The
Mystery of a Ukrainian Army ‘Defector’
Robert
Parry
22
July 2014
Exclusive: U.S.
intelligence officials suggest that the person who fired the missile
that downed Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 may have been “a defector”
from the Ukrainian army, an apparent attempt to explain why some CIA
analysts thought satellite images revealed men in Ukrainian army
uniforms manning the missile battery, writes Robert Parry.
As
the U.S. government seeks to build its case blaming eastern Ukrainian
rebels and Russia for the shoot-down of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17,
the evidence seems to be getting twisted to fit the preordained
conclusion, including a curious explanation for why the troops
suspected of firing the fateful missile may have been wearing
Ukrainian army uniforms.
On
Tuesday, mainstream journalists, including for the Los Angeles Times
and the Washington Post, were given a briefing about the U.S.
intelligence information that supposedly points the finger of blame
at the rebels and Russia. While much of this circumstantial case was
derived from postings on “social media,” the briefings also
addressed the key issue of who fired the Buk anti-aircraft missile
that is believed to have downed the airliner killing all 298 people
onboard.
After
last Thursday’s shoot-down, I
was told that U.S. intelligence analysts were examining
satellite imagery that showed the crew manning the suspected missile
battery wearing what looked like Ukrainian army uniforms, but my
source said the analysts were still struggling with whether that
essentially destroyed the U.S. government’s case blaming the
rebels.
The
Los Angeles Times article on
Tuesday’s briefing seemed to address the same information this way:
“U.S. intelligence agencies have so far been unable to determine
the nationalities or identities of the crew that launched the
missile. U.S. officials said it was possible the SA-11 [anti-aircraft
missile] was launched by a defector from the Ukrainian military who
was trained to use similar missile systems.”
That
statement about a possible “defector” might explain why some
analysts thought they saw soldiers in Ukrainian army uniforms tending
to the missile battery in eastern Ukraine. But there is another
obvious explanation that the U.S. intelligence community seems
unwilling to accept: that the missile may have been launched by
someone working for the Ukrainian military.
In
other words, we may be seeing another case of the U.S. government
“fixing the intelligence” around a desired policy outcome, as
occurred in the run-up to war with Iraq.
The
Los Angeles Times also reported: “U.S. officials have not released
evidence proving that Russia’s military played a direct role in the
downing of the jet or in training separatists to use the SA-11
missile system. But they said Tuesday that the Russian military has
been training Ukrainian separatists to operate antiaircraft batteries
at a base in southwestern Russia.”
Though
that last charge also has lacked verifiable proof – and could refer
to training on less powerful anti-aircraft weapons like so-called
Manpads – the key question is whether the Russian government
trained the rebels in handling a sophisticated anti-aircraft system,
like the SA-11, and then was reckless enough to supply one or more of
those missile batteries to the rebels — knowing that these rockets
could reach above 30,000 feet where passenger airlines travel.
The
Russian government has denied doing anything that dangerous, if not
crazy, and the eastern Ukrainian rebels also deny ever possessing
such a missile battery. But the question that needs answering is: Are
the Russians and the rebels lying?
That
requires a serious and impartial investigation, but what the Obama
administration and most of the mainstream U.S. news media have
delivered so far is another example of “information warfare,”
assembling a case to make an adversary look bad regardless of the
actual evidence — and then marginalizing any dissents to the
desired conclusion.
That
was exactly the “group think” that led the United States into the
disastrous invasion of Iraq – and it appears that few if any lesson
were learned.
[For
more on this topic of prejudging who’s to blame for the Malaysia
Airlines tragedy, see Consortiumnews.com’s “Kerry’s
Latest Reckless Rush to Judgment.”]
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