CNN’s Christiane Amanpour speaks with Syria’s UN envoy Bashar Jaafari about claims his government used chemical weapons.
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CNN’s Christiane Amanpour speaks with Syria’s UN envoy Bashar Jaafari about claims his government used chemical weapons.
by Sibel Edmonds
It has long been acknowledged that the Saudis have been one of the key players funding, arming, training and smuggling terrorists into Syria during the conflict. But the Saudi connection to the fighting in Syria took on a new dimension in the wake of last month’s chemical attack on Ghouta. The Saudis are now being blamed for supplying the chemical weapons that the rebels used in the attack. In one key report,
veteran AP correspondent Dale Gavlak and on-the-ground reporter Yahyah Ababneh interviewed rebels in Ghouta who alleged that the weapons had been supplied by Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the Saudi intelligence chief. Find out more about the Bandar Bush and the Syrian Subversion in this week’s EyeOpener report with James Corbett. Watch the Preview Clip Here:
James Corbett interview Sharmine Narwani
Writer and political analyst Sharmine Narwani joins us to break down the geopolitics behind the Syrian war. We discuss the main players in the Syrian conflict and their
competing agendas and explore her new article, “Bandar ibn Israel,” detailing Prince Bandar bin Sultan bin Abdul Aziz al-Saud’s strange disappearance and reappearance in the thick of the Syrian war.
Liston to Audio Sharmine Narwani exposing Bandar Bush Subversion
Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden has been awarded the biennial “whistleblower prize” in Germany, worth some $3,900, in recognition of his “bold efforts” to expose the monitoring of communications data by his former employer.
The prize, last awarded in 2011, was officially bestowed upon the 30-year-old at a ceremony in Berlin which took place Friday, prompting a nine-minute congratulatory video message from Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald on Saturday.
“If I ran the committee, making the choice of who was to receive this award, it would take me probably one and a half seconds at most to have come to the conclusion that he is the only person deserving of the award this year,” said Greenwald, who published Snowden’s leaks, in the honorific speech released in response to the news.
“He told me in good conscience that he could not sit by quietly and allow privacy and Internet freedom to be destroyed while doing nothing about it.”
Here’s the 10-minute address I taped for the Berlin award ceremony where Snowden received 2013 Whistleblower Award http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EPhghCkwk0E
The organizers of the prize commended Snowden’s work, stating that he had uncovered “massive and unsuspecting monitoring and storage of communication data, which cannot be accepted in democratic societies.”
The audience also heard a statement by Edward Snowden from Russia read out at the ceremony. “We should never forget the lessons of history when surveillance took the upper hand,” he said.
“Not only did [German Chancellor Angela Merkel], it seems, allow the US to spy on Germany, but it seems she also helped the US to spy on Germany. So this is one of the reasons why Edward Snowden has received this award,” RT correspondent Peter Oliver said from the ceremony in Berlin. “He is being honored with this by a number of groups for his work in revealing what turns out to be the wide ranging spying activities of the NSA and the US.”
The whistleblower award was first awarded in 1999 under the auspices of the Association of German Scientists and the German chapter of the International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms (IALANA).
Snowden is credited with releasing details of mass surveillance operations by US and British intelligence agencies through his prior connection with the NSA.
It was revealed in June that for seven years, the US National Security Agency (NSA) has been using PRISM, a warrantless web surveillance system with a near-limitless ability to spy on anyone’s phone calls, e-mails, video chats, search history and more, with major Internet giants Google, Apple and Facebook being complicit in the scheme.
By: JAMES CORBETT
Given that the pretext for attacking Syria is falling apart before the public’s eyes, why is the US preparing to wage war on that country? Who benefits from the ongoing [rivasliderpro id=”11″]destabilization of Assad’s government? What will the Middle East look like if the Sunnis take over Syria? What is Israel’s role in this? What do Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia have to gain from a war in Syria? And what does Bandar Bush have to do with all of this? Join us today on The Corbett Report as we discuss these and other pressing issues as the world stands on the brink of yet another US-led Middle Eastern military adventure.
By Elad Benari
A video posted online shows fighters from the Kurdish People’s Protection Unit fighting off jihadists from Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Nusra Front.
Amid speculations of an impending attack in Syria by Western states, the fighting in the country’s civil war continues.
A video recently posted online shows fighters from the Kurdish People’s Protection Unit (YPG) fighting off jihadists from the Al-Nusra Front, which has pledged allegiance to Al-Qaeda.
In addition to the war between Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad’s troops and the rebels fighting to oust him, Arutz Sheva has reported over the past several weeks about another civil war in Syria, this one between Al-Qaeda loyalists and thousands of Syrian Kurds.
Last year, Syrian forces pulled out of most of the Kurdish regions, with the army concentrating on defending its position in the center and south of the country, where Syria’s principal cities are located. But into that vacuum rushed Islamist forces, seeking to build a contiguous territory with fellow Islamists in Iraq.
Kurdish fighters have been battling the Islamists, most of them members of Al Qaeda-affiliated groups, and ordinary Kurds have been caught up in the fighting. The YPG has been involved in fierce fighting with Al Qaeda-linked Islamist groups over control of Kurdish-majority regions in northern Syria.
Not long after the start of the uprising against the Assad regime, government forces pulled out of Kurdish areas, and the YPG moved in to take control. Arab groups within the rebel Free Syrian Army (FSA) initially made a grab for Kurdish areas but were beaten back.
In recent months, however, the jihadist rebel groups have led a concerted and violent campaign to install their own independent “emirates,” or Islamic mini-states in the region. That was met with fierce opposition by the YPG, who responded by ejecting Islamist forces from the town of Ras al-Ain among other areas.
As the fighting has continued, thousands of Syrian Kurds seeking to escape persecution at the hands of Jihadists, have been crossing the border into the autonomous Kurdish area of northern Iraq.
by James Corbett August 26, 2013
With the latest allegations that Assad used chemical weapons on his own people in Syria, the world once again stands on the brink of outright military intervention in the country. As the calls for intervention by the usual suspects increases in intensity, military strikes on Damascus are looking more and more inevitable.
And with these pompous bloviations, Kerry and the warmongers of the American war machine have raised their collective middle finger not just to the Bashar al-Assad government, not just to his allies in Tehran and Moscow and Beijing, not just to the overwhelming public opinion of their own citizens, but even to the old conventions of giving lip service to truth that has run this murderous system of lies for so long.
To hell with the facts. Damn those who ask for the presentation of any shred of proof that these chemical weapons attacks can be blamed on Assad. Damn all logic in asking us to believe that Assad waited until chemical weapons inspectors arrived in his country before using chemical weapons in a war that he was already winning anyway. Damn the staggering 91% of the public who do not support the idea of military intervention. None of that matters to the psychopaths who are hell-bent on yet another murderous conflict. The American/Israeli/French/British war machine cries out for the blood of more innocents, and this it shall have come hell or high water.
We are being told that this attack is being prepared because Assad crossed the “red line” of chemical weapons use. This is a lie. America has never cared about the victims of chemical weapons attacks ever in its history unless it can achieve its own military objectives by parading on the corpses of those victims. This time is no exception.
Chemical weapons are weapons that use chemical agents to harm or kill enemy combatants, often in painful and horrific ways. These include such categories of weapons as blister agents like mustard gas, nerve agents like VX and Sarin, blood agents and choking agents. Their use is proscribed under international law by the 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention.
Saddam Hussein’s use of chemical weapons was often cited in the run up to the 2003 war on Iraq as one justification for that war. In this latest round of war propaganda surrounding the Syrian incident, it is particularly ironic that newly declassified documents show that the United States actively aided and abetted Saddam’s use of the weapons throughout the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s through the provision of technical and logistical support that helped Saddam plan his attacks. The documents show that US intelligence apparatus was fully aware of Saddam’s intent to use chemical weapons, and the instances in which he did so, but did not withdraw their support for his regime, as the Reagan White House did not want to see Iraq lose the conflict.
In an even more blatant case of hypocrisy, both the US and Israel have used white phosphorous in warfare in the last decade. The US deployed white phosphorous against civilians in Iraq in 2004 and Israel did so in its “Operation Cast Lead” in Palestine in 2009. The use of WP as a weapon against civilians is prohibited, but it was done knowingly in both cases, constituting a war crime under both countries’ own laws and treaty obligations.
The US has also used depleted uranium in virtually every country it has fought in over the past two decades. Depleted uranium has been linked to a range of health effects including birth defects, cancer and other diseases, resulting in “the highest rate of genetic damage in any population ever studied” in one area of Iraq.
Meanwhile, the US and its allies are perfectly happy to look the other way when their pliant puppet regimes around the world use chemical weapons. In Bahrain, for example, the Bahraini government has been weaponizing tear gas, locking down cities and flooding the area with the chemical until many of the inhabitants are debilitated or even dead. For some reason, however, there is no 24/7 coverage of the crisis in Bahrain, nor are there any Beltway pundits or talking heads providing interviews to the dinosaur media laying out the case for war against the chemical weapons-deploying Bahraini regime.
The simple fact is that this war, like all the others before it, is being waged for the expansion and preservation of the oligarchies self-interest.
It’s about pipeline politics. A freshly inked Memorandum of Understanding between Damascus, Baghdad and Tehran has brought the Iran-Iraq-Syria gas pipeline one step closer to reality. But that pipeline would undercut Qatar’s importance as a gas producer and undermine Turkey’s position as self-appointed East-West energy crossroads, and thus cannot be allowed to stand.
It’s about regional dominance. The removal of Iran’s so-called Shia land bridge that cuts through Iraq and Syria to join up with Hezbollah in Lebanon effectively undermines any chance for Iran to assume the regional dominance that it would otherwise have, while aggrandizing Turkey, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and others vying for the region’s driver seat.
It’s about the increasing isolation of Iran in preparation for the coming assault on that country. As the now-infamous 2009 Brookings Institution report, “Which Path to Persia?” contends, the road to Tehran goes through Damascus.
And, of course, as always, it’s about the ever-present need to feed more and more people into the maw of the military-industrial complex to maintain the justification for its existence.
The public is not stupid. It understands these things. But after the demoralization of the Iraq war fiasco, in which the largest simultaneous worldwide protests in the history of the planet failed to deviate the oligarchy from its invasion plans one inch, there seems to be nothing to stop the forward progress of this march to war.
And yet, the need to stop this madness has never been more urgent and the stakes in this increasingly insane game of imperial chess have never been higher. As French/Syrian political activist Ayssar Midani pointed out in yesterday’s special report, the coming attack on Syria is not just directed at Assad, but at all of Syria’s increasingly agitated (and increasingly powerful) allies.
Where does this leave us? Once again watching helplessly as yet another overwhelmingly unpopular war is launched to the detriment of all but the oligarchy and their cronies. And where is the anti-war movement that could even potentially demonstrate the public’s resistance to this agenda, let alone deviate the war machine from its path? Has it really come to this, after decades of hard-fought, sometimes bloody resistance to war after war? Can the US government and its allies really start another “kinetic military action” without the approval of Congress and without showing a shred of evidence to the public to back up their phony justification? Unfortunately, we’re about to find out.
And until the political status quo changes and people stop voting for the better of the two proffered slave masters every four years, nothing is going to change. Sadly, however, given the state of the inter-nicene squabbling between those factions who should be opposed to this agenda, such a change in consciousness seems as far away as ever. And the war machine marches on unimpeded…
In a Friday interview, Bill Jones pointed to Turkey’s measures against the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, saying that Turkey will “suffer” the consequences of its actions.
Jones said Ankara’s support for militancy in Syria has exacerbated the unrest across the Arab nation, and warned of a potential spillover of unrest from Syria’s Kurdish regions into Turkey.
“I see no upsides to the direction that the Turkish government has taken,” he added.
Jones noted that Turkey’s “full support” for the foreign-backed crisis in Syria has “created a tinderbox in the entire region which could light a fire, which would be hard for anybody to put out.”
Turkey has persistently served as a major supply line and safe haven for the foreign-sponsored militants in Syria.
In early August, Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan and US President Barack Obama once again expressed their support for the Syrian opposition.
Syria has been gripped by deadly unrest since 2011. According to the United Nations, more than 100,000 people have been killed and millions of others displaced in the violence.
According to reports, Western powers and their regional allies, especially Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey, are supporting the militants operating inside Syria.
ASH/HMV
Press TV report:
The possibility of “a direct military attack” on Syria is increasing with the US deploying its “naval assets” in the eastern Mediterranean, says Rick Rozoff of Stop NATO International.
“All the pieces are coming into place for what could be not only increased military threats against Syria but the possibility of a direct military attack on Syria,” Rozoff told Press TV on Tuesday.
The chance for an attack is “being complemented with the heightened deployment of US naval assets into the east of Mediterranean.”
“There are no fewer than four what are called Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers the United States has currently deployed in the east of Mediterranean,” he noted.
There are also “reports of, one for certain and possibly two, US submarines, each of which are equipped with 150 Tomahawk cruise missiles”, he added.
“So that’s a total 300 missiles there, 70 missiles apiece on the guided missile destroyers, so the total of almost 600 missiles are in the area plus aircraft carriers on each side of the Suez Canal attached to the Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean and the Fifth Fleet in the Indian Ocean.”
A day after US Secretary of State John Kerry claimed there was “undeniable” evidence of a chemical attack in Syria, another senior US official, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Washington was ready to attack the country if President Barack Obama issues an order.
“We have moved assets in place to be able to fulfill and comply with whatever option the president wishes to take,” Hagel told the BBC on Tuesday.
Some unnamed senior American officials sounded more bellicose as they told NBC News that the US has planned to launch missile strikes against Syria “as early as Thursday”.
Also on Monday, Israeli newspaper Haaretz said the US and its Western allies may launch a military strike against Syria.
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Martin Dempsey was in Jordan on Monday to discuss Syria options with his Jordanian counterpart and other regional defense chiefs.
AT/HJ