Was
a Russian Bomb Used in Deadly Sarin Gas attack in Syria?
Was a Russian made bomb used in deadly Sarin Gas attack in Syria? Western experts now claim they have the evidence that the Syrian pilot used an outdated Russian made Khab-250 chemical weapons bomb on the children of Khan Sheikhoun. Once again we are faced with more evidence but does this evidence support that President Assad gassed his own people. I for one support his removal if he did but the evidence seems to suggest otherwise.
Links:
Khab-250: http://foreignpolicy.com/2017/05/01/s...
https://www.google.cz/search?q=sarin+...
Humans Right watch: https://www.hrw.org/report/2017/05/01...
Postol: https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017...
https://www.scribd.com/document/34499...
The National: http://www.thenational.ae/world/middl...
Sarin: http://www.encyclopedia.com/social-sc...
Gazeta: https://www.gazeta.ru/army/2017/05/02...
W Helmets: https://www.google.cz/search?q=white+...
http://www.thedailysheeple.com/anothe...
UN experts https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yc-Rm...
Hersh: https://www.lrb.co.uk/v36/n08/seymour...
Erdem: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hBBT_...
Pilot: http://archive.is/mTAXP
Lies from the NZ Herald
The
Assad Government has repeatedly used chemical weapons to consolidate
its power in Syria, according to new evidence that has "decimated"
the Russian "cover story" for the deadly April 4 attack on
Khan Sheikhoun.
The
world was shocked last month when it was revealed that Syria had used
a nerve agent against its own citizens in the rebel-held Idlib
province town, killing 92 people, including at least 30 children,
according to news.com.au.
The
attack prompted US President Donald Trump to launch 59 Tomahawk
missiles at a Syrian airfield.
But
new evidence released on Monday by Human Rights Watch shows that
Bashar al-Assad's government used nerve agents three times leading up
to the April atrocity, which show "widespread and systematic
attacks on civilians [that] could constitute crimes against
humanity".
Russia,
which supports the Assad regime, justified the Khan Sheikhoun attack
by saying a Syrian bomb had inadvertently hit a rebel cache of nerve
gases or pesticides.
But
Human Rights Watch executive director Ken Roth says new evidence
renders that explanation "utterly implausible".
The
organisation has revealed that the Syrian military used chemical
weapons just five days before the April 4 attack at a town 15km
southwest of Khan Sheikhoun.
This
attack did not kill anyone but injured dozens of civilians and rebel
insurgents.
Syrian
forces also dropped nerve agents twice in mid-December near the
eastern Hama towns of Jrouh and Al-Salaliyah, an area controlled by
Islamic State.
A
rebel-affiliated activist and local residents say 64 people died from
chemical exposure in those attacks.
"This
pattern of the Syrian government using nerve agents makes the
Syria-Russia cover story preposterous," Roth said at a briefing
attended by news.com.au in New York.
"There's
no way that on four different occasions, in four different places,
Syrian forces just happened to hit caches of nerve agents, even
ignoring the fact that there's no evidence that such caches ever
existed.
"It's
time for Moscow and Damascus to stop these transparently false,
diversionary claims and to come clean about this grotesque breach of
international law."
The
organisation has also confirmed multiple cases of government forces
using helicopters and ground-launched rockets to deploy
chlorine-filled munitions "pervasively".
Roth
said the report showed chemical weapons had become a "central
part of its military strategy".
Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad. Photo/AP
"And
as so often happens with Syria's military strategy under the Assad
Government, these attacks are directed not only at military forces,
but very often also at the civilian population and civilian
institutions," he said.
"As
such, these widespread and systematic attacks on civilians could
constitute crimes against humanity.
"That
is a level of culpability and horror that cries out for prosecution."
Roth
said the pattern of attacks suggested that the Syrian Government had
kept sarin gas or a similar nerve agent after the August 2013 Ghouta
sarin gas attack.
International
condemnation following the attack forced the country to agree to hand
over all of its chemical weapons to United Nations inspectors.
"Assad
apologists have also asked: why would the Syrian government risk
using nerve agents when the war seemed to be going its way? But all
four of these attacks were in areas where opposition or Isis forces
were launching an offensive that threatened government military air
bases," Roth said.
"Short
on ground troops and already having gotten away with using chlorine
as a chemical weapon, the Assad Government decided to deploy a nerve
agent."
Human
Rights Watch's report also reveals new detail about what weapon was
used in the April 4 attack.
Its
analysis concludes it was most likely a KhAB-500, a Soviet-made
air-dropped chemical bomb, specifically designed to deliver deadly
sarin gas.
Local
residents told the organisation that a warplane flew over Khan
Sheikhoun twice about 6.45am.
Abdul-Hamid
Alyousef holds his twin babies who were killed by a chemical weapons
attack in Khan Sheikhoun. Photo/AP
It
dropped a bomb near the town's central bakery. Witnesses did not hear
an explosion but did see smoke and gas.
This
was followed by another flyover, which resulted in three or four
highly explosive bombs being dropped on the town.
First
responders told Human Rights Watch that hundreds of people in the
area exhibited signs of nerve-agent exposure, including frothing at
the mouth, pinpoint pupils, constricted breathing and trembling.
Roth
said the Russian Government, led by President Vladimir Putin, was
culpable for its role in covering up the truth.
"The
Russians seem determined to try to poke a hole in any evidence that's
put forward," he said.
"But
the primary cover story they've presented so far is decimated by this
report.
"The
Assad Government is utterly dependent on Russian military support.
Both Tehran and Moscow have the capacity to stop these chemical
attacks. The fact that they are choosing not to, that they are
continuing to provide military support depside ample evidence of
chemical weapon use makes them complicit in these war crimes as
well."
Human
Rights Watch has condemned Russia and China for using its UN Security
Council veto to stop Syria from going before the International
Criminal Court.
It
has called on Syria to fully co-operate with investigators from the
UN and the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, and
proposed that the Security Council impose a travel ban and asset
freeze on the Syrian government
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