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FREEDOM IS SECURITY
Obama and his partners in crime set stage of another murderous attack
Kurt Nimmo
Prison Planet.com
August 26, 2013
During his remarks today at the State Department, Secretary Kerry exploited the shock value of the chemical attack last week in Syria but did not provide a shred of verifiable evidence that the attack was the work of Bashar al-Assad and his military. Kerry said Syria destroyed any evidence by shelling the Jobar neighborhood outside of Damascus where the attack allegedly occurred. He failed to mention, however, that the government of Syria is involved in ongoing hostilities with so-called “rebels” who are CIA mercenaries consisting primarily of al-Nusra and al-Qaeda terrorists and shelling enemy positions is normal activity during war.
Kerry’s remarks on Monday are a precursor to a WMD rationale. It will be reminiscent of the Bush administration’s WMD pretext prior to the invasion of Iraq. Despite then Secretary of State Colin Powell’s ludicrous theatrics at the United Nations when he famously wagged a model vial of anthrax and presented other fabricated evidence like mobile biological weapon labs, it was clearly determined before and after the invasion that Iraq did not possess nuclear, chemical or biological weapons.
A House committee in 2004 identified “237 misleading statements about the threat posed by Iraq that were made by President Bush, Vice President Cheney, Secretary Rumsfeld, Secretary Powell, and National Security Advisor Rice. These statements were made in 125 separate appearances, consisting of 40 speeches, 26 press conferences and briefings, 53 interviews, 4 written statements, and 2 congressional testimonies.” According to the committee, at least 61 separate statements “misrepresented Iraq’s ties to al-Qaeda.” A Senate investigation in 2006 also found the Bush administration and its coterie of neocons had lied to the American people.
Prior to the first Iraq invasion perpetuated by the Bush senior administration, a fraudulent story surfaced during a congressional hearing held on October 10, 1990, claiming that Iraqi soldiers had thrown babies from incubators after invading Kuwait. Following the invasion of Iraq it was learned that the girl who testified before Congress about the incident was in fact the 15-year old daughter of a Kuwaiti emir. She had been coached by the public relations firm Hill and Knowlton to provide false testimony and thus provide valuable pre-war propaganda.
Over the next few days the Obama administration, collaborating
closely with its international partners in crime, will exploit the
unsubstantiated and highly dubious claim that the government of al-Assad
used chemical weapons on his own people. This will serve as a pretext
to commence a bombing campaign in Syria. Similar to previous bombing
campaigns in the former Yugoslavia, Iraq and Libya, the latest effort
will not merely concentrate on al-Assad’s military capability, but the
country’s civilian infrastructure as well.
The idea is not to stop a brutal dictator from abusing his own people as the government and the establishment media claim. It is designed to destroy Syria and reduce it to a failed state like Iraq and Afghanistan. The “New Middle East” did not begin with the so-called Arab Spring, but with the Anglo-American-Israeli “military roadmap” drawn up to balkanize the region and foment instability, chaos, and violence extending from Lebanon, Palestine, and Syria to Iraq, the Persian Gulf, Iran, and beyond.
Secretary of State Kerry’s remarks follow:
Well, for the last several days President Obama and his entire
national security team have been reviewing the situation in Syria. And
today I want to provide an update on our efforts as we consider our
response to the use of chemical weapons.
What we saw in Syria last week should shock the conscience of the world. It defies any code of morality. Let me be clear. The indiscriminate slaughter of civilians, the killing of women and children and innocent bystanders by chemical weapons is a moral obscenity. By any standard, it is inexcusable. And despite the excuses and equivocations that some have manufactured, it is undeniable.
The meaning of this attack goes beyond the conflict on Syria
itself. And that conflict has already brought so much terrible
suffering. This is about the large-scale indiscriminate use of weapons
that the civilized world long ago decided must never be used at all, a
conviction shared even by countries that agree on little else.
There is a clear reason that the world has banned entirely the
use of chemical weapons. There is a reason the international community
has set a clear standard and why many countries have taken major steps
to eradicate these weapons. There is a reason why President Obama has
made it such a priority to stop the proliferation of these weapons, and
lock them down where they do exist. There is a reason why President
Obama has made clear to the Assad regime that this international norm
cannot be violated without consequences. And there is a reason why no
matter what you believe about Syria, all peoples and all nations who
believe in the cause of our common humanity must stand up to assure that
there is accountability for the use of chemical weapons so that it
never happens again.
Last night, after speaking with foreign ministers from around the
world about the gravity of this situation, I went back and I watched
the videos — the videos that anybody can watch in the social media, and I
watched them one more gut-wrenching time. It is really hard to express
in words the the human suffering that they lay out before us.
As a father, I can’t get the image out of my head of a man who
held up his dead child, wailing while chaos swirled around him, the
images of entire families dead in their beds without a drop of blood or
even a visible wound, bodies contorting in spasms, human suffering that
we can never ignore or forget. Anyone who could claim that an attack of
this staggering scale could be contrived or fabricated needs to check
their conscience and their own moral compass.
What is before us today is real, and it is compelling.
So I also want to underscore that while investigators are
gathering additional evidence on the ground, our understanding of what
has already happened in Syria is grounded in facts, informed by
conscience and guided by common sense. The reported number of victims,
the reported symptoms of those who were killed or injured, the firsthand
accounts from humanitarian organizations on the ground, like Doctors
Without Borders and the Syria Human Rights Commission — these all
strongly indicate that everything these images are already screaming at
us is real, that chemical weapons were used in Syria.
Moreover, we know that the Syrian regime maintains custody of
these chemical weapons. We know that the Syrian regime has the capacity
to do this with rockets. We know that the regime has been determined to
clear the opposition from those very places where the attacks took
place. And with our own eyes, we have all of us become witnesses.
We have additional information about this attack, and that
information is being compiled and reviewed together with our partners,
and we will provide that information in the days ahead.
Our sense of basic humanity is offended not only by this cowardly
crime but also by the cynical attempt to cover it up. At every turn,
the Syrian regime has failed to cooperate with the U.N. investigation,
using it only to stall and to stymie the important effort to bring to
light what happened in Damascus in the dead of night. And as Ban Ki-
moon said last week, the U.N. investigation will not determine who used
these chemical weapons, only whether such weapons were used, a judgement
that is already clear to the world.
I spoke on Thursday with Syrian Foreign Minister Muallem, and I
made it very clear to him that if the regime, as he argued, had nothing
to hide, then their response should be immediate: immediate
transparency, immediate access, not shelling. Their response needed to
be unrestricted and immediate access. Failure to permit that, I told
him, would tell its own story.
Instead, for five days the Syrian regime refused to allow the
U.N. investigators access to the site of the attack that would allegedly
exonerate them. Instead, it attacked the area further, shelling it and
systematically destroying evidence. That is not the behavior of a
government that has nothing to hide. That is not the action of a regime
eager to prove to the world that it had not used chemical weapons. In
fact, the regime’s belated decision to allow access is too late and is
too late to be credible.
Today’s reports of an attack on the U.N. investigators, together
with the continued shelling of these very neighborhoods, only further
weakens the regime’s credibility. At President Obama’s direction, I’ve
spent many hours over the last few days on the phone with foreign
ministers and other leaders. The administration is actively consulting
with members of Congress, and we will continue to have these
conversations in the days ahead. President Obama has also been in close
touch with the leaders of our key allies, and the president will be
making an informed decision about how to respond to this indiscriminate
use of chemical weapons.
But make no mistake: President Obama believes there must be
accountability for those who would use the world’s most heinous weapons
against the world’s most vulnerable people. Nothing today is more
serious, and nothing is receiving more serious scrutiny.
Thank you.
Kurt Nimmo
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