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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Transparent Hoax Could Lead to War Phony "poison gas" attack spurs calls for intervention Those rollicking jihadists, the Syrian rebels, love a joke: although they can be deadly serious such as when theyre eating the internal organs of their enemies what they enjoy more than anything is a really good prank. There was the time they claimed the Assad regime was killing babies in incubators not very original, but hey, it worked for the Kuwaitis! Then there was the "massacre" at Houla, which was alleged to have killed 32 children and over 60 adults: a photo started appearing in the mainstream media, documenting the slaughter. The state-supported BBC was first to run with it until it was discovered the supposedly incriminating photo was taken in Iraq during the recent war. The photographer was justifiably furious, the story was withdrawn, and the Syrian rebels went back to the drawing board. I could go on for quite a while about the various Syrian hoaxes weve been subjected to, but lets get down to the latest one a claim Syrian government forces used nerve gas at the Syrian village known as Ghouta. Videos posted by the rebels show rows of people killed or incapacitated without any dramatic indications of physical trauma: instead, the victims display convulsions and other signs of exposure to asphyxiating gases. Yet, as Haaretz reports: "Western experts on chemical warfare who have examined at least part of the footage are skeptical that weapons-grade chemical substances were used, although they all emphasize that serious conclusions cannot be reached without thorough on-site examination. "Dan Kaszeta, a former officer of the U.S. Armys Chemical Corps and a leading private consultant, pointed out a number of details absent from the footage so far: None of the people treating the casualties or photographing them are wearing any sort of chemical-warfare protective gear, he says, and despite that, none of them seem to be harmed." Perhaps Allah is protecting these caregivers and others attending to the sick: or maybe the aid were shipping the rebels includes some really neat stuff from Marvel Comics. On the other hand, maybe the whole thing is yet another put up job. You tell me. If the "massacre" at Ghouta involved military-grade nerve gas, all those doctors and others milling around the fallen victims would be dead or in serious trouble. Thats because the poison would stick around for days, penetrating the skin and being inhaled by anyone who came close to them or even entered the vicinity. Another problem is that, as Kaszeta says, "One issue is that you cant really test for sarin gas, you test for chemicals that are released as it decomposes." The UN inspection team was in Damascus anyway, investigating previous claims of poison gas use: of course its just a coincidence that this latest claim is made about a site a few miles from where theyre staying. They are on their way to Ghouta even as I write: but how will they determine who used whatever chemical agents were unleashed, if indeed that is what happened? The answer is: they wont. They have only to come up with "evidence" that some sort of "WMD" was used: in spite of rebel claims that they would "retaliate" in kind in response to previous alleged chemical attacks, it will simply be assumed by Western governments and media (or do I repeat myself) that the Syrian government is responsible. As for Washington and its allies: they arent waiting for the "evidence." They already know who is guilty, and who is not. A "senior US official" is cited by ABC as saying: "Based on the reported number of victims, reported symptoms of those who were killed or injured, witness accounts, and other facts, there is very little doubt at this point that a chemical weapon was used by the Syrian regime against civilians in this incident. We are continuing to assess the facts so the President can make an informed decision about how to respond to this indiscriminate use of chemical weapons." The War Party has the Presidents ear, and believe you me they arent whispering in it theyre making their case loud and clear, in public and no doubt in private. The only dove in the vicinity of the White House is Hagel, and hes consigned to simply preparing the US military for any and all contingencies. On that front, the news isnt good: US forces are already converging on the region and moving into position. So if the evidence for a nerve gas attack is so thin, and the rebels record of crying "Wolf!" at the drop of a scimitar is grounds for skepticism, what is all the shouting about? Are we really about to go to war on the strength of a transparent hoax? The shouting is about taking the NSA story off the front pages for a while and drowning out the rising voices of civil libertarian protest. Edward Snowdens revelations of a wide-ranging years-long domestic spying operation threatens Obamas presidency. It also threatens the leadership of the two parties, who are confronted with a grassroots rebellion on both sides of the aisle and have only just barely managed to contain it. Official Washington has been shaken to its already pretty flimsy foundations by the scandal and theres nothing like another war to take everyones mind off the fact that theyre shredding the Fourth Amendment. Indeed, a little "kinetic action" in Syria affords them the opportunity to tear the Constitution into even tinier pieces by going to war without even bothering to consult Congress, and without much of anyone outside Rand Paul, Justin Amash, and a few others (all Republicans, by the way) making a fuss about it. Speaking of those intrepid libertarian-leaning Republicans: invariably, when the subject of Syria comes up, their first response is to address the question of whether its constitutional for the President to simply send in the bombers without going to Congress. This action would be clearly unconstitutional, its true, but that cant be the end of it, and it is barely the beginning of an adequate argument: aside from the purely procedural case, we need to hear substantial policy-oriented specifics as to why overthrowing Syrian despot Bashar al-Assad would be a stupid move on our part. They might start by accurately characterizing the "rebels" as terrorists, the lot of them either formally affiliated with Al Qaeda remember those folks who brought down the twin towers and breached the Pentagon? or else willing dupes and fellow travelers. Suicide bombings, the beheading of their enemies and even the eating of their victims internal organs it seems theres nothing these savages arent capable of. Oh, but theyre our jihadists well, thats not quite what the interventionists are saying, but that will be the effect if the War Party wins out. The allegedly "secular" groups we are supposed to be aiding arent exactly Unitarians, and, aside from that, theyre not a real presence on the battlefield. They merely serve as mouthpieces for the real hub of Syrias emerging Islamist state the numerous autonomous "commanders" of the various Islamist militias currently rampaging through half of Syria, killing Christians, looting and murdering their way across the countryside. The US predator has been circling its Syrian prey ever since George W. Bushs first term, There was that whole Hariri business, which was supposed to trigger a UN interdict and then presumably US-NATO military action. However, that somehow got lost in the shuffle, perhaps because the "evidence" the Lebanese leader was killed by Syrian intelligence agencies was thin to nonexistent. Anyway, that ticking time bomb was somehow defused, but the ever-inventive folks over at War Party HQ soon came up with a new scheme and a new narrative and thats where we are today. Amid all the solemn UN "investigations" and "inspections," all the learned discourse on the pros and cons of intervention as it impacts Americas (alleged) "national interest," the reality is that this is all mere window-dressing. It matters not a whit that just based on the science of how nerve gas and other military-grade variants work the rebels claims arent even half-credible. Nor does it matter what sort of blowback well have to endure, including the increased threat of terrorism on our shores. There is no "national interest," only the political interests of individual political actors who seek, above all, to maintain and extend their own power and prestige. A crude interpretation of this theory that domestic politics essentially determines the course of a nations foreign policy would be vulnerable, in this instance, since this administration is seriously considering war in spite of polls showing massive opposition: a pitiful nine percent favor US meddling. The pro-intervention group increases somewhat if its shown the Syrian government used chemicals weapons, but still a plurality 46 percent oppose US action. Yet the administration may be willing to take heat on this front rather than on another potentially far more disastrous front: the NSA scandal that is unraveling the credibility of this White House at Weiner-like speed. Obamas poll numbers are plummeting at alarming speed, and if the Guardian keeps publishing in spite of the best efforts of the British government it wont be long until Obamas tied with Mayor Filner in the polls. Consider the Presidents position: first his DNI went in front of Congress and lied about the nature and extent of the NSA surveillance programs and later joked about it. Then the President himself went in front of the American people and flat out lied to their faces, denying any such domestic surveillance program existed. Not only that, but his lie was exposed within one week, with new revelations coming courtesy of Snowden. Even the Presidents most ardent defenders are having a hard time standing up for their guy, who, instead of embodying Lincoln and FDR, as his cultists insist, stands revealed as an unholy hybrid of LBJ and Richard Nixon exhibiting the politics of the former, the guile of the latter, and the low cunning of both. From this administrations perspective, its time to change the subject, to shift the focus of the camera away from the Liar-in-chief and swing it in the direction of the War Partys latest hate object let the mob take out their anger and frustrations on Assad. In the midst of a public relations and political meltdown, with new information about how they spied and how they lied coming out day after day, this punch- drunk administration is apparently quite prepared to "pay any price" and have us "bear any burden," as another interventionist President put it, as long as they can get this President off the ropes. So, sure, the idea of going to war in Syria is unpopular, but widespread post- Iraq aversion to intervention didnt stop him in Libya. If you add in all the indirect costs and benefits in purely political terms, then the interventionist argument begins to make sense: at least we wont be talking about the latest Snowden documents and what Glenn Greenwald is reporting all the time. A knockout blow will have been averted, at least for the moment. Several international players have sufficient clout in this country to make the President stop and think before he defies the calls by the political class to "do something" about Syria. To begin with, the Saudis, the main arms supplier and ideological guide to the Syrian rebels, have a powerful Washington lobby, and plenty of cash to throw around. The Israelis, too, are rumored to have a bit of clout on Capitol Hill, although its a hate crime to say so. The Netanyahu government is strangely soft on the rebels who are, after all, fanatical anti- Semites and seems to have saved all its vitriol for Assad, essentially echoing and amplifying jihadist propaganda albeit with this twist: "The civil war in Syria is continuing, with one hundred thousand dead, and, not for the first time, the regime is employing chemical weapons. This is a life- and-death struggle between a regime representing the Alawite minority and a disunited opposition. The end is not yet in sight, and even the fall of [Syrian President Bashar] Assad would not end this conflict." That s Israeli defense minister Moshe Yaalon, as cited in the Haaretz piece quoted above. Note his characterization of the rebels as "disunited": in other words, theyre not all flying Al Qaedas black banner. The main point, however, is the "no end to it" doctrine, as we might call it: Yaalons absolutely accurate prognosis that Western intervention will not be the end of anything. Israel wants a buffer between itself and a rapidly decomposing Syria: in the end, they hope, well see Western "peacekeeping" troops, no doubt under UN auspices, stationed on the Syrian-Israeli border. By themselves, the Israelis cannot control the chaos they did much to unleash: or, rather, they could control the chaos, militarily, but would rather the West do their dirty work for them, as usual. With the Islamist regime in Egypt quashed, and Hezbollah thrown on the defensive, the Israelis just want to kick back, thumb, their noses at John Kerry, and build more "settlements." What better way to accomplish this than by recruiting an army of human shields made up of Western "peacekeepers" a scouting party paving the way for the ultimate confrontation with Iran. All the political interests including economic heavy-hitters like the "defense" industry, Big Media, the leadership of both parties, the "humanitarian" liberals and the neocon empire-builders stand united in demanding we "punish" Assad. With one voice, they demand we fulfill our self- appointed role as Arbiter of Global Morality and Planetary Father Figure ever ready to give "rogue" states a proper spanking. This is certainly the British view and style, but I think they rather enjoy it too much, if you know what I mean
. The American people, on the other hand, are as yet unused to or, at least, largely unaware of the burden of empire, and have yet to succumb to its perverse pleasures. Certainly our history militates against it: the very idea of America as Big Daddy seems not only presumptuous but positively un-American. After all, didnt we burst the imperial pretensions of a similarly arrogant and supposedly invincible empire during that little incident known as the American Revolution? To the Washington policy wonks and power-mad social climbing Beltway sycophants of Power, the American empire can just keep on expanding, exporting its goodness and its decadent culture all over the world. Bankruptcy, either financial or moral, doesnt enter into it: our rulers have even less fiscal sense than they have moral sense. In both cases, they think we owe it to ourselves. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 12.
#6. To: Ada (#0)
"Based on the reported number of victims, reported symptoms of those who were killed or injured, witness accounts, and other facts, there is very little doubt at this point that a chemical weapon was used by the Syrian regime We will bomb Syria. This amount of saber rattling can't go without 'action' albeit it from 30,000 feet. I pray the Ruskies have armed up the Assad. Whatever American military machinery that attacks Syria deserves to be blown out of the sky.
Indeed. Kill a lot of people that will be called collateral damage. I hope there is no one here that does not understand why we WILL NOT send in a drone and surgically remove Assad.
My guess is that if we did take Assad out it would be a personal affront to Putin who would likely consider taking out our dictator in retaliation.
Good heavens, you get a gold ring. Pol Pot Obama does not have much hair BUT HE DOES WANT TO KEEP IT ALL TOGETHER ON TOP OF HIS HEAD. Pooty Poot is all man, he has traded his olde woman in for a vibrant young lady, Pol Pot Obama is looking over the new crop of male interns.
Our guy is an angry fag.
Well, at least he has gotten rid of the training wheels he had on his bike during the first four years. I hope the white Americans that put this abortion in office sleep well at nite.
#16. To: Cynicom (#12)
App. 4 of them are living in the Nest being mothered by Red Robin. They've pulled the curtain down on their act so I'm unsure of their sleeping habits.
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