Washington Fabricates Chemical Weapons Pretext For War Against Syria

By Bill Van Auken 
27 April, 2013 
WSWS.org
In an attempt to pave 
the way for a direct military intervention aimed at toppling the 
government of President Bashar al-Assad, Washington, its NATO allies, 
Israel and Qatar have all in recent days broadcast trumped-up charges 
that Syria has used chemical weapons.
In a letter to members of Congress Thursday, the 
White House declared, “The US intelligence community assesses with some 
degree of varying confidence that the Syrian regime has used chemical 
weapons on a small scale in Syria.”
In the midst of a Middle East tour dedicated to 
arranging a $10 billion deal to provide Israel and the right-wing Arab 
monarchies with advanced weaponry directed against Iran, US Secretary of 
Defense Chuck Hagel denounced the chemical weapons use, saying it 
“violates every convention of warfare.” He went on to acknowledge, “We 
cannot confirm the origin of these weapons, but [they] ...very likely 
have originated with the Assad regime.”
Similarly, British Prime Minister David Cameron 
charged Syria with a “war crime,” stating: “It’s limited evidence, but 
there’s growing evidence that we have seen too of the use of chemical 
weapons, probably by the regime.”
All of these convoluted statements—“with some degree of varying confidence,” 
“cannot confirm the origin of these weapons,” 
“limited evidence” and “probably by the regime”—underscore the 
fraudulent character of these accusations.
There is no proof whatsoever that the Assad regime 
used chemical weapons. The Syrian government has itself charged the 
US-backed rebels—dominated by Al Qaeda-linked elements who have boasted 
that they have obtained such arms and are prepared to use them—of 
carrying out a gas attack in the village of Khan al-Assal near Aleppo 
last March. According to the Syrian military, the weapon was a rocket 
carrying chlorine gas that was fired from a rebel-controlled area at a 
military checkpoint in an area controlled by the government. A number of 
soldiers were among its victims.
The Assad regime requested that the United Nations 
send an inspection team to investigate the incident, but the US, Britain and 
France demanded that any team be given unfettered access to the 
entire country and all Syrian facilities. This would have created the 
same kind of inspection regime used to prepare the US invasion of Iraq.
Knowing that they have no proof and what evidence 
there is points to the Al Qaeda-affiliated elements they have supported, the US 
and its allies are nonetheless determined to use the accusations over chemical 
weapons to sell another war to the public.
Powerful sections of the ruling strata in the United States are determined to 
provoke a direct US military intervention and 
are flogging the poison gas pretext for all it is worth. Much of the 
corporate media is demanding that the Obama administration make good on 
its threat to treat the use of chemical weapons in Syria as a “red line” and a 
“game changer.”
But what gives the US the moral authority to 
proclaim “red lines” on this issue? In its nearly nine-year war in Iraq, the US 
military used chemical weapons to devastating effect. In its 
barbaric siege of Fallujah, it employed white phosphorus shells and an 
advanced form of napalm, both banned by international conventions, to 
burn men, women and children alive.
The legacy of these weapons continues to plague the 
Iraqi people—with huge increases in child leukemia and cancer, and an 
epidemic of nightmarish birth defects in Fallujah, Basra and other 
cities subjected to US military siege.
It should also be recalled that it was the British 
who introduced chemical warfare to the Middle East, dropping mustard gas bombs 
on Iraqi tribes that resisted British colonial rule. Winston 
Churchill, then secretary of state for war and air, declared at the 
time: “I am strongly in favor of using poisoned gas against uncivilized 
tribes…[to] spread a lively terror.”
Washington continues to defend its own massive 
stockpiles of “weapons of mass destruction,” while reserving to itself 
the right to respond to any chemical attack with nuclear weapons.
Behind the sudden turn to promoting the chemical 
weapons pretext for direct military intervention is the growing 
frustration of the US and its European allies over the failure of their 
proxy forces in Syria to make any headway in overthrowing the Assad 
regime.
This is in large measure because the Syrian 
government retains a popular base and, even among those who detest the 
regime, many hate and fear even more the Islamist elements, from the 
Muslim Brotherhood to Al Qaeda, which are seeking to replace it.
The US and its allies are themselves increasingly 
wary about the potential “blowback” from the sectarian civil war that 
they have promoted. The governments in Britain and Germany as well as 
the European Union have all made statements in the last week warning of 
the dangers posed by hundreds of Islamists from their own countries 
going to Syria to join with Al Qaeda elements.
Behind the pretense that the cutthroats that rule 
the US and Europe are concerned about human rights and Syrian lives, the 
reality is that they are preparing bombings, the use of cruise missiles and 
Predator drones, as well as a potential ground invasion that will 
dramatically increase Syria’s death toll.
The motives underlying such a war have nothing to do with qualms about chemical 
weapons, but rather concern definite 
geostrategic interests. 
“Syria and the changing Middle East energy map,” an 
article by Ruba Husari, a Middle East energy expert and editor of 
IraqOilForum.com, published earlier this year by the Carnegie Middle 
East Center, provides a glimpse into the real reasons for the mounting 
pressure for direct US-NATO intervention.
“Syria might not be a major oil or gas producer in 
the Middle East, but—depending on the outcome of the Syrian uprising—it 
may determine the shape of the future regional energy map,” she writes. 
“The country’s geographic location offers Mediterranean access to 
landlocked entities in search of markets for their hydrocarbons and to 
countries seeking access to Europe without having to go through Turkey. 
The opportunities presented to many in the region by the current Syrian 
regime could be lost in a post-crisis Syria. To others, new 
opportunities will emerge under a new Syrian regime.”
The principal losers in a successful war for regime 
change would be Iran, which recently signed a major pipeline 
deal—bitterly opposed by Washington—with Syria and Iraq that is 
ultimately aimed at bringing Iranian gas to the Mediterranean Sea, and 
Russia, which has sought to expand its own influence in energy 
development in the region.
The principal winners would be the US and its 
allies, together with the major US and Western European-based energy 
conglomerates.
Ultimately, the goal of US imperialism and its NATO 
allies in Syria is to isolate and prepare for a far larger war against 
Iran, with the aim of imposing neocolonial control over the vast 
energy-producing region stretching from the Persian Gulf to the Caspian 
Basin.
The real issue in this conflict is not the nature of the Syrian regime, but the 
nature of the regimes that rule the US, 
Britain, France and Germany, which are embarking on another predatory 
carve-up of the world like those that produced the First and Second 
World Wars.

http://www.countercurrents.org/auken280413.htm

NOTE:  This article makes no mention of the use of deadly radioactive Depleted 
Uranium in Iraq and Afghanistan, which puzzles me, as that has been the worst 
use of chemical/radiological weapons in the Middle East to date.  Hajja Romi

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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