, and there are no judgements that endorse the
approach taken by the government in its argument.
The three “tests” set out under
para 3 as to what is permitted under international law are not in fact a
statement of anything other than the UK’s own position. These “tests” are
specifically quoted by Ola Engdahl in Bailliet and Larsen (ed) “Promoting Peace Through
International Law” (Oxford University Press 2015). Engdahl notes:
The UK position, that it is permitted to take coercive action
under a doctrine of humanitarian intervention when certain conditions are met,
is a minority view and does not reflect lex data on the prohibition of the use of force in international
relations as expressed in article 2(4) of the UN Charter.
That is undeniably true, and as
it is equally undeniably true that a minority view cannot be customary
international law, the British government position is utterly devoid of merit.
The Government argument is a
classic statement of the doctrine of “liberal intervention”, which is of course
the mantra adopted by neo-conservatives over the last 30 years to justify
resource grabs. It is not in any way accepted as customary international law.
It is a doctrine opposed by a very large number of states, and certainly by the
great majority of African, South American and Asian states. (African states
have occasionally advocated the idea that UN Security Council authorisation may
be replaced by the endorsement of a UN recognised regional authority such as
ECOWAS or the African Union. This was the Nigerian position over Liberia 20
years ago. The Security Council authorised ECOWAS action anyway, so no discord
arose. The current Nigerian government does not support intervention without
security council authorisation).
The examples of “liberal intervention”
most commonly used by its advocates are Sierra Leone and Libya. My book “The Catholic Orangemen of Togo”
details my experiences as UK Representative at the Sierra Leone peace talks,
and I hope will convince you that the accepted story of that war is a lie.
Libya too has been a disaster, and it is not a precedent for the government’s
legal argument as the western forces employed were operating under cover of a
UN Security Council Resolution authorising force, albeit only to enforce a no
fly zone.
In fact, if the British
government were to offer examples of state practice to attempt to prove that
the doctrine it outlines is indeed customary international law, the most
appropriate recent examples are Russian military intervention in Ukraine and
Georgia. I oppose those Russian interventions as I oppose the UK/US/French
actions now. It is not a question of “sides” it is a question of the illegality
of military action against other states.
The rest of the government’s
argument is entirely hypothetical, because as the liberal intervention doctrine
is not customary international law these arguments cannot justify intervention.
But the evidence that Assad
used chemical weapons against Douma is non-existent, and the OPCW did not
conclude that the Assad government was responsible for the attack on Khan
Sheikhoun. There is no evidence whatsoever that military action was urgently
required to avert another such “immediate” attack. Nor is it true that the UK’s
analysis of the situation is “generally accepted” by the international
community, as witness China and Russia voting together in the Security Council
yesterday to condemn the attack.
So the British government sets
up its own “three tests” which have no legal standing and are entirely a
British concoction, yet still manages to fail them.
Even western mainstream media is reporting that no chemical attack took place in Douma http://theduran.com/western-media-says-no-gas-in-syrai/?mc_cid=c7fa80d167&mc_eid=42e11870e2
Medical personnel on the ground in Syria give testimony that those videos show people suffering from hypoxia – not gas poisoning
On April 7th, an attack was carried out
in the town of Douma, just a few kilometers out of Syria’s capital, Damascus,
which was occupied by radical terrorist forces. The attack was peddled as a chemical
weapons attack using chlorine gas, and it was additionally reported to have included some unknown nerve agent (which apparently the White Helmet guys who were filming the
incident were somehow immune to), which was then said to have killed at least
75 people, and, according to the UK Prime Minister Theresa
May, also resulted in the deaths of 500 more, all
based on social media postings, based on what is being revealed to the public
anyway, by groups that have known links and coincidental interests with the very
radical terrorists that Western governments are
claiming to be fighting.
Additionally, these media outlets and
governments have been quick to thrust blame in the direction of Syrian
government forces, particularly on the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, before
any independent organization has conducted an investigation to determine
whether the attack was of a chemical nature or who carried out the attack in
the first place.
The US, UK, and France are, however,
continuing to insist that the attack was chemical in nature, and that Assad
conducted the attack, of course, without having any of their own assets on the
ground to conduct any observations or investigations in Douma, citing
“intelligence”, which, of course, is classified, and will not be released to
the public in order to bolster their “confidence” that Assad ordered a chemical
attack on his own citizens “including young children” at a time when his forces
were retaking the town already anyway.
In fact, the US and France have even
insisted that they have “proof” that they are “highly confident
that they believe in” that Assad did, in fact, conduct a chemical weapons
attack on his own civilian population in Douma, once again, including women and
young children. Meanwhile, the Kremlin has been warning for monthsthat
provocateurs were preparing to launch a chemical attack in Syria in order to
blame their opposition, the Syrian government, and provoke a Western military
response to help them in their conflict against Assad’s forces.
On the basis of this alleged chemical
attack, that the West says that it is highly confident that Assad
ordered, a military “precision strike” was conducted by a coalition of US, British,
and French forces on the Syrian capital of Damascus, for the purpose of destroying or significantly disrupting the
Syrian government’s capability to manufacture, store and employ chemical
weapons, as well as to serve as a deterrent against any future chemical weapons
attack, which the US ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley says will actually happen again, and
which recurrence will be met with yet another coordinated response by the US
and its allies.
The strike took place just hours before
the UN’s Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons expert
investigators were due to arrive at the scene of the alleged chemical attack to
determine if reports about the suspected attack were, or are, in fact, true.
We are being told that the coordinated
missile strike, included over 100 missiles, including American Tomahawks,
struck chemical weapons research and manufacturing facilities in
Damascus, which apparently didn’t result in any dangerous banned chemicals or nerve
agents being released into the surrounding area, which would have been utterly devastating to hundreds of people in
the area, if not more.
Now, all of the sudden, after
conducting a few interviews with witnesses from the site of the attack, even
some mainstream Western invesigative journalists are questioning the narrative that
has been published about a chemical gas attack in Douma.
The world’s third largest news agency,
Agence France-Presse (AFP), and a major British online newspaper, the
Independent, are publishing stories which are casting doubt on the whole
chemical gas attack narrative that we have been being fed since the date of the
attack, and which Western governments are claiming “proof” for, which, of
course, they are “highly confident” in, and which was used as a justification
for a military intervention in Syria against the capital city of a government
that is fighting the same bad guys that these very Western governments say they
have spent, and continue to throw money at, billions on.
The AFP spoke with Marwan Jaber, a medical student who witnessed the
aftermath of the alleged chemical attack, who said “Some of [the victims]
suffered from asthma and pulmonary inflammation. They received routine
treatment and some were even sent home, they showed no symptoms of a chemical
attack. But some foreigners entered while we were in a state of chaos and
sprinkled people with water, and some of them were even filming it.”:
The Syrian regime
on Monday (April 16th) organized a press visit to the city of Duma in Eastern
Ghouta, where an alleged chemical attack on April 7 killed at least 40 people,
shortly before the regime’s forces took over the city, then held by the rebels.
The team of the International Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons (OPCW) had still not been able to enter the city on Monday.
The Independent’s Robert Fisk travelled to the site in Douma, and spoke with
medical personnel on the ground in the Syrian town:
It was a short walk
to Dr Rahaibani. From the door of his subterranean clinic – “Point 200”, it is
called, in the weird geology of this partly-underground city – is a corridor leading
downhill where he showed me his lowly hospital and the few beds where a small
girl was crying as nurses treated a cut above her eye.
“I was with my
family in the basement of my home three hundred metres from here on the night
but all the doctors know what happened. There was a lot of shelling [by
government forces] and aircraft were always over Douma at night – but on this
night, there was wind and huge dust clouds began to come into the basements and
cellars where people lived. People began to arrive here suffering from hypoxia,
oxygen loss. Then someone at the door, a “White Helmet”, shouted “Gas!”, and a
panic began. People started throwing water over each other. Yes, the video was
filmed here, it is genuine, but what you see are people suffering from hypoxia
– not gas poisoning.”
But, just like the story with Saddam
Hussein went when these very Western government wanted so bad to follow the
American’s blood lust for war in Iraq, this government, so they say, has
weapons of mass destruction, and is lead by not just any old tyrannical
dictator, but a “monster” who is using these banned WMDs on his own population
(apparently for the sheer sadistic pleasure of it), for no good reason. And, of
course, without any verifiable intelligence resulting from any on the ground
investigation by anyone trained to look for the stuff.
In fact, here we are seeing reports
from journalists, western ones, I might add, that report the opposite of what
we have been told for the past ten days. No use of WMDs being used in Douma, or
at least, no evidence of it anyway. And, based on the fact that the US led
strike on Syria’s alleged chemical weapons labs and storehouses didn’t release
any of these agents into the area when the strike should have spread the stuff
all over the place, it looks like Syria doesn’t have those WMDs, or, at least
the West doesn’t know where they’re at, and just randomly shot off a couple of
missiles to make it look like they were doing something about those WMDs.
UK involved in Skripal poisoning, NOT Russia – evidence from Swiss lab shows http://theduran.com/uk-involved-in-skripal-poisoning-not-russia-evidence-from-swiss-lab-shows/?mc_cid=fea32e83a0&mc_eid=42e11870e2
Comparison of BZ and Novichok nerve agents reveals strong evidence to support that Sergey Lavrov’s claim in the Skripal case is in fact, true, creating a real problem for the UK leadership
As attention seemed to rapidly wane
concerning the US air and missile strikes in Syria, Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov made a
stunning announcement, saying that the samples of the nerve
agent used on Sergey and Yulia Skripal was not a Novichok agent,
but in fact something that NATO codenamed “BZ.” This is a major statement
because of what BZ actually is, and what Novichok agents are understood to be.
Novichok agents are highly deadly nerve agents, developed by the Soviet Union and
later the Russian Federation, during a time period spanning the years 1971 to
1993. The compounds under this program were distinguished in these ways,
according to the report on Wikipedia:
- Russian scientists who developed the agents claim they are the deadliest nerve agents made,
- some variants possibly five to eight times more potent than VX,
- other variants up to ten times more potent than soman.
- They were designed as part of a Soviet program codenamed “FOLIANT”.
- Five Novichok variants are believed to have been adapted for military use.
- The most versatile is A-232 (Novichok-5).
- Novichok agents have never been used on the battlefield.
- Theresa May, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, and many heads of state, said that one such agent was used in the poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal in England in March 2018.
Russia denies producing or researching
agents “under the title Novichok”. So the upshot of the Novichok agents is
their lethality. In fact, one of the developers of this was quoted repeatedly
during the earlier days of the Skripal story, pointing out that there is no
cure and no preventative or even reparative procedure that is known to be able
to stop a Novichok agent from killing its intended victim. While this is not quite true, the Wiki entry does
show that the likelihood of a full recovery to normal living is not at all
easy:
“…[N]ovichok agents
may cause lasting nerve damage, resulting in permanent disabling of victims,
according to Russian scientists. Their effect on humans was demonstrated
by the accidental exposure of Andrei Zheleznyakov, one of the scientists
involved in their development, to the residue of an unspecified Novichok agent
while working in a Moscow laboratory in May 1987.
“He was critically
injured and took ten days to recover consciousness after the incident. He lost
the ability to walk and was treated at a secret clinic in Leningrad for three
months afterwards. The agent caused permanent harm, with effects that included
“chronic weakness in his arms, a toxic hepatitis that gave rise to cirrhosis of the liver, epilepsy, spells of severe depression,
and an inability to read or concentrate that left him totally disabled and
unable to work.”
He never recovered
and died in July 1992 after five years of deteriorating health.”
However, Yulia Skripal appears to have
recovered, and now Sergey is also in recovery. The Washington Post
questioned this in this piece dated April 6th. And the Washington Post is a very liberal paper, but they
still ran this piece to try to explain how it is that two people allegedly
poisoned by a “no way out” chemical agents are in fact getting better.
The BZ agents are very
different in purpose from Novichok.
BZ is known in the chemical field as 3-Quinuclidinyl benzilate. This agent is NOT a nerve toxin. It is not a
Novichok at all. This agent is referred to as an
“incapacitating agent”, which is defined by the US Department of Defense as:
“An agent that produces temporary physiological or mental effects, or both, which will
render individuals incapable of concerted effort in the performance of their
assigned duties.”
Such an agent can, of course kill, but
for many of its victims who do die, they die because the chemical makes them
actually unable tl avoid it.
The concept of
“humane warfare” with widespread use of incapacitating or deleriant drugs such
as LSD or Agent BZ to stun an enemy, capture them alive, or
separate friend from foe had been available in locations such as Berlin since the 1950s, an initial focus of US CBW development was the
offensive use of diseases, drugs, and substances that could completely
incapacitate an enemy for several days with some lesser possibility of death
using a variety of chemical, biological, radiological, or toxin agents.
So, here we have reference to BZ as a
specifically non-lethal agent.
Both the Skripals are alive
and recovering from an alleged agent that was supposedly inevitably going to
kill them.
While this does not give us 100 percent
assurance that the Russian Foreign Minister is telling the truth, it
certainly pokes major holes in the
allegation from the UK that a Russian Novichok agent was used (by order of President
Putin, so the story goes).
Mr. Lavrov’s clear declaration of the
use of BZ is also much more substantiated than the British allegation is. There
is a bigger problem, though.
Both parties may be lying.
While the Russian position is much more
thoroughly substantiated, the factor remains that each country has the right to
make its own propaganda. What is true is that the British attempt seems to be
based more on innuendo, and the initial refusal of the UK to give Russia
samples for examination (according to OPCW rules) did not do their side’s cause
any favors.
Further, Russian Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov was citing the results of the
examination conducted by a Swiss
chemical lab that worked with the samples that London handed over to the Organisation for the
Prohibition of the Chemical Weapons (OPCW).
Now in fairness, given the hostility of
the Western media to all things Russia, it is strongly likely that the Swiss
report is being squelched by the editorial staff of the main news sources. This
is the worst sort of injustice, however, in so many ways. The Russians are not
getting any sort of fair treatment, and have become the scapegoat of all
Western ills, which in reality are entirely the result of their own failures on
many levels.
But the more alarming effect is that it
has become increasingly difficult, almost impossible, to get a true report on
major events.
We still do
not know who poisoned the Skripals. We do not know why. We do not even know
HOW, apparently. The implications of not knowing these things is enormous. It
places the society on edge, and keeps it in some state of fear; or worse,
indifference. In that indifference, anything, literally anything can happen.
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