Caitlin Johnstone
Deluge Of New Leaks Further Shreds The
Establishment Syria Narrative
by Caitlin Johnstone
It's been a bad last
24 hours for the war propagandists.
WikiLeaks has published multiple documents providing
further details on the coverup within the Organisation for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) of its own
investigators' findings which contradicted the official
story we were all given about an alleged chlorine gas attack
in Douma, Syria last year. The alleged chemical weapons
incident was blamed on the Syrian government by the US and
its allies, who launched airstrikes against Syria several
days later. Subsequent evidence indicating that there was
insufficient reason to conclude the chlorine gas attack ever
happened was repressed by the OPCW, reportedly at the urging of US
government officials.
The new publications by WikiLeaks
add new detail to this still-unfolding scandal, providing
more evidence to further invalidate attempts by
establishment Syria narrative managers to spin it all as an
empty conspiracy theory. The OPCW has no business hiding any
information from the public which casts doubt on the
official narrative about an incident which was used to
justify an act of war on a sovereign nation.
RELEASE:
Third batch of documents showing doctoring of facts in
released version of OPCW chemical weapons report on Syria.
Including a memo stating 20 inspectors feel released version
“did not reflect the views of the team members that
deployed to [Syria]”https://t.co/ndK4sRikNk
—
WikiLeaks (@wikileaks) December 15, 2019
The following
are hyperlinks to the individual OPCW documents WikiLeaks
published, with some highlights found therein:
A first draft of the OPCW's July 2018
Interim Report on the team's findings in
Douma.
Contains crucial information that was
not included in either the final draft of the July 2018 Interim
Report or the March 2019 Final Report, including
(emphasis mine):
1. The symptoms of the alleged
victims of the supposed chemical incident were inconsistent
with chlorine gas poisoning.
"Some of the signs and
symptoms described by witnesses and noted in photos and
video recordings taken by witnesses, of the alleged victims
are not consistent with exposure to
chlorine-containing choking or blood agents
such as chlorine gas, phosgene or cyanogen chloride," we
learn in the unredacted first draft. "Specifically, the
rapid onset of heavy buccal and nasal frothing in many
victims, as well as the colour of the secretions, is
not indicative of intoxication from
such chemicals."
"The large number of decedents in the
one location (allegedly 40 to 45), most of whom were seen in
videos and photos strewn on the floor of the apartments away
from open windows, and within a few meters of an escape to
un-poisoned or less toxic air, is at odds with
intoxication by chlorine-based choking or blood
agents, even at high concentrations," the
unredacted draft says.
This important information was
omitted from the Interim Report and completely contradicted
by the Final Report, which said that the investigation had
found "reasonable grounds that the use of a toxic chemical
as a weapon took place. This toxic chemical contained
reactive chlorine. The toxic chemical was likely molecular
chlorine."
2. OPCW inspectors couldn't find any
explanation for why the gas cylinders supposedly dropped
from Syrian aircraft were so undamaged by the
fall.
"The FFM [Fact-Finding Mission] team is
unable to provide satisfactory explanations for
the relatively moderate damage to the cylinders
allegedly dropped from an unknown height, compared to the
destruction caused to the rebar-reinforced concrete roofs,"
reads the leaked first draft. "In the case of Location 4,
how the cylinder ended up on the bed, given the point at
which it allegedly penetrated the room, remains unclear. The
team considers that further studies by specialists in
metallurgy and structural engineering or mechanics are
required to provide an authoritative assessment of the
team’s observations."
We now know that a specialist was
subsequently recruited to find an answer to this mystery. A
leaked document dated February 2019 and
published by the Working Group On Syria,
Propaganda and Media in May 2019 was signed by a
longtime OPCW inspector named Ian Henderson. Henderson, a
South African ballistics expert, ran some experiments and
determined that “The dimensions, characteristics and
appearance of the cylinders, and the surrounding scene of
the incidents, were inconsistent with what would
have been expected in the case of either cylinder being
delivered from an aircraft,” writing instead
that the cylinders being "manually placed"
(i.e. staged) in the locations where investigators found
them is “the only plausible explanation for observations
at the scene.”
More on Ian Henderson in a
moment.
3. The team concluded that either the victims
were poisoned with some unknown gas which wasn't chlorine,
or there was no chemical weapon at all.
"The
inconsistency between the presence
of a putative chlorine-containing toxic chocking or blood
agent on the one hand and the testimonies of alleged
witnesses and symptoms observed from video footage and
photographs, on the other, cannot be rationalised," the
unredacted first draft reads. "The team considered two
possible explanations for the incongruity:
a. The victims
were exposed to another highly toxic chemical agent that
gave rise to the symptoms observed and has so far gone
undetected.
b. The fatalities resulted from a
non-chemical-related incident."
Again,
none of this information made it into any of
the OPCW's public reports on the Douma incident. The
difference between the information we were given (that a
chlorine gas attack took place and the strong suggestion
that it was dropped by Syrian aircraft) and the report the
inspectors were initially trying to put together (literally
the exact opposite) is staggering. For more insider
information on the deliberation between OPCW inspectors who
wanted their actual findings to be reported and the
organisation officials who conspired to omit those findings,
read this November report by journalist
Jonathan Steele.
A memo from a member of the OPCW's
Fact-Finding Mission (FFM) in Douma to the OPCW Director
General Fernando Arais.
It's worth noting
that this memo is dated two weeks after the OPCW
published its Final Report on the Douma incident in March
2019, because it further invalidates the bogus argument made by narrative management
firms like Bellingcat claiming that the grievances of
the dissenting OPCW inspectors had been satisfactorily
addressed by the time the Final Report was
published.
Clearly the concerns were not addressed,
because the memo consists entirely of complaints, and
according to its author "there are about 20
inspectors who have expressed their concern
over the current situation."
The memo's author complains
that the FFM report was made almost exclusively by team
members who never even went to Douma, doing their research
instead solely in "Country X", which WikiLeaks speculates may be Turkey.
"The FFM
report does not reflect the views of all the teams that
deployed to Douma," the memo says. "Only one team member (a
paramedic) of the so-called 'FFM core team' was in Douma.
The FFM report was written by this core team, thus by people
who had only operated in Country X."
"After the exclusion
of all team members other than a small cadre of members who
had deployed (and deployed again in October 2018) to Country
X, the conclusion seems to have turned completely
in the opposite direction. The FFM team members
find this confusing, and are concerned to know how this
occurred.”
The memo's author is unnamed in the
WikiLeaks document, but claims to have been "assigned the
task of analysis and assessment of the ballistics of the two
cylinders," indicating that it was likely the aforementioned
Ian Henderson. A concurrent publication by Peter Hitchens
in the Daily Mail appears to confirm this. Hitchens
reports that when Henderson lodged his Engineering
Assessment in the OPCW's secure registry after failing to
get traction for his report, which the memo's author also reports to have done, an unpopular
unnamed OPCW official nicknamed "Voldemort" ordered that
every trace of the report be removed.
"Mr Henderson tried
to get his research included in the final report, but when
it became clear it would be excluded, he lodged a copy in a
secure registry, known as the Documents Registry Archive
(DRA)," Hitchens reported. "This is normal practice for such
confidential material, but when ‘Voldemort’ heard about
it, he sent an email to subordinates saying: ‘Please get
this document out of DRA … And please remove all
traces, if any, of its delivery/storage/whatever in
DRA’."
So to recap, the OPCW enlisted a
longtime ballistics expert with an extensive history of work with the
organisation to run some experiments and produce an
Engineering Assessment to explain how the alleged chlorine
cylinders could have been found in the condition they were
found in, and when he came to conclusions which were
exculpatory for the Syrian government, his boss ordered
every sign of it purged from the registry.
Again, not a
whisper of any of this was breathed in the OPCW's public
reports on the Douma incident, despite somewhere around 20
inspectors having objections. The OPCW had no business
hiding this from the public.
An internal email from May 2019 voicing
further concerns.
The usual regime change
fanatics helped provoke more OPCW leaks by flagrantly lying
about a whistleblower. Read the whole thread here. https://t.co/fyrfBnoxM2
—
Max Blumenthal (@MaxBlumenthal) December 15, 2019
This
interesting email, sent to the OPCW's Office of Strategy and Planning Director
Veronika Stromsikova, defended Ian Henderson and objected to
the mistreatment of a principled and respected team
member.
"A member of the FFM team has been suspended from
his post and escorted from the OPCW
building in a less than dignified manner," the
email's author complains. "After more than 12 years, I
believe, serving the OPCW with dedication and
professionalism, Ian Henderson's personal and professional
integrity have taken a knock in the most public of fora, the
internet. A falsehood issued by the
OPCW, that Ian did not take part in the Douma FFM team, has
been pivotal in discrediting him and
his work."
Indeed, as soon as Henderson's Engineering
Assessment was leaked this past May, Syria narrative
managers like Idrees Ahmad, Brian Whitaker, and Bellingcat founder Eliot Higgins
immediately set to work trying to spin him as merely a lone
"disgruntled employee" who was "not a
part of the Fact-Finding Mission".
"The denial is
patently untrue," the email's author writes. "Ian Henderson
WAS part of the FFM and there is an abundance of official
documentation, as well as other supporting proof, that
testifies to that."
But I don't suppose we can expect to
see any apologies or corrections from the usual suspects in
light of this new information.
"We are not insisting on
being right in our assertions, but we are demanding to be
heard," the email's author writes. "We have desperately
tried to limit expression of concerns to within the
Organisation and will continue to do so. However, we have
been stonewalled throughout by
obfuscation,
exclusion, and even
thuggish and bullying behavior."
The author
wraps things up by explaining why they're pushing so hard to
be heard with a quote from Edmund Burke: "All that
is required for evil to triumph is for good men to do
nothing."
Email communications between FFM members and
their team leader Sami Barrek.
New leak:
"It's because the stakes are so high that we have a
responsibility to guard against misrepresentation, by both
sides."
https://t.co/5U9OWbQEez
#Douma #wikileaks #syria #opcw
— Dr. Roy Schestowitz
() (@schestowitz) December 15, 2019
This July 2018
correspondence is significant mainly because it brings in
hard evidence for the exchange described by the OPCW
whistleblower "Alex" in the aforementioned Jonathan Steele
report, which was described as follows:
"This request
was rejected but Sami Barrek, the team leader, was put in
charge of replacing the doctored version with what turned
out to be a toned-down but still misleading report. During
the editing four of the Douma inspectors, including Ian
Henderson, the engineering expert, had managed to get Barrek
to agree that the low levels of COCs [Chlorinated Organic
Chemicals] should be mentioned. On the day before the new
publication date, July 6, they found that the levels were
again being omitted."
The back-and-forth exchanges
feature one or more anonymous team members arguing with
Barrek that more information needs to be included in the
Interim Report so that people won't jump to conclusions that
the team had found evidence it hadn't. And sure enough,
Moon of Alabama documented multiple mass
media headlines which falsely claimed the Interim
Report had asserted chlorine gas was used (that invalid
claim wasn't made until the Final Report in March
2019).
Here's a sample exchange where one inspector tries
to persuade Barrek to change the language in the report so
readers will understand that the information they had about
chlorinated organic chemical concentrations at the time
hadn't reached any "damning conclusion", with Barrek
throwing up inertia and saying he can unilaterally overrule
them if he wants to:
Again, none of the
findings which were inconsistent with the US narrative were
included in either the final draft of the Interim Report or
in the Final Report. Nothing about the low levels of
chlorinated organic chemicals, nothing about the
inconsistencies in symptoms with chlorine gas poisoning,
nothing about the lack of damage to the cylinders, nothing
about Ian Henderson's findings. Nothing. The OPCW had no
business withholding that information.
Eight weeks ago
a whistleblower claimed to have documents showing
"irregularities" in the OPCW's investigation of a suspected
chemical attack in Syria. Since then, only one document has
surfaced. Where are the others? https://t.co/hacK3PeId1
—
Brian Whitaker (@Brian_Whit) December 11, 2019
These new leaks
take care of the latest spin jobs by establishment narrative
managers, who were just the other day beginning to
argue that the fact that there hadn't been any more OPCW
leaks in a while indicated that the whole OPCW scandal was
bogus. Sorry to disappoint you, fellas.
My full
account of what took place at Newsweek.
Despite a
number of offers, I decided to publish on my website because
I take full responsibility for what's
reported
It's a long piece so I recommend reading
at a time when you can digest and on a computerhttps://t.co/obpcSgaa1A
—
Tareq Haddad (@Tareq_Haddad) December 14, 2019
The WikiLeaks
documents and Hitchens' Daily Mail article came out
the same day as ex-Newsweek reporter Tareq Haddad shared emails sent to him by his editors
forbidding him to publish information on the OPCW scandal,
an important slice of information on the way mass media
outlets stifle commentary on important stories that are
inconvenient for US imperialism.
Newsweek’s
foreign affairs editor Dimi Reider (who Haddad notes has
Council on Foreign Relations ties) shot down Haddad's pitch
for a story about the OPCW scandal last month by falsely
claiming that Bellingcat had "published a thorough
refutation" of the story Haddad wanted to report on. In
fact, as I documented at the time, Bellingcat had
published an unbelievably pathetic spin job in which
it tried to paint the whole OPCW scandal as a big
misunderstanding.
Bellingcat argued that the concerns
voiced in the leaked email published by WikiLeaks last
month about the developing Interim Report in July 2018 had
been fully addressed by the time the Final Report was
published in March 2019, citing as evidence the fact that
some slight adjustments had been made in the wording, like
changing “likely” to “possible” and changing
“reactive chlorine containing chemical” to “chemical
containing reactive chlorine.” In focusing on this
ridiculous, pedantic nonsense, Bellingcat tries to weave the
narrative that because the whistleblower's concerns were
addressed with this pedantry, there was therefore no OPCW
coverup. Never mind the fact that the multiple OPCW
whistleblowers were still plainly so incensed by the
organisation's publishing that they felt the need to leak
internal documents. Never mind that Bellingcat made no
attempt whatsoever to address the aforementioned actual
grievances by the OPCW whistleblowers like the low levels of
chlorinated organic chemicals on the scene, the
inconsistencies in symptoms and testimony with chlorine
poisoning, or the Ian Henderson report.
But that's what
happens when mass media outlets like The New York Times and The Guardian publish swooning puff
piece after swooning puff piece about Bellingcat; they grant
a US government-funded narrative management
firm so much unearned legitimacy that even a
transparently bogus argument like the one they made about
the OPCW scandal gets passed around newsrooms by credulous
editors assuring each other that it's a "thorough
refutation" of facts and reality. Mass media outlets help
puff up Bellingcat's legitimacy, and in turn Bellingcat
rewards them with an excuse to not have to ever challenge
establishment narratives.
Reider also argued that
Haddad's report on the OPCW couldn't be published because
"not a single respected media outlet - many of whom boast
far greater regional expertise, resources on the ground and
in newsroom than Newsweek does - have taken the leak
remotely seriously."
That's a great self-reinforcing
system, isn't it? MSM outlets validate US government-funded
narrative managers like Bellingcat so they can tell them
with authority why an unauthorised story shouldn't be
published, and each outlet sees the absence of other outlets
reporting on it as evidence that it shouldn't be reported
on. And we wonder why no one's reporting on the
OPCW scandal.
Fake News By Omission — The Mass
Media’s Cowardly Distortion Tool
"The
exceptional silence on the OPCW scandal from imperial news
media discredits them completely, but people won’t know
about it unless they are told. Spread the word." #OPCW #Syriahttps://t.co/MSrSh2vgP7
—
Caitlin Johnstone (@caitoz) December 6, 2019
And Newsweek's
Digital Director Laura Davis gave Haddad the same answer,
regurgitating the absolutely bogus Bellingcat line that the
leaked email wasn't newsworthy because "it predates the
final report" and because no one else has written about it.
It's a system fully locked down against any oppositional
reporting, and we can surmise that this is the norm for
newsrooms throughout the English-speaking world.
Haddad
also published a similar email he'd received from
International Business Times then-editor-in-chief
Julian Kossoff, who rejected a pitch he'd made for an
opinion piece he'd written about the Khan Sheikhun incident
in April 2017.
"Thanks for the suggested opinion piece,"
Kossoff wrote. "However, I do not think we will be able to
use it. Its narrative is highly controversial and likely to
offend and only a writer or expert of repute (e.g Noam
Chomsky) could get away with such an incendiary
thesis."
And what was this "incendiary thesis"? Well,
Haddad published it with CounterPunch, so you
can see for yourself. He simply argued what in my opinion
should be a completely uncontroversial position: that there
wasn't yet enough evidence to be certain Assad was behind
the attacks, and the US has a known history of entering into
military entanglements based on lies, so the warmongers
demanding Assad's overthrow shouldn't be listened
to.
This insight into the dynamics behind the mass
media's lies by omission are very valuable, and they help us
paint a better picture about the reason we're not seeing
more discussion of these OPCW
leaks.
________________________
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