The
real rogue state is the United States of America
Not
a ‘slam dunk’: US intelligence can’t prove Assad used chemical
weapons
Only
days after the White House suggested it was all but certain Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons to gas hundreds of
civilians, United States intelligence officials briefed on the
situation say the evidence isn’t all there.
RT,
29
August, 2013
Despite
recent remarks from US President Barack Obama, Secretary of State
John Kerry and other top administration officials, sources within the
intelligence community are disputing the certainty that Assad ordered
the use of chemical gas last week on innocent civilians outside of
Damascus, Syria.
Four
US officials — including one senior member of the intelligence
community — told the Associated Press this week that there’s
confusion over where the reported chemical warheads are currently
being held and who exactly possesses them. Citing a lapse in both
signals and human intelligence reports, the officials all told the AP
on condition of anonymity that US and allied spies “have lost track
of who controls some of the country's chemical weapons supplies,”
according to reporters Kimberly Dozier and Matt Apuzzo.
Multiple
officials, the AP reported Thursday morning, used the phrase “not a
slam dunk” to discuss the credibility of intelligence linking
chemical weapon use directly to Pres. Assad. In 2002, then-Central
Intelligence Agency Director George Tenet infamously said Washington
scored a “slam dunk” with regards to confirming Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction. Now more than a
decade down the road, US officials hesitant to rush off to war are
again questioning the credibility of the White House’s own report.
According
to an Office of the Director for National Intelligence report cited
by the AP, the evidence against Syria “is thick with caveats” and
contains gaps that are getting in the way of putting the chemical
weapon use directly in the hands of Assad.
But
Carney, the administration’s press secretary, said earlier this
week that the White House “established with a high degree of
confidence that the Syria regime has used chemical weapons already in
this conflict.”
“It
is our firm conviction that the Assad regime is responsible” for
gassing civilians on August 21, Carney added. “Logic dictates that
conclusion, as well as the hard facts. And the president is working
with his national security team to evaluate the options available to
him to respond, as well as consulting with international allies and
consulting with members of Congress.”
Those
remarks echoed a statement made by Sec. Kerry this week as well in
which he said the White House was certain Assad’s regime maintains
custody of the chemical weapons used, and that the regime “has been
determined to clear the opposition from those very places where the
attacks took place.”
Kerry
fell short of directly saying Assad ordered the attack, but Pres.
Obama made that allegation during an interview with PBS’ NewsHour
on Wednesday.
"We
have concluded that the Syrian government in fact carried these out,"
Obama said of the assault. "And if that's so, then there need to
be international consequences."
Earlier
this week, Foreign Policy reporter Noah Shachtman wrote that the US
intelligence community recently intercepted conversations in Syria
that suggested the Aug. 21 assault could have been not necessarily
ordered by Assad, but perhaps “the work of a Syrian officer
overstepping his bounds.”
"It's
unclear where control lies," one US intelligence official told
Foreign Policy. "Is there just some sort of general blessing to
use these things? Or are there explicit orders for each attack?"
"We
don't know exactly why it happened," the official added. "We
just know it was pretty fucking stupid."
Pres.
Obama is briefing members of Congress on the Syrian situation on
Thursday using conclusions made by US intelligence, after which a
declassified report is expected to be released to the public
This
from the Guardian:
A
US military strike on Syria would go against the longstanding advice
of the president's most senior military adviser, Guardian national
security editor Spencer Ackerman (@attackerman) points out:
General
Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff and former
top army officer, has highlighted the risks of US involvement in
Syria's bloody civil war for over two years.
Dempsey,
a multi-tour command veteran of the Iraq war, has never openly
opposed a strike on Syria, something that would risk undermining
civilian control of the military. But when asked for his views, in
press conferences and testimony, Dempsey has tended to focus on the
risks and costs of intervention.
In
April, Dempsey said that the US military could force down Syria's
warplanes and disrupt its air defenses, but not without significant
peril to US pilots, all for a negligible impact on dictator Bashar
al-Assad.
"It's
not about: can we do it? It's: should we do it, and what are the
opportunity costs?" Dempsey testified to the Senate armed
services committee in March 2012.
Dempsey's
nomination for a new term as chairman was even briefly delayed in the
Senate last month after pro-war senators demanded fuller advice about
Syria.
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