Ex-intel
officials: Pentagon report proves US complicity in ISIS
Renowned
government whistleblowers weigh in on debate over controversial
declassified document
Nafeez
Ahmed
2 June, 2015
According
to leading American and British intelligence experts, a declassified
Pentagon report confirms that the West accelerated support to
extremist rebels in Syria, despite knowing full well the strategy
would pave the way for the emergence of the ‘Islamic State’
(ISIS).
The
experts who have spoken out include renowned government
whistleblowers such as the Pentagon’s Daniel Ellsberg, the NSA’s
Thomas Drake, and the FBI’s Coleen Rowley, among others.
Their
remarks demonstrate the fraudulent nature of claims by two other
former officials, the CIA’s Michael Morell and the NSA’s John
Schindler, both of whom attempt to absolve the Obama administration
of responsibility for the policy
According
to leading American and British intelligence experts, a declassified
Pentagon report confirms that the West accelerated support to
extremist rebels in Syria, despite knowing full well the strategy
would pave the way for the emergence of the ‘Islamic State’
(ISIS).
The
experts who have spoken out include renowned government
whistleblowers such as the Pentagon’s Daniel Ellsberg, the NSA’s
Thomas Drake, and the FBI’s Coleen Rowley, among others.
Their
remarks demonstrate the fraudulent nature of claims by two other
former officials, the CIA’s Michael Morell and the NSA’s John
Schindler, both of whom attempt to absolve the Obama administration
of responsibility for the policy failures exposed by the DIA
documents.
Foreseeing ISIS
As
I reported on
May 22nd, the US Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) document obtained
by Judicial Watch under Freedom of Information confirms that the US
intelligence community foresaw the rise of ISIS three years ago, as a
direct consequence of the support to extremist rebels in Syria.
The
August 2012 ‘Information Intelligence Report’ (IIR) reveals that
the overwhelming core of the Syrian insurgency at that time was
dominated by a range of Islamist militant groups, including al-Qaeda
in Iraq (AQI). It warned that the “supporting powers” to the
insurgency — identified
in the document as the West, Gulf states, and Turkey — wanted
to see the emergence of a “Salafist Principality” in eastern
Syria to “isolate” the Assad regime.
The
document also provided an extraordinarily prescient
prediction that
such an Islamist quasi-statelet, backed by the region’s Sunni
states, would amplify the risk of the declaration of an “Islamic
State” across Iraq and Syria. The DIA report even anticipated the
fall of Mosul and Ramadi.
Divide and rule
Last
week, legendary whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, the former career
Pentagon officer and US military analyst who leaked Pentagon papers
exposing White House lies about the Vietnam War, described my Insurge
report on
the DIA document as “a very important story.”
Daniel
Ellsberg, the former US military analyst who leaked the Pentagon
Papers in 1971, revealing how the US public had been misled about the
Vietnam War.
In
an extensive podcast interview,
he said that the DIA document provided compelling evidence that the
West’s Syria strategy created ISIS. The DIA, he said, “in 2012,
was asserting that Western powers were supporting extremist Islamic
groups in Syria that were opposing Assad…
“They were not only as they claimed supporting moderate groups, who were losing members to the more extremist groups, but that they were directly supporting the extremist groups. And they were predicting that this support would result in an Islamic State organization, an ISIS or ISIL… They were encouraging it, regarding it as a positive development, because it was anti-Assad, Assad being supported by Russia, but also interestingly China… and Iran… So we have China, Russia and Iran backing Assad, and the US, starting out saying Assad must go… What he [Nafeez Ahmed] is talking about, the DIA report, is extremely significant. It fits into a general framework that I’m aware of, and sounds plausible to me.”
Ellsberg
also noted that “it’s pretty well known” in the intelligence
community that Saudi Arabia sponsors Islamist terrorists to this day:
“It’s kind of a deal that the Saudis will support various Islamic extremists, all around the world, and the deal is that they [extremists] will not try to overthrow the corrupt, alcohol-drinking clique in Saudi Arabia.”
Ellsberg,
who was a former senior analyst at RAND Corp, also agreed with the
relevance of a 2008 US Army-commissioned RAND report, quoted in my
Insurge story, and also examined
in-depth for Middle
East Eye.
The
US Army-funded RAND report advocated a range of policy scenarios for
the Middle East, including a “divide and rule” strategy to play
off Sunni and Shi’a factions against each other, which Ellsberg
describes as “standard imperial policy” for the US.
The
RAND report even
confirmed (p. 113) that its “divide and rule” strategy was
already being executed in Iraq at the time:
“Today in Iraq such a strategy is being used a tactical level, as the United States now forms temporary alliances with nationalist insurgent groups that it had been fighting for four years… providing carrots in the form of weapons and cash. In the past, these nationalists have cooperated with al-Qaeda against US forces.”
The
confirmed activation of this divide-and-rule strategy perhaps
explains why the self-defeating US approach in Syria is fanning the
flames of both sides: simultaneously allying with states like Turkey
who have continued to covertly sponsor ISIS, while working with Assad
through the Russians to fight ISIS. Ellsberg added:
“As Assad is the main opponent of ISIS, we are covertly coordinating our airstrikes against ISIS with Assad. So are we against Assad, or not? It’s ambivalent… I think that Obama and everybody around him is clear that they do not any longer as they’ve been saying want Assad to leave power. I don’t believe that that is their intention anymore, as they believe anyone who succeeds Assad would be far worse.”
If
true, Ellsberg’s analysis exposes the deep-rooted hypocrisy of the
previous campaign against Assad, the current campaign against ISIS,
and why both appear destined for failure.
Frankenstein script
Former
FBI Special Agent Coleen Rowley testified before the Senate and 9/11
Commission on how FBI Head Quarters in Washington DC had sabotaged
investigations that could have uncovered the 9/11 plot
Rowley,
who was selected as TIME ‘Person
of the Year’ in 2002 after revealing how pre-9/11 intelligence was
ignored by superiors at the FBI, said of the document:
“It’s like the mad power-hungry doctor who created Frankenstein, only to have his monster turn against him. It’s hard to feel sorry when the insane doctor gets his due. But in our case, that script is constantly repeating. The quest for ‘full spectrum dominance’ and blindness of exceptionalism seems to mean we are doomed to keep repeating the ‘Charlie Wilson’s Frankenstein War’ script… The various neocon warmongers and military industrial complex, most of them inept Peter Principles, just don’t care.”
Also
commenting on the declassified Pentagon report, former NSA senior
executive Thomas Drake — the whistleblower who inspired Edward
Snowden — condemned “the West’s role in ISIS and threat of
‘violent extremists’, justifying surveillance and libercide at
home.”
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Thomas
Drake, former NSA senior executive, who leaked information in 2006
about the NSA’s corrupt and dysfunction Trailblazer project.
Alastair
Crooke, a former senior MI6 officer who spent three decades at the
agency, said
yesterday that
the DIA document provides clear corroboration that the US was
covertly pursuing a strategy to drive an extremist Salafi “wedge”
between Iran and its Arab allies.
Alistair
Crooke worked for MI6 for three decades at a senior level,
specialising in the politics of the Muslim world. He went on to
advise the EU on Middle East foreign policy, and is currently
founding director of the Conflicts Forum in Beirut.
The
strategy was, Crooke confirms, standard thinking in the Western
intelligence establishment for about a decade.
“The
idea of breaking up the large Arab states into ethnic or sectarian
enclaves is an old Ben Gurion ‘canard,’ and splitting Iraq along
sectarian lines has been Vice President Biden’s recipe since the
Iraq war,” wrote Crooke, who had coordinated British assistance to
the Afghan mujahideen in the 1980s. After his long MI6 stint, he
became Middle East advisor to the European Union’s foreign policy
chief (1997–2003).
“But
the idea of driving a Sunni ‘wedge’ into the landline linking
Iran to Syria and to Hezbollah in Lebanon became established Western
group think in the wake of the 2006 war, in which Israel failed to
de-fang Hezbollah,” continued Crooke. “The response to 2006, it
seemed to Western powers, was to cut off Hezbollah from its sources
of weapons supply from Iran…
“… In short, the DIA assessment indicates that the ‘wedge’ concept was being given new life by the desire to pressure Assad in the wake of the 2011 insurgency launched against the Syrian state. ‘Supporting powers’ effectively wanted to inject hydraulic fracturing fluid into eastern Syria (radical Salafists) in order tofracture the bridge between Iran and its Arab allies, even at the cost of this ‘fracking’ opening fissures right down inside Iraq to Ramadi. (Intelligence assessments purpose is to provide ‘a view’ — not to describe or prescribe policy. But it is clear that the DIA reports’ ‘warnings’ were widely circulated and would have been meshed into the policy consideration.)
“But this ‘view’ has exactly come about. It is fact. One might conclude then that in the policy debate, the notion of isolating Hezbollah from Iran, and of weakening and pressurizing President Assad, simply trumped the common sense judgment that when you pump highly toxic and dangerous fracturing substances into geological formations, you can never entirely know or control the consequences… So, when the GCC demanded a ‘price’ for any Iran deal (i.e. massing ‘fracking’ forces close to Aleppo), the pass had been already partially been sold by the US by 2012, when it did not object to what the ‘supporting powers’ wanted.”
Intel
shills
Crooke’s
analysis of the DIA report shows that it is irrelevant whether or not
“the West” should be included in the “supporting powers”
described by the report as specifically wanting a “Salafist
Principality” in eastern Syria. Either way, the report groups “the
West, Gulf countries and Turkey” as supporting the Syrian
insurgency together — highlighting that the Gulf states and
Turkey operated in alliance with the US, Britain, and other Western
powers.
The
observations of intelligence experts Ellsberg, Rowley, and Drake add
further weight to Crooke’s analysis. They come in addition to
comments I had previously received on the DIA document from former
MI5 counter-terrorism officer, Annie Machon, and former
counter-terrorism intelligence officer, Charles Shoebridge.
The
comments undermine the recent
claims of disgraced US
national security commentator, John Schindler, a retired NSA
intelligence officer, to the effect that the August 2012 DIA report
is “almost incomprehensible,” “so heavily redacted that its
difficult to say much meaningful about it,” “Nothing special
here, not one bit,” “routine,” “a single data point,” and
so on.
Schindler
cites the DIA’s use of ‘Curveball’ — the Iraqi informant
who fabricated claims about Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass
destruction (WMD) — as evidence of the agency’s “less than
stellar reputation.” But this misrepresents the fact noted
by the CIA’s Valerie Plame Wilson that “it was widely known [in
the intelligence community] that CURVEBALL was not a credible source
and that there were serious problems with his reporting.”
As
I’ve documented elsewhere,
the WMD threat mythology was not the outcome of an ‘intelligence
failure’, as Schindler and his ilk like to claim, but a consequence
of the corruption and politicization of intelligence under the
influence of dubious vested interests.
Also
contrary to Schindler’s misinformation, an IIR provides raw
intelligence data from human sources (HUMINT), not simply rumour,
gossip or opinion. Before wider distribution, the IIR is vetted to
determine whether it is worthy of dissemination to the intelligence
community. IIRs then provide a source basis for evaluation,
interpretation, analysis and integration with other information.
Far
from justifying the dismissal of the relevance of the declassified
DIA documents, this shows that urgent questions must be asked:
What
happened to this raw intelligence data, described by six US UK
intelligence experts as providing damning confirmation of how Western
strategy led to the rise of ISIS?
And
why did it not lead to a change in policy, despite DIA analysts’
clear warning of the outgrowth of an ISIS-entity from Western allies’
desire to see a ‘Salafist Principality’ in the region — a
warning which was, in hindsight, quite accurate?
Are
intel critics traitors?
Schindler
previously characterized NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden as
a traitor and
“pawn… of America’s adversaries.”
He
now declares that those who cite the DIA report as proof the
intelligence community “knew more about the rise of the Islamic
State than they let on” are at best “fools; at worst, they’re
deceivers who have lied to the American people.”
On
the contrary, six decorated former senior US and British intelligence
officials, many with direct experience of IIRs and their function,
agree that the DIA report provides significant insight into the kind
of intelligence available to the US intelligence community at the
time.
Yet
for Schindler, it seems, Ellsberg, Drake, Rowley, Crooke, Machon and
Shoebridge are all, effectively, traitors simply for lending their
expertise to public understanding of the newly declassified
documents.
As
Marcy Wheeler points out in Salon,
the large corpus of secret DIA documents obtained by Judicial Watch
demonstrates, at the least, that:
“The Intelligence Community (IC) knew that AQI had ties to the rebels in Syria; they knew our Gulf and Turkish allies were happy to strengthen Islamic extremists in a bid to oust Assad; and CIA officers in Benghazi (at a minimum) watched as our allies armed rebels using weapons from Libya. And the IC knew that a surging AQI might lead to the collapse of Iraq. That’s not the same thing as creating ISIS. But it does amount to doing little or nothing while our allies had a hand in creating ISIS. All of which ought to raise real questions about why we’re still allied with countries willfully empowering terrorist groups then, and how seriously they plan to fight those terrorist groups now. Because while the CIA may not have deliberately created ISIS, it sure seems to have watched impassively as our allies helped to do so.”
However,
Wheeler overlooks that the reliance on foreign allies is a standard
proxy war strategy — as Ellsberg explained in his
interview — used by the covert operations arm of the US
government to guarantee ‘plausible deniability.’
As
I noted in my Middle
East Eye analysis
of the DIA document, there is extensive evidence against which to
contextualize the DIA report’s assertions. This evidence shows that
the CIA did not merely watch “impassively” as the Gulf states and
Turkey supported violent extremists in Syria, but actively
supervised, facilitated and accelerated this policy.
The
August 2012 DIA document further corroborates this by repeatedly
pointing out that the support to the Syrian insurgency from its
allies was itself backed by “the West” — despite awareness
of their intent to establish an extremist Salafi political entity.
While
the DIA document was, indeed, just one data-point, analyzing it in
context with the other DIA reports along with incontrovertible
facts in the public record,
establishes that the Pentagon was complicit in its allies’ support
of Islamist terrorists, despite recognizing this could create an
“Islamic State” in Iraq and Syria.
These
revelations show that the real traitors are not the courageous
whistleblowers who sacrifice everything to speak out on behalf of the
public interest, but shameless shills like Schindler and Morell who
willfully sanitize a dysfunctional and dangerous ‘national
security’ system from legitimate public scrutiny
Dr Nafeez
Ahmed is
an investigative journalist, bestselling author and international
security scholar. A former Guardian writer, he writes the ‘System
Shift’ column for VICE’s Motherboard, and is also a columnist for
Middle East Eye. He is the winner of a 2015 Project Censored Award,
known as the ‘Alternative Pulitzer Prize’, for Outstanding
Investigative Journalism for his Guardian work, and was selected in
the Evening Standard’s ‘Power 1,000’ most globally influential
Londoners.
Nafeez
has also written for The Independent, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age,
The Scotsman, Foreign Policy, The Atlantic, Quartz, Prospect, New
Statesman, Le Monde diplomatique, New Internationalist, Counterpunch,
Truthout, among others. He is the author of A
User’s Guide to the Crisis of Civilization: And How to Save
It (2010),
and the scifi thriller novel ZERO
POINT,
among other books. His work on the root causes and covert operations
linked to international terrorism officially contributed to the 9/11
Commission and the 7/7 Coroner’s Inquest.
This
exclusive is being released for free in the public interest, and was
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