As With Iraq, New York Times  Propagates Demonstrable Lies About Syrian  
WMDs

By _Jeremy R. Hammond_ (https://www.facebo
ok.com/jeremy.r.hammond?directed_target_id=0)  _#jeremyrhammond_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/hashtag/jeremyrhammond) 

_https://www.facebook.com/https://www.fachttps://www.faceb&set=a.set=a.<WBR>
108461602set=a.<WBR&type=1_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10201373080502853&set=a.1084616029494.15088.1049169745&type=1)
   


"A headline  in the New York Times yesterday stated as fact that “With the 
World Watching,  Syria Amassed Nerve Gas”. The lead paragraph asserted that “
Syria’s top leaders  amassed one of the world’s largest stockpiles of 
chemical weapons with help from  the Soviet Union and Iran, as well as Western 
European suppliers and even a  handful of American companies, according to 
American diplomatic cables and  declassified intelligence records.”

But as with its propagandistic  reporting about Saddam Hussein’s possession 
of weapons of mass destruction (WMD)  in the run-up to the Iraq war, the 
Times provided no evidence to support its  claim, and an examination of 
publicly available documents the Times cited for  this story illustrates how 
the 
newspaper is demonstrably lying.

After  asserting as fact that the documents show that Syria “amassed one of 
the world’s  largest stockpiles of chemical weapons”, the Times stated 
that Syrian President  Bashar al-Assad and his father before him, “were greatly 
helped in their  chemical weapons ambitions by a basic underlying fact: 
often innocuous, legally  exportable materials are also the precursors to 
manufacturing deadly chemical  weapons.”

To support its claim that “innocuous, legally exportable  materials” were 
used by Syria to manufacture chemical weapons, the Times cited a  2009 State 
Department cable released by WikiLeaks in 2010. The cable, the Times  
stated, “instructed diplomats to ‘emphasize that failure to halt the flow’ of  
chemicals and equipment into Syria, Iran and North Korea could render 
irrelevant  a group of anti-proliferation countries that organized to stop that 
 
flow.”

But on its face, this only indicates that Syria imported materials  
considered “dual-use”, meaning that it could have both civilian and military  
applications. It does not constitute evidence that Syria actually used such  “
chemicals and equipment” to manufacture chemical weapons.

The cable  states that “Syria, Iran and North Korea have continued to 
acquire goods useful  to their chemical and/or biological weapons programs”, 
but 
offers no evidence  that dual-use materials it acquired were used for that 
purpose.

The Times  report continued: “Another leaked State Department cable on the 
Syrians asserted  that ‘part of their modus operandi is to hide procurement 
under the guise of  legitimate pharmaceutical or other transactions.’”

Once again, no  evidence from the cable is offered that materials that 
admittedly have  “legitimate pharmaceutical” uses were actually used to 
manufacture chemical  weapons.

The sentence just prior to the one quoted by the Times in the  cable 
stated, “We remain extremely concerned that Iran and Syria are using  companies 
in 
the UAE to evade U.S. trade prohibitions as well as the export  control 
regulations of other countries to acquire chemical and biological  warfare 
(CBW)-useful equipment and technology.”

The cable itself,  however, reveals that there was no knowledge that such 
materials were actually  directed towards any military program. The State 
Department, it noted, did “not  have additional information” that materials 
that could be “useful” for  manufacturing chemical or biological weapons were 
actually used for that  purpose.

The Times nevertheless continued to falsely assert that “The  diplomatic 
cables and other intelligence documents show that, over time, the two  
generations of Assads built up a huge stockpile by creating companies with the  
appearance of legitimacy, importing chemicals that had many legitimate  uses”.

As already illustrated, the claim that the cables released by  WikiLeaks “
show” that Syria “built up a huge stockpile” of chemical weapons is  an 
outright lie.

The Times then turned to one of the “intelligence  documents” it cited as 
proof, stating that “As early as 1991, under the first  Bush presidency, a 
now declassified National Intelligence Estimate concluded  that ‘both 
Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union provided the chemical agents,  delivery 
systems 
and training that flowed to Syria.’”

But that quote does  not date to a National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) 
from 1991, but rather from 30  years ago. The NIE from which it originated, 
titled “Implications of Soviet Use  of Chemical and Toxin Weapons for U.S. 
Security Interests”, was issued on  September 15, 1983 and stated that Syria “
probably has the most advanced  chemical warfare capability in the Arab 
world, with the possible exception of  Egypt” (p. 11).

What was deemed “probably” true three decades ago may or  may not be true 
today, and it is useful to point out that the U.S. has backed  the military 
dictatorship of Hosni Mubarak, who took power in 1981, with  billions in 
military “aid”. Egypt has been second only to Israel as the largest  recipient 
of U.S. foreign assistance since the 1979 Egyptian-Israeli peace  treaty, 
which provided for this money to flow from the American taxpayers to the  
regime in Egypt.

By 1983, it had also become evident that Iraq was using  chemical weapons 
in its war with Iran, but the U.S. nevertheless removed the  country from its 
list of state sponsors of terrorism in order to step up support  for its 
war effort. In December of that year, President Ronald Reagan dispatched  
Donald Rumsfeld, who was later Secretary of Defense under the Bush  
administration, for a second time to Iraq to reassure Saddam Hussein that the  
U.S. 
would continue to back him despite his use of chemical weapons.

The  1983 NIE also noted that with its foreign suppliers, “there is no need 
for Syria  to develop an indigenous capability to produce CW agents or 
material, and none  has been identified.” The purpose of that Cold War-era NIE 
was to build the case  that the Soviet Union was violating the 1975 
Biological and Toxin Weapons  Convention.

The rest of the Times article similarly provided no  substantiation for the 
headline’s claim. It cited again “precursor ingredients  that can also be 
used for medicine”, with no supporting evidence that such  ingredients were 
used for anything other than civilian  applications.

Perhaps the most egregious example of manipulation with the  attempt to 
deceive the public came towards the end of the article, where the  Times quoted 
from a March 2006 State Department cable: “‘Syrian businessmen  regularly 
report on the ease with which their fellow businessmen illegally  import 
U.S. commodities with seeming impunity, as well as express concerns that  the 
USG’s [United States Government’s] lack of enforcement of the economic  
sanctions’ are ‘hurting those that choose to play by the rules.’”

“Those  transactions presumably included chemicals that could be precursors 
for chemical  warfare”, the Times added.

Yet the “commodities” described in that cable  were mostly related to 
legitimate civilian uses—particularly for use in  hospitals.

The cable relayed the “constant refrain heard from the  business community”
 in Syria that U.S. sanctions were “ineffective” and did not  impact the 
Syrian government, “but rather are most directly impacting legitimate  
business transactions.”

Among the “commodities” mentioned are “x-ray  tubes, personal computers, 
defibrillators, and consumable supplies”.

“One  source told us”, the cable states, providing an example of how 
sanctions are  bypassed, “that he can easily purchase U.S. commodities, 
specifically medical  spare parts, from the Internet and have them shipped to 
Syria 
through a third  country.”

The cable does note that some of the materials imported are  “dual-use”; 
for example, “a Varian linear accelerator” tendered for a military  hospital—
a devise used for the treatment of cancer.

Other items mentioned  include “two MRI systems, at least one of which 
would be used by a military  hospital in Aleppo.”

The cable discusses how the U.S. sanctions regime  harms businesses seeking 
to import such items legally because their competitors  are able to do so 
at a lower cost by obtaining them through other channels. It  cites one 
example where a “competitor was able to offer the products at a  substantially 
cheaper price because he did not invest the necessary time and  money into 
pursuing an export license.”

In another example of a  “dual-use” item, the cable mentions the 
importation of “a consumable product,  potassium cyanide, shipped to a public 
pediatric hospital in October 2003.” The  cable states that the regulatory 
agency 
intended to verify the end use of  imported materials “was unable to verify 
that it had been used  legitimately”—which is also to say that neither was 
there any evidence that the  potassium cyanide was redirected for the purpose 
of manufacturing chemical  weapons.

The cable adds that the supplier in this case also sold  potassium cyanide “
to other end-users not permitted in his export license”, with  no further 
indication as to who the end users were or for what purpose it was  acquired.

And once again, contrary to the Times’ willful lie that cables  such as 
this one prove Syria manufactured and stockpiled chemical weapons, the  cable 
itself implicitly acknowledges the lack of evidence for this claim, noting  
that the a “trained” team of “criminal investigators” in the Bureau of 
Industry  and Security, operating under the U.S. Department of Commerce, “have 
not  traveled to Syria to assess whether the end-use of allowable commodities 
is  legitimate, evaluate whether commodities have been diverted to other 
end-users,  or collect evidence of potential sanctions violations.”

The cable closes  by urging that the investigative team be dispatched to “
follow-up on some of the  anectodal evidence that we have received” of 
sanctions violations.

“The  Americans were not the only ones concerned”, the Times report 
continued.  “According to another leaked cable, the Netherlands discussed how 
monoethylene  glycol, an important raw material used to manufacture urethane 
and 
antifreeze,  was shipped by a Dutch concern to the Syrian Ministry of 
Industry, considered a  front for the Syrian military. The Dutch outlined how 
the 
chemical could also be  used as a precursor for sulfur mustard, and 
possibly for VX and  sarin.”

Yet again we see how the Times took a cable merely noting that  Syria had 
acquired “dual-use” materials that could possibly be used to  manufacture 
sarin gas, the chemical weapon the U.S. is alleging that the Assad  regime 
used in a Damascus suburb last month as a pretext to launch military  strikes 
against Syria, and dishonestly reported this in its headline and lead  
paragraph as proof that this was indeed the end use of the material.

This  is the same kind of propagandistic reporting that the Times engaged 
in prior to  the U.S. war on Iraq. Once again, it is evident that America’s “
newspaper of  record” is serving as a mouthpiece for the U.S. government, 
not only  uncritically parroting claims of government officials for which 
there is no  evidence, but going out of its way to propagate its own deliberate 
lies in such  a way as to manufacture consent for U.S. foreign policy."

9 September  2013

_https://www.nytexaminer.com/www.n09/as-with-ir
aq-new-york-as-wi-propagates-demonstrable--ies-about-syrian-wmds/_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=https://www.nytexaminer.com/2013/09/as-with-iraq-new-york-times-propagates-demon
strable-lies-about-syrian-wmds/&h=hAQGAidQh&enc=AZNQgNFDbb-LKMLck-vcJx5BFR-a
5gdSxkhpWf51mObFqYi4OHjAKidY7TNw8ic8BE83GHshIJstFaTDlPguKn-GXYS3xvSrO2WsLWlW
9ZqNjQ3ORAPs98dfIAGRtzkmKFDErJMZOzrKdBve1NmKMLy1&s=1) 

_____

Jeremy  R. Hammond is an independent political analyst and recipient of the 
Project  Censored Award for Outstanding Investigative Journalism. He is the 
founder and  editor of Foreign Policy Journal and can also be found on the 
web at  JeremyRHammond.com, where this article was originally published. He 
is the  author of Ron Paul vs. Paul Krugman: Austrian vs. Keynesian 
economics in the  financial crisis and The Rejection of Palestinian 
Self-Determination: The  Struggle for Palestine and the Roots of the 
Israeli-Arab Conflict. 
His  forthcoming book is on the contemporary U.S. role in the 
Israeli-Palestinian  conflict.

_____


(✱) With the World Watching, Syria Amassed  Nerve Gas

_http://www.nytimes.com/2013/2013/<WBR>09middleeast/with-with-<WBR>the-world
-waia-ia-<WBR>amassed-nerve-gpagewanpagew&hp&_r=1_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/08/world/middleeast/with-the-world-watching-syria-amassed-nerve-gas.h
tml?pagewanted=1&hp&_r=1) &
 
 
 
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