f you think you know for sure, or even with a reasonable degree of
certainty, who was responsible for the chemical attacks in Syria, you are
wrong.

http://strawberryrevolution.wordpress.com/2013/09/08/if-you-think-you-know-who-used-chemical-weapons-in-syria-you-are-wrong/

short URL:  http://bit.ly/1aiYLjW <http://t.co/eYYiTXy6PS>

Full disclosure: I oppose bombing Syria because the US lacks moral standing
to play global Sheriff. I also oppose the bombing because, if the US had
moral standing and was acting in good faith, the past record suggest our
government is not a very good Sheriff.

Although those are the critical points, this post concentrates on the
excuse of the day, that we know that the Assad regime used chemical
weapons. According to a recent AP story, working (not retired) intelligence
sources are not at all sure the the Assad regime was the source of the most
recent chemical weapons
attack<http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_UNITED_STATES_SYRIA_INTELLIGENCE_DOUBTS?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2013-08-29-03-11-56>.
 Although buried deep in the AP story it notes that “ Some have even talked
about the possibility that rebels could have carried out the attack in a
callous and calculated attempt to draw the West into the war. That
suspicion was not included in the official intelligence report, according
to the official who described the report.”  Some members of Congress who
have seen the classified summary of the report find it unconvincing.
<http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2013/09/classified-intelligence-doesnt-prove-anything.html>

One of the key arguments the administration makes that Assad is responsible
for the attack is the claim that the rebels don’t have access to chemical
weapons. After all, false flag operations are a long standing part of the
history of warfare,  so if they have the capability then Assad’s guilt in
this regard becomes a lot less certain. (That Assad is a bloody butcher
remains absolutely certain.) A Washington Blog Post includes citations of
and links to a number of sources (including the Wall Street Journal and the
Washington Post) showing that the fall of Libya gave a wide variety of
groups access to chemical
weapons<http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2013/09/yes-the-syrian-rebels-do-have-access-to-chemical-weapons.html>

The same article also shows that on occasion Syrian rebels have captured
and held for prolonged periods of time areas that stored Assad’s chemical
weapons.  Further, evidence that the rebels are willing use chemical
warfare includes this Haaretz report of rebel use of chlorine
gas<http://www.haaretz.com/news/middle-east/jihadists-not-assad-apparently-behind-reported-chemical-attack-in-syria.premium-1.511680>,
as well as this Turkish report of rebel smuggling of chemical
weapons<http://www.zaman.com.tr/gundem_adanada-el-kaide-operasyonu-12-gozalti_2094730.html>.
Here is the Google translate version
o<http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.zaman.com.tr%2Fgundem_adanada-el-kaide-operasyonu-12-gozalti_2094730.html>f
the same article.

So do we know that the rebels were responsible for the attack? There are
many articles out there saying so.  For example, the following story from Mint
Press<http://www.mintpressnews.com/witnesses-of-gas-attack-say-saudis-supplied-rebels-with-chemical-weapons/168135/>
(a
normally very reliable source). However, there are several problems with
this article. One of the main sources, Abu Abdel-Moneim, gives his real
name. In a region where a coffee seller was murdered for saying he would
not give a free coffee to Mohammed himself.  When the source did not ask
for confidentiality didn’t the reporter offer it? Or at least ask why he
thought he could survive his name being published.  This is not just a
matter of protection of a source. It also goes to the source’s credibility.
There should be some explanation in the article as to why the source chose
not to be anonymous.

There are other stories too, interviews with retired intelligence officers
and so on. They all have one thing in common. They rely on intelligence
sources just as the administration’s sources do  - either directly  or
indirectly as interviews are done with people who in turn have done
interviews.  And just as the administration has incentives to lie, Russian,
Iranian and Syrian intelligence have incentives to plant false stories
blaming the rebels. And neither your nor I are in a position to tell who is
lying and who is telling the truth.  For example, there is a great deal
made in various stories of a supposed Egyptian intelligence report that the
attack of the 21st was a false flag operation. The problem is that those
reporting don’t read Egyptian. Which means they read a translation or had
the report described to them. They don’t even know for certain that the
report exists, let alone that its contents have been described to them
accurately.

If everyone involved were pure rational actors, the rebels are the ones
with greater incentive for an attack than Assad, since he has plenty of
other means of mass killing available to him which won’t bring the wrath of
the US down on him. But past history shows Assad not to be a perfect
rational actor. A great many mistakes on his part have brought him to the
point of fighting a civil war. So here is the conclusion. The Assad regime
may have used chemical weapons. A rogue element within it may have used
chemical weapons without permission, for which the regime would still bear
responsibility. Or the rebels may have used chemical weapons in a false
flag operation. And as of today September 8th 2013, only those responsible
know for sure. Everyone else is guessing. If you think you know, you are
wrong

-- 
Facebook: Gar Lipow  Twitter: GarLipow
Solving the Climate Crisis web page: SolvingTheClimateCrisis.com
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