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FOCUS | Fight the So-Called Centrists! Finesse the Tea Party Extremists! Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=5494"><span class="small">Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Tuesday, 22 October 2013 13:40

Weissman writes: "If you liked the government shutdown, the debt ceiling fight, political polarization, and agonizing gridlock of the past few weeks, you will love the Congressional budget talks ahead."

Tea Party extremists like Ted Cruz try to hide behind the flag. (photo: AP)
Tea Party extremists like Ted Cruz try to hide behind the flag. (photo: AP)


Fight the So-Called Centrists! Finesse the Tea Party Extremists!

By Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News

22 October 13

f you liked the government shutdown, the debt ceiling fight, political polarization, and agonizing gridlock of the past few weeks, you will love the Congressional budget talks ahead.

The deal to end the shutdown and temporarily raise the debt ceiling called for reconciling the Senate budget that cuts Pentagon spending, ends some corporate subsidies, and closes some tax loopholes for the rich with Paul Ryan's budget that the House passed this spring, seriously cutting social programs. Ryan and Senator Patty Murray (D-Wash.) are co-chairing the conference committee to do this, and they must report any agreement by December 13. If they fail to agree, as seems likely, or if both chambers fail to pass a unified budget, or if President Obama refuses to sign it into law, the Budget Control Act of 2011 will kick in, imposing automatic, across-the-board cuts, or sequestration. Using figures from the Bipartisan Policy Center, this will trim the Pentagon budget for Fiscal Year 2014 by an estimated $54.7 billion, and reduce by a similar amount non-defense spending, including Medicare.

Allowing these automatic cuts would be a mammoth failure. But a budget agreement could prove even worse. Apart from the harm done to the weakest among us, these cuts will further weaken an economy in which overall demand is still too low to create decent growth and provide sufficient jobs. John Maynard Keynes long ago explained how this works, and even the IMF is beginning to catch on. As I wrote in April, "When times are tough and the private sector pulls back, borrow or print money to stimulate demand. When growth returns, pay down the borrowing."

Senator Ted Cruz, the Tea Party darling who has staked his presidential ambitions on the shutdown, abhors such rational economic timing. He grew up schooled in the "free market" trinity of Friedrich Hayek, Ludwig von Mises, and Milton Friedman, which – for all his vaunted intellect – makes Cruz easy to ridicule as a libertarian lunatic, which he is. But, compared to the real movers and shakers in the budget and debt debate, Cruz is only a political pipsqueak barely worth attacking. I would leave him largely to the barbs of country club Republicans and those in the business community who are coming to see the danger to themselves of using right-wing populists and libertarian ideologues as shock troops. Even the billionaire Koch brothers, who are massively funding opposition to Obamacare, seem of mixed minds about using the shutdown as a tactic against it.

Progressives in and to the left of "the democratic wing of the Democratic Party" would do better to counter the "centrist" arguments of people like Peter J. "Pete" Peterson, the octogenarian Wall Street billionaire who has led the class war to slash Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security ever since the early days of the Reagan administration. More than anyone else, Peterson and his amen chorus in the media fabricated the supposed "debt crisis" that still has us in its mythic clutches. Before most non-Texans even heard of Cruz, Peterson and those who kiss his coattails persuaded Obama to create the 2010 National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, headed by retired Republican senator Alan Simpson and Bill Clinton's White House chief of staff, the Wall Street banker Erskine Bowles. Their report led directly to the catastrophically stupid Budget Control Act and its automatic cuts, and will frame much of the debate ahead.

If only Obama, who stood firmly against Cruz's effort to defund Obamacare, had stood up against Peterson's "debt crisis" fear-mongering. He did not and still does not. To his credit, he never endorsed the final recommendations of the Simpson-Bowles panel. But he signed the Budget Control Act in exchange for an earlier hike in the debt ceiling. He – along with the Democratic leadership in Congress – has accepted as a starting point for negotiations some $80 billion in across-the-board cuts that have already been made. And, he appears open to weakening Medicare by means-testing and reducing Social Security payments by linking cost of living adjustments to the chained Consumer Price Index. This leaves it up to citizen activists on the left to let Congress and the country know that we will fight any cuts to social spending.

No doubt, a no-compromise stance will get us tarred as extremists, much like the Tea Party on the right. But we cannot let ourselves be cowed by attacks from bought-and-paid-for politicians, ubiquitous political consultants, and corporate media pundits. In fact, I would go even further. As crazy as I find Tea Party economics, as outrageous as I find their opposition to health care as a human right, and as racist as some of them appear to be, we should learn from the movement-building approach they took in their shut-down fight. They knew what they were for and against. They kept their demands simple. They stuck to them, showing backbone that leading Democrats seem not to have. And if they lost the battle, they are closer today to winning the war they were fighting, which is to take over and remake the Republican Party, with the wonderfully unelectable Ted Cruz now a leading candidate to be its presidential candidate in 2016.

I also think we should make common cause with Tea Party Republicans in fighting for the First and Fourth Amendments and against the Surveillance State, the use of drones in targeted assassinations, the military-industrial complex, and an imperial foreign policy.

In all this, we need not become similarly suicidal, crazy, isolationist, or in any way reckless with the well-being of others, as the Tea Party groups are and will continue to be. Very much a wave of the past, the right-wing evangelicals and libertarians who identify with Cruz and Rand Paul are overwhelmingly white, small town voters who feel they are losing the white-bread Christian America they thought was theirs. They're right: they are, as non-white immigrants and their children become a large part of the electorate and as a new generation of voters swings to the left. This is the wave of the future, which can help build a decent society, but not if Democratic Party leaders continue to compromise away what remains of our social safety net.



A veteran of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and the New Left monthly Ramparts, Steve Weissman lived for many years in London, working as a magazine writer and television producer. He now lives and works in France, where he is researching a new book, "Big Money: How Global Banks, Corporations, and Speculators Rule and How To Break Their Hold."

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Snowden Offers to Fix Healthcare Website Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9160"><span class="small">Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Monday, 21 October 2013 13:41

Borowitz writes: "The N.S.A. leaker Edward Snowden today reached out to the United States government, offering to fix its troubled healthcare.gov Web site in exchange for immunity from prosecution."

Edward Snowden during an interview while still in Hong Kong. (photo: Guardian UK)
Edward Snowden during an interview while still in Hong Kong. (photo: Guardian UK)


Snowden Offers to Fix Healthcare Website

By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker

21 October 13

 

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."

he N.S.A. leaker Edward Snowden today reached out to the United States government, offering to fix its troubled healthcare.gov Web site in exchange for immunity from prosecution.

Speaking from an undisclosed location in Russia, Mr. Snowden said he hacked the Web site over the weekend and thinks he is "pretty sure what the problem is."

"Look, this thing was built terribly," he said. "It's a government Web site, O.K.?"

Mr. Snowden said that if an immunity deal can be worked out, "I can get to work on this thing right away-I don't need a password."

In addition to full immunity, Mr. Snowden said he is requesting that he be allowed to work from home.

At the White House, President Obama offered a muted response to Mr. Snowden's proposal: "Edward Snowden is a traitor who has compromised our national security. Having said that, if he knows why we keep getting those error messages, that could be a conversation."


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FOCUS | Let's Get This Class War Started Print
Monday, 21 October 2013 12:33

Hedges writes: "We have been blinded to the depravity of our ruling elite by the relentless propaganda of public relations firms that work on behalf of corporations and the rich."

Although his actual wealth has been called into question, Donald Trump has made a handsome living playing a rich person on TV. (photo: Gage Skidmore)
Although his actual wealth has been called into question, Donald Trump has made a handsome living playing a rich person on TV. (photo: Gage Skidmore)


Let's Get This Class War Started

By Chris Hedges, TruthDig

21 October 13

 

he rich are different from us," F. Scott Fitzgerald is said to have remarked to Ernest Hemingway, to which Hemingway allegedly replied, "Yes, they have more money."

The exchange, although it never actually took place, sums up a wisdom Fitzgerald had that eluded Hemingway. The rich are different. The cocoon of wealth and privilege permits the rich to turn those around them into compliant workers, hangers-on, servants, flatterers and sycophants. Wealth breeds, as Fitzgerald illustrated in "The Great Gatsby" and his short story "The Rich Boy," a class of people for whom human beings are disposable commodities. Colleagues, associates, employees, kitchen staff, servants, gardeners, tutors, personal trainers, even friends and family, bend to the whims of the wealthy or disappear. Once oligarchs achieve unchecked economic and political power, as they have in the United States, the citizens too become disposable.

The public face of the oligarchic class bears little resemblance to the private face. I, like Fitzgerald, was thrown into the embrace of the upper crust when young. I was shipped off as a scholarship student at the age of 10 to an exclusive New England boarding school. I had classmates whose fathers-fathers they rarely saw-arrived at the school in their limousines accompanied by personal photographers (and at times their mistresses), so the press could be fed images of rich and famous men playing the role of good fathers. I spent time in the homes of the ultra-rich and powerful, watching my classmates, who were children, callously order around men and women who worked as their chauffeurs, cooks, nannies and servants. When the sons and daughters of the rich get into serious trouble there are always lawyers, publicists and political personages to protect them-George W. Bush's life is a case study in the insidious affirmative action for the rich. The rich have a snobbish disdain for the poor-despite well-publicized acts of philanthropy-and the middle class. These lower classes are viewed as uncouth parasites, annoyances that have to be endured, at times placated and always controlled in the quest to amass more power and money. My hatred of authority, along with my loathing for the pretensions, heartlessness and sense of entitlement of the rich, comes from living among the privileged. It was a deeply unpleasant experience. But it exposed me to their insatiable selfishness and hedonism. I learned, as a boy, who were my enemies.

READ MORE: Let's Get This Class War Started


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Most Americans Are Not Like Antonin Scalia Print
Sunday, 20 October 2013 13:58

Sides writes: "Antonin Scalia isn't like most Americans because most Americans don't live in little bubbles surrounded by viewpoints we agree with."

Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)


Most Americans Are Not Like Antonin Scalia

By John Sides, The Washington Post

20 October 13

 

hen Antonin Scalia sat for an interview with New York magazine's Jennifer Senior a few weeks ago, he described a life of cloistered conservatism:

We just get The Wall Street Journal and the Washington Times. We used to get the Washington Post, but it just ... went too far for me. I couldn't handle it anymore...It was the treatment of almost any conservative issue. It was slanted and often nasty. And, you know, why should I get upset every morning? I don't think I'm the only one. I think they lost subscriptions partly because they became so shrilly, shrilly liberal.

And:

When was the last party you went to that had a nice healthy dose of both liberals and conservatives?
Geez, I can't even remember. It's been a long time.

This has produced a number of lamentations. Dahlia Lithwick:

When Scalia suggests he doesn't know anyone-especially "ladies"-who uses foul language, you can practically hear Senior's eyebrows clang against the ceiling. Part of it is gender, to be sure. But at least a part of it is the absolute polarization of American life: the complete intellectual silos that are our neighborhoods, our media, our friends, and our intellectual sparring partners.

David Carr:

The polarized political map is now accompanied by a media ecosystem that is equally gerrymandered into districts of self-reinforcing discourse. Justice Scalia and millions of news consumers select and assemble a worldview from sources that may please them, but rarely challenge them.

James Carville:

But perhaps as much as anything is the disturbing fragmentation of the media. Today, conservatives can get all their information from conservative outlets, and liberals can get all their information from liberal outfits. And you can spend your whole life never being challenged, never having to hear or think about or confront viewpoints that are different from your own.

And others.

Here's the good news: things aren't nearly that dire. Antonin Scalia isn't like most Americans because most Americans don't live in little bubbles surrounded by viewpoints we agree with.

Neighborhoods.Let's start with the neighborhoods that Lithwick mentioned. In reality, most neighborhoods are at least somewhat politically diverse. Here is a graph from Yale political scientist Eitan Hersh:

(Graph by Eitan Hersh)

In the 2008 election, most precincts in the country did not vote for Obama or McCain in a lopsided fashion. Instead, they were somewhere in the middle. Hersh's point in making this graph is to illustrate that campaigns cannot easily target based on precincts. They're simply too heterogeneous. What that means is that most of us actually live in neighborhoods alongside partisans of both stripes.

But aren't neighborhoods growing more homogeneous? That is the argument of Bill Bishop's well-known book The Big Sort. It has occasioned several subsequent analyses. One of these, by Jesse Sussell, finds some evidence for growing partisan segregation in California between 1992 and 2010. Another analysis by political scientists Samuel Abrams and Morris Fiorina - which I previously described here - examines a wider swath of states and does not find evidence of geographic sorting. (See also the response by Bishop.) A new paper by Stanford's Clayton Nall and Jonathan Mummolo finds that partisans would like to live among fellow partisans, but mostly cannot and do not because other considerations - things like home prices and school quality - take precedence when deciding where to move:

Even though there are large differences between the parties when individuals are presented with hypothetical residential scenarios, the impacts of these partisan preferences are mitigated by reality. Communities that are generally considered desirable-with good schools, low crime, and suburban-are swing areas that members of both parties desire and move to, a fact supported by the generally high costs of real estate in these areas. If anything, partisan residential sorting appears to be governed, at least in the present, by mixing. A Democrat in the Dallas-Fort Worth area who wants to live in a nice neighborhood (even with a fairly loose definition of "nice" based only on home ownership rates) has no choice but to live in a mixed or Republican zip code, while a Republican hoping to live in a high-home-ownership neighborhood in the San Francisco-Oakland area has no options except to live in a mixed or Democratic zip code.

See also Maryland political scientist James Gimpel's comments, which paint a fairly qualified picture about any geographic sorting.

The Media. The evidence is even clearer here. Most Americans do not get their news from some ideologically congenial set of outlets. First, most Americans watch very little partisan news at all. People report watching partisan news in surveys but data on what they actually watch reveals that these surveys exaggerate. For example, Princeton political scientist Markus Prior found that about 18% of Americans call themselves "regular" viewers of Fox News, but only 5% actually watch at least an hour of Fox News every week.

Second, most Americans get news from non-partisan sources or a variety of sources. They are omnivores. UCLA's Michael LaCour tracked media usage via devices that participants carried with them and that regularly recorded the ambient sounds around them. Here is his graph of whether news consumption was skewed to the left- or right-wing.

(Graph by Michael LaCour)

A positive score means watching and listening to media that is conservative, and a negative score means watching or listening to media that is liberal. But most people are clustered near zero. They have a pretty balanced news diet. LaCour's findings are also consistent with the research of Matthew Gentzkow and Jesse Shapiro, who examined news consumption on-line and found that most consumers read ideologically diverse new outlets. To be sure, if you isolate people who watch a lot of partisan news, their viewing habits reflect more skew. The same is true of people who read political blogs: they are anything but omnivores, according to my research with Eric Lawrence and Henry Farrell. But both groups are small.

None of this is to say that Americans haven't become more partisan (they have). Or that liberals and conservatives haven't become better sorted into the two major political parties (they have). Or that partisans aren't more polarized in some respects (they are).

But these trends do not reflect much self-segregation into little red or blue bubbles. Our neighborhoods and our news are pretty purple after all.


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How US Pressure Bends UN Agencies Print
Sunday, 20 October 2013 13:46

Parry writes: "For at least the past dozen years, the U.S. government has aggressively sought to gain control of the leadership of key United Nations agencies, including the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons."

The headquarters of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons. (photo: Peter Dejong/AP)
The headquarters of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons. (photo: Peter Dejong/AP)


How US Pressure Bends UN Agencies

By Robert Parry, Consortium News

20 October 13

 

Lost in the celebration over the Nobel Peace Prize to the UN agency eliminating the Syrian government's chemical weapons is the question of who was really behind the Aug. 21 poison-gas attack near Damascus. Relevant to that mystery is the recent U.S. pressure to control key UN agencies including the prize recipient, reports Robert Parry.

or at least the past dozen years, the U.S. government has aggressively sought to gain control of the leadership of key United Nations agencies, including the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) which is central to the dispute over the Syrian government's alleged use of Sarin gas on Aug. 21.

Yet, despite evidence that this U.S. manipulation can twist the findings of these UN groups in ways favored by Official Washington, the mainstream American press usually leaves out this context and treats UN findings - or at least those that side with the U.S. government - as independent and beyond reproach, including the OPCW's recent reporting on the Syrian dispute.

For instance, the background of the current OPCW director-general, Ahmet Uzumcu, is rarely if ever mentioned in American news articles about the OPCW's work in Syria. Yet, his biography raises questions about whether he and thus his organization can be truly objective about the Syrian civil war.

Uzumcu, who was chosen to take over the top OPCW job in 2010, is a career Turkish diplomat who previously served as Turkey's consul in Aleppo, Syria, now a rebel stronghold in the war to oust Syrian President Bashar al-Assad; as Turkey's ambassador to Israel, which has publicly come out in favor of the rebels ; and as Turkey's permanent representative to NATO, which is dominated by the United States and other Western powers hostile to Assad. Uzumcu's home country of Turkey also has been a principal backer of the rebel cause.

While Uzumcu's history does not necessarily mean he would pressure his staff to slant the OPCW's findings against the Syrian government, his objectivity surely could be put in question given his past diplomatic postings and the interests of his home government. Plus, even if Uzumcu were inclined to defy Turkey and its NATO allies - and insist on being evenhanded in his approach toward Syria - he surely would remember what happened to one of his predecessors who got on the wrong side of U.S. geopolitical interests.

That history about how the world's only superpower can influence purportedly honest-broker UN outfits was recalled on Monday in an article by Marlise Simons of the New York Times, describing how George W. Bush's administration ousted OPCW's director-general Jose Mauricio Bustani in 2002 because he was seen as an obstacle to invading Iraq.

Bustani, who had been reelected unanimously to the post less than a year earlier, described in an interview with the Times how Bush's emissary, Under-Secretary of State John Bolton, marched into Bustani's office and announced that he (Bustani) would be fired.

"The story behind [Bustani's] ouster has been the subject of interpretation and speculation for years, and Mr. Bustani, a Brazilian diplomat, has kept a low profile since then," wrote Simons. "But with the agency thrust into the spotlight with news of the Nobel [Peace] Prize last week, Mr. Bustani agreed to discuss what he said was the real reason: the Bush administration's fear that chemical weapons inspections in Iraq would conflict with Washington's rationale for invading it. Several officials involved in the events, some speaking publicly about them for the first time, confirmed his account."

Bolton, a blunt-speaking neocon who later became Bush's Ambassador to the United Nations, continued to insist in a recent interview with the New York Times that Bustani was ousted for incompetence. But Bustani and other diplomats close to the case reported that Bustani's real offense was drawing Iraq into acceptance of the OPCW's conventions for eliminating chemical weapons, just as the Bush administration was planning to pin its propaganda campaign for invading Iraq on the country's alleged secret stockpile of WMD.

Bustani's ouster gave President Bush a clearer path to the invasion by letting him frighten the American people about the prospects of Iraq sharing its chemical weapons and possibly a nuclear bomb with al-Qaeda terrorists.

Brushing aside Iraq's insistence that it had destroyed its chemical weapons and didn't have a nuclear weapons project, Bush launched the invasion in March 2003, only for the world to discover later that the Iraqi government was telling the truth. As a result of the Iraq War, hundreds of thousands of Iraqis have died, along with nearly 4,500 American soldiers, with the estimated costs to the U.S. taxpayers running into the trillions of dollars.

Bush's Bullying

But U.S. bullying of UN agencies did not start or stop with replacing the OPCW's Bustani. Prior to Bustani's ouster, the Bush administration employed similar bare-knuckled tactics against UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Mary C. Robinson, who had dared criticize human rights abuses committed by Israel and Bush's "war on terror." The Bush administration lobbied hard against her reappointment. Officially, she announced she was retiring on her own accord.

The Bush administration also forced out Robert Watson, the chairman of the U.N.-sponsored Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [IPCC]. Under his leadership, the panel had reached a consensus that human activities, such as burning fossil fuels, contributed to global warming. ExxonMobil sent a memo to Bush's White House asking, "Can Watson be replaced now at the request of the U.S.?"

The ExxonMobil memo, obtained by the Natural Resources Defense Council through the Freedom of Information Act, urged the White House to "restructure U.S. attendance at the IPCC meetings to assure no Clinton/Gore proponents are involved in decisional activities." On April 19, 2002, the Bush administration succeeded in replacing Watson with Rajendra Pachauri, an Indian economist.

Commenting on his removal, Watson said, "U.S. support was, of course, an important factor. They [the IPCC] came under a lot of pressure from ExxonMobil who asked the White House to try and remove me." [For details, see Consortiumnews.com's "Bush's Grim Vision."]

This pattern of pressure continued into the Obama administration which used its own diplomatic and economic muscle to insert a malleable Japanese diplomat, Yukiya Amano, into the leadership of the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency [IAEA], which was playing a key role in the dispute over Iran's nuclear program.

Before his appointment, Amano had portrayed himself as an independent-minded fellow who was resisting U.S.-Israeli propaganda about the Iranian nuclear program. Yet behind the scenes, he was meeting with U.S. and Israeli officials to coordinate on how to serve their interests. His professed doubts about an Iranian nuclear-bomb project was only a theatrical device to intensify the later impact if he declared that Iran indeed was building a nuke.

But this ploy was spoiled by Pvt. Bradley Manning's leaking of hundreds of thousands of pages of U.S. diplomatic cables. Among them were reports on Amano's secret collaboration with U.S. and Israeli officials.

The U.S. embassy cables revealing the truth about Amano were published by the U.K. Guardian in 2011 (although ignored by the New York Times, the Washington Post and other mainstream U.S. news outlets). Despite the silence of the major U.S. news media, Internet outlets, such as Consortiumnews.com, highlighted the Amano cables, meaning that enough Americans knew the facts not to be fooled again. [For details, see Consortiumnews.com's "Did Manning Help Avert War with Iran?"]

The Syrian Dossiers

This history is relevant now because the credibility of the UN's chemical weapons office has been central to conclusions drawn by the mainstream U.S. news media that the OPCW's report on the alleged chemical weapons attack outside Damascus on Aug. 21 pointed to the Syrian government as the responsible party.

Though the OPCW report did not formally assess blame for the attack, which purportedly killed hundreds of Syrian civilians, the report included details that the U.S. press and some non-governmental organizations, such as Human Rights Watch, used to extrapolate the guilt of Assad's government.

Yet, elements of the OPCW's official report appeared stretched to create the public impression that the Syrian government carried out the attack despite apparent doubts by OPCW field investigators whose concerns were played down or buried in tables and footnotes.

For instance, the UN inspectors found surprisingly little evidence of Sarin gas at the first neighborhood that they visited on Aug. 26, Moadamiyah, south of Damascus. Of the 13 environmental samples collected that day, none tested positive for Sarin or other chemical-warfare agents. The two laboratories used by the inspectors also had conflicting results regarding trace amounts of chemical residue that can be left behind by Sarin after being degraded by intense heat.

By contrast, tests for Sarin were more clearly positive from samples taken two and three days later - on Aug. 28-29 - in the eastern suburban area of Zamalka/Ein Tarma. There, Lab One found Sarin in 11 of 17 samples and Lab Two found Sarin in all 17 samples.

Though the UN report concludes that Sarin was present in Moadamiyah - despite the failure to identify actual chemical-warfare agents - the report does not explain why the Aug. 26 samples in Moadamiyah would test so negatively when the Aug. 28-29 samples in Zamalka/Ein Tarma would test much more positively.

One would have thought that the earlier samples would test more strongly than later samples after two or three more days of exposure to sun and other elements. An obvious explanation would be that the release of Sarin was concentrated in the eastern suburb and that the spotty residue detected in the south came from other factors, such as false positives for secondary chemicals especially from Lab Two.

If the Aug. 21 attack centered on Zamalka/Ein Tarma as the UN results suggest, that would indicate a much less expansive use of chemical weapons than a U.S. government white paper claimed. The alleged breadth of the attack served as a primary argument for blaming the Syrian government given its greater military capabilities than the rebels.

Obama's Claims

That point was driven home by President Barack Obama in his nationally televised address on Sept. 10 when he asserted that 11 neighborhoods had come under chemical bombardment on Aug. 21. [See Consortiumnews.com's "Obama Still Withholds Syria Evidence."]

However, even the U.S. "Government Assessment" on the attack, issued on Aug. 30 explicitly blaming the Syrian government, suggested that the initial reports of about a dozen targets around Damascus may have been exaggerated. A footnote contained in a White House-released map of the supposed locations of the attack read:

"Reports of chemical attacks originating from some locations may reflect the movement of patients exposed in one neighborhood to field hospitals and medical facilities in the surrounding area. They may also reflect confusion and panic triggered by the ongoing artillery and rocket barrage, and reports of chemical use in other neighborhoods."

In other words, victims from one location could have rushed to clinics in other neighborhoods, creating the impression of a more widespread attack than actually occurred. That possibility would seem to be underscored by the divergent findings of the UN inspectors when they took soil and other environmental samples from the southern and eastern areas and got strikingly different results.

The UN inspectors also revealed how dependent they were on Syrian rebels for access to the areas of the alleged chemical attacks and to witnesses, with one rebel commander even asked to take "custody" of the UN inspection.

At the suspected attack sites, the inspectors also detected signs that evidence had been "moved" and "possibly manipulated." Regarding the Moadamiyah area, the UN report noted, "Fragments [of rockets] and other possible evidence have clearly been handled/moved prior to the arrival of the investigative team."

In the Zamalka/Ein Tarma neighborhood, where a crudely made missile apparently delivered the poison gas, the inspectors stated that "the locations have been well traveled by other individuals prior to the arrival of the Mission. ... During the time spent at these locations, individuals arrived carrying other suspected munitions indicating that such potential evidence is being moved and possibly manipulated."

Media's Conventional Wisdom

The UN inspectors did not draw any specific conclusion from their research as to whether Syrian government forces or the rebels were responsible for the hundreds of civilian deaths that resulted from the apparent use of Sarin gas. However, major U.S. news outlets, including the New York Times and the Washington Post, concluded that the findings implicated the Syrian government.

Those accounts cited weapons "experts" as asserting that the type of missiles used and the supposed sophistication of the Sarin were beyond the known capabilities of the rebels. The articles also said the rough calculations by the UN inspectors of the likely missile trajectories suggested that the launches occurred in government-controlled areas with the missiles landing in areas where the rebels dominate.

These mainstream U.S. news reports did not cite the cautionary comments contained in the UN report about possible tampering with evidence, nor did they take into account the conflicting lab results in Moadamiyah compared with Zamalka/Ein Tarma, nor the fact that the OPCW's director-general is a career Turkish diplomat. [For more on rebel capabilities, see Consortiumnews.com's "Do Syrian Rebels Have Sarin?"]

Reinforcing the Assad-did-it conventional wisdom, Secretary of State John Kerry and President Obama moved to assign any remaining doubters to the loony bin of conspiracy theorists. "We really don't have time today to pretend that anyone can have their own set of facts," Kerry sniffed in response to continuing Russian government's doubts.

President Obama drove home the same point in his annual address to the UN General Assembly: "It's an insult to human reason and to the legitimacy of this institution to suggest that anyone other than the regime carried out this attack."

Yet, the doubters reportedly include U.S. intelligence analysts, who I'm told have briefed Obama personally about the uncertainty of the evidence. Clearly, if the Obama administration had the entire intelligence community onboard, there would have been no need for such a dodgy dossier as the "Government Assessment" posted by the White House press office on Aug. 30, rather than a National Intelligence Estimate that would have reflected the views of the 16 intelligence agencies and been released by the Director of National Intelligence.

Doubts in the Field

And, Robert Fisk, a veteran reporter for London's Independent newspaper, found a lack of consensus among UN officials and other international observers in Damascus - despite the career risks that they faced by deviating from the conventional wisdom on Assad's guilt.

"In a country - indeed a world - where propaganda is more influential than truth, discovering the origin of the chemicals that suffocated so many Syrians a month ago is an investigation fraught with journalistic perils," Fisk wrote. "Nevertheless, it also has to be said that grave doubts are being expressed by the UN and other international organisations in Damascus that the sarin gas missiles were fired by Assad's army.

"While these international employees cannot be identified, some of them were in Damascus on 21 August and asked a series of questions to which no one has yet supplied an answer. Why, for example, would Syria wait until the UN inspectors were ensconced in Damascus on 18 August before using sarin gas little more than two days later - and only four miles from the hotel in which the UN had just checked in?

"Having thus presented the UN with evidence of the use of sarin - which the inspectors quickly acquired at the scene - the Assad regime, if guilty, would surely have realised that a military attack would be staged by Western nations.

"As it is, Syria is now due to lose its entire strategic long-term chemical defences against a nuclear-armed Israel - because, if Western leaders are to be believed, it wanted to fire just seven missiles almost a half century old at a rebel suburb in which only 300 of the 1,400 victims (if the rebels themselves are to be believed) were fighters.

"As one Western NGO put it ... 'if Assad really wanted to use sarin gas, why for God's sake, did he wait for two years and then when the UN was actually on the ground to investigate?'"

Further adding to these doubts about the Official Story of the Aug. 21 poison-gas attack is the 11-year-old story about how the U.S. government engineered a change in the leadership of the UN's OPCW because the director-general committed the unpardonable sin of getting in the way of a U.S. geopolitical/propaganda priority - and the question about the impartiality of the Turkish diplomat now running the agency.


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