In Rush to Strike Syria, U.S. Tried to  Derail U.N. Probe
 

Analysis by _Gareth  Porter_ (http://www.ipsnews.net/author/gareth-porter/) 
 
 
http://www.ipsnews.net/2013/08/in-rush-to-strike-syria-u-s-tried-to-derail-u
-n-probe/

 
 
 
WASHINGTON, Aug 27 2013 (IPS) - After  initially insisting that Syria give 
United Nations investigators unimpeded  access to the site of an alleged 
nerve gas attack, the administration of  President Barack Obama reversed its 
position on Sunday and tried unsuccessfully  to get the U.N. to call off its 
investigation. 
The administration’s reversal, which came within  hours of the deal reached 
between Syria and the U.N., was reported by the  Wall Street Journal Monday 
and effectively confirmed by a State  Department spokesperson later that 
day. 
In his press appearance Monday, Secretary of State John Kerry, who 
intervened  with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon to call off the 
investigation, 
dismissed  the U.N. investigation as coming too late to obtain valid evidence 
on the attack  that Syrian opposition sources claimed killed as many 1,300 
people. 
The sudden reversal and overt hostility toward the U.N. investigation, 
which  coincides with indications that the administration is planning a major 
military  strike against Syria in the coming days, suggests that the 
administration sees  the U.N. as hindering its plans for an attack. 
Kerry asserted Monday that he had warned Syrian Foreign Minister Moallem 
last  Thursday that Syria had to give the U.N. team immediate access to the 
site and  stop the shelling there, which he said was “systematically 
destroying evidence”.  He called the Syria-U.N. deal to allow investigators 
unrestricted access “too  late to be credible”. 
After the deal was announced on Sunday, however, Kerry pushed Ban in a 
phone  call to call off the investigation completely. 
The Wall Street Journal reported the pressure on Ban without  mentioning 
Kerry by name. It said unnamed “U.S. officials” had told the  
secretary-general that it was “no longer safe for the inspectors to remain in  
Syria and 
that their mission was pointless.” 
But Ban, who has generally been regarded as a pliable instrument of U.S.  
policy, refused to withdraw the U.N. team and instead “stood firm on principle
”,  the Journal reported. He was said to have ordered the U.N. inspectors 
to  “continue their work”. 
The Journal said “U.S. officials” also told the secretary-general that  
the United States “didn’t think the inspectors would be able to collect 
viable  evidence due to the passage of time and damage from subsequent 
shelling.” 
The State Department spokesperson, Marie Harf, confirmed to reporters that  
Kerry had spoken with Ban over the weekend. She also confirmed the gist of 
the  U.S. position on the investigation. “We believe that it’s been too 
long and  there’s been too much destruction of the area for the investigation to
 be  credible,” she said. 
That claim echoed a statement by an unnamed “senior official” to the  
Washington Post Sunday that the evidence had been “significantly  corrupted” by 
the regime’s shelling of the area. 
“[W]e don’t at this point have confidence that the U.N. can conduct a  
credible inquiry into what happened,” said Harf, “We are concerned that the  
Syrian regime will use this as a delay tactic to continue shelling and  
destroying evidence in the area.” 
Harf did not explain, however, how the Syrian agreement to a ceasefire and  
unimpeded access to the area of the alleged chemical weapons attack could  
represent a continuation in “shelling and destroying evidence”. 
Despite the U.S. effort to portray the Syrian government policy as one of  “
delay”, the formal request from the United Nations for access to the site 
did  not go to the Syrian government until Angela Kane, U.N. High 
Representative for  Disarmament Affairs, arrived in Damascus on Saturday, as 
Ban’s 
spokesman, Farhan  Haq, conceded in a briefing in New York Tuesday. 
Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Muallem said in a press conference Tuesday 
 that Syria had not been asked by the United Nations for access to the East 
 Ghouta area until Kane presented it on Saturday. Syria agreed to provide 
access  and to a ceasefire the following day. 
Haq sharply disagreed with the argument made by Kerry and the State  
Department that it was too late to obtain evidence of the nature of the Aug. 21 
 
incident. 
“Sarin can be detected for up to months after its use,” he said. 
Specialists on chemical weapons also suggested in interviews with IPS that  
the U.N. investigating team, under a highly regarded Swedish specialist Ake 
 Sellstom and including several experts borrowed from the Organisation for 
the  Prevention of Chemical Weapons, should be able to either confirm or 
disprove the  charge of an attack with nerve or another chemical weapon within 
a matter of  days. 
Ralph Trapp, a consultant on proliferation of chemical and biological  
weapons, said he was “reasonably confident” that the U.N. team could clarify  
what had happened. 
“They can definitely answer the question [of] whether there was a chemical  
attack, and they can tell which chemical was used,” he said, by collecting  
samples from blood, urine and hair of victims. There was even “some chance”
 of  finding chemical residue from ammunition pieces or craters where they  
landed. 
Trapp said it would take “several days” to complete an analysis. 
 
Steve Johnson, who runs a programme in chemical, biological and  
radiological weapons forensics at Cranfield University in the United Kingdom,  
said 
that by the end of the week the U.N. might be able to answer whether  “people 
died of a nerve agent.”
Johnson said the team, if pushed, could produce “some kind of view” on 
that  issue within 24 to 48 hours. 
Dan Kastesza, a 20-year veteran of the U.S. Army Chemical Corps and a 
former  adviser to the White House on chemical and biological weapons 
proliferation,  told IPS the team will not be looking for traces of the nerve 
gas sarin 
in blood  samples but rather chemicals produced when sarin degrades. 
But Kastesza said that once samples arrive at laboratories, specialists 
could  make a determination “in a day or two” about whether a nerve agent or 
other  chemical weapons had been used. 
The real reason for the Obama administration’s hostility toward the U.N.  
investigation appears to be the fear that the Syrian government’s decision to 
 allow the team access to the area indicates that it knows that U.N.  
investigators will not find evidence of a nerve gas attack. 
The administration’s effort to discredit the investigation recalls the 
George  W. Bush administration’s rejection of the position of U.N. inspectors 
in 
2002  and 2003 after they found no evidence of any weapons of mass 
destruction in Iraq  and the administration’s refusal to give inspectors more 
time 
to fully rule out  the existence of an active Iraqi WMD programme. 
In both cases, the administration had made up its mind to go to  war and 
wanted no information that could contradict that policy to arise. 






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