Like
all, I am surveying a grim landscape on every fronts. However, I do
believe that in this blackness and evil and stupidity, a new
consciousness is pushing up against a ten-inch thick sidewalk. It is
not a "faction" or a group. It is just an awareness of how
close we are to the abyss in so many ways and a realization that we
have painted ourselves and the planet into a corner.
So
I don't attribute this to political machinations. I feel that this is
just a tiny sign that not everyone and everything is hell bent on
destruction. Everyone -- at least in my circles -- understands that
Syrian intervention is the threshold to global, nuclear conflict
because Iran will instantly back Assad militarily. China and Russia
are bound to side with Iran if hostilities open between the US/Israel
and Tehran.
Sibel
Edmonds gave us a great piece of work around this. But the calculus
here is complicated and this may be like Spock's three-dimensional
chess. All of the other things that are so befouled are still there
and legitimately depressing; legitimately irreparable from within a
dying meme.
Taking
this story at face value what I saw in here was a little common
sense. If I were a blade of grass, underneath the darkness of that
huge, oppressive sidewalk, the perspective would not allow me to see
blades of grass that might already be breaking through in scattered
places.
We
must continue as if that is what is happening.
---Mike
Ruppert
Obama
won't rush to act against Syria over chemical arms
President
Barack Obama signaled on Tuesday that he is no rush to respond
quickly to Syria's apparent use of chemical weapons, taking a
cautious approach to the Arab country's civil war that mirrors the
views of the U.S. public, most lawmakers and some American allies.
26
January, 2013
Obama,
who last year declared that the use or deployment of chemical weapons
by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad would cross a "red line,"
told a White House news conference there is evidence those weapons
were used, but that there is still much U.S. intelligence agencies do
not know.
"We
don't know how they were used, when they were used, who used them,"
he said, and, "We don't have a chain of custody that establishes
what exactly happened."
Obama
did not rule out action - military or otherwise - against Assad's
government. But he repeatedly stressed he would not allow himself to
be pressured prematurely into deeper intervention in Syria's
two-year-long civil war.
The
president's remarks raised the prospect that, despite declaring last
week that there is evidence Assad has used the nerve agent sarin "on
a small scale," any U.S. government response will not be quick.
Obama's
press secretary Jay Carney told reporters on Monday that there is no
deadline for rendering a final judgment on whether chemical weapons
were used, and by whom. "I would not give you a timetable,"
Carney said.
Privately,
U.S. officials predict it will be weeks before any conclusion is
reached.
Syria
denies using chemical weapons.
'FRAGMENTARY'
EVIDENCE
Obama
administration officials have not specified what "physiological"
evidence they have that Syrian forces used sarin, but government
sources said it includes samples of blood from alleged victims, and
of soil.
The
evidence is "fragmentary" at best, but appears to indicate
the use of sarin on two occasions, said a European national security
official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Since
the Syrian conflict erupted in 2011 - it has killed 70,000 people and
created more than 1.2 million refugees - Obama has repeatedly shied
away from deep U.S. involvement.
That
stance is shared by top Pentagon officials, who have spoken publicly
and privately of their concerns about the limits and risks of
employing U.S. military force in the shattered country.
Whether
Obama is now slowly moving toward a more activist approach is
unclear. He faces criticism for softening a "red line" that
seemed crystal clear when he said in August that the use of chemical
weapons by Assad, or transfer of stockpiles to extremist groups would
be unacceptable.
White
House officials said they do not think the U.S. public is eager to
get involved militarily in Syria.
"Setting
aside instances when America has been attacked - the Japanese and al
Qaeda - military action should always be something any president
considers very seriously and deliberately and that's especially the
case when it's not an attack on the United States," a senior
White House official said.
A
New York Times/CBS News poll released on Tuesday found that 62
percent of Americans say the United States has no responsibility to
do something about the fighting between Assad's forces and
anti-government rebels.
Only
39 percent of respondents said they were following the Syrian
violence closely, indicating it is not among U.S. citizens' top
concerns.
"I
think the American people are kind of where the president is. You've
got to have some definitive evidence and you've got to very careful
about what you do," said Democratic strategist Bob Shrum, who
managed John Kerry's 2004 presidential campaign.
"The
politics of this is not hard for the president. It's the policy
that's hard," Shrum said.
Obama
also has room for maneuver on Syria because Republican are divided
over what to do, and - unlike with Iran's nuclear program - close
U.S. Middle East ally Israel is not urging American action.
Some
prominent Republicans, including senators John McCain of Arizona and
Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, cited the chemical weapons evidence
to renew their calls for action such as establishing a no-fly zone to
neutralize Syria's air defenses.
But
not all Republicans share that view. Departing from his party's
frequent disparagement of the United Nations, Representative Harold
Rogers of Kentucky replied when asked if Washington should arm the
Syrian rebels: "It is such a muddled picture. I think probably
we ought to be asking the U.N. to be involved."
The
Republican divide "leads to an incoherent critique of the
administration's policy," said Jon Alterman, director of the
Middle East program at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies think tank.
There
is also "the long hang-over from Iraq" and the U.S. war
there, Alterman said. "I don't know when that goes away."
Michael
Oren, Israel's ambassador to the United States, said his country is
not calling on Obama to act against Syria.
"We're
not making any policy recommendations," Oren said in a telephone
interview. "We think the issue is very complex."
At
his news conference, Obama insisted that "I've got to make sure
I've got the facts" before declaring that the red line was
crossed.
"If
we end up rushing to judgment without hard, effective evidence, then
we can find ourselves in the position where we can't mobilize the
international community to support what we do," he said.
Said
Alterman: "Obama is looking for an opportunity to be decisive"
in Syria. "You could either see it as reluctance, or patience."
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