Whenever the mainstream mass media speaks, with one voice, on an issue of importance, I think we should be very suspicious of their agenda, and seek elsewhere for the truth. Such is clearly the case with the crisis in Syria.
Syrian Opposition
Fighters Arrested with Chemical Weapons
By Bill Van Auken Turkish police rounded up 12 members of Syria’s Al Qaeda-affiliated Al Nusra Front, along with chemical weapons materials.
These are the Islamic extremist "rebels" being armed and supported by certain Western and Arab states to illegally overthrow a secular government in Syria for their own strategic reasons. . . the same "Al Qaeda terrorists" they claim to be fighting a 'War on Terror' against elsewhere!
In a series of raids in the capital of Istanbul and in the
southern provinces of Mersin, Adana and Hatay near the Syrian
border, Turkish police rounded up 12 members of Syria’s Al
Qaeda-affiliated Al Nusra Front along with chemical weapons
materials.
The
Turkish media initially reported that police recovered four and
a half pounds of sarin, the deadly nerve gas which had earlier
been linked to chemical weapons attacks inside Syria.
While
widely reported in the Turkish press, the arrests Wednesday have
been virtually blacked out by the corporate media in the US.
Newspapers like the New York Times, which have openly
promoted a US intervention in Syria, citing alleged chemical
weapons use by the regime of Bashar al-Assad as a pretext, have
posted not a word about the raids in Turkey.
The daily
newspaper Zaman reported that “the al-Nusra members had
been planning a bomb attack for Thursday in [the Turkish city
of] Adana but that the attack was averted when the police caught
the suspects. Along with the sarin gas, the police seized a
number of handguns, grenades, bullets and documents during their
search.”
The city
of Adana, approximately 60 miles from the Syrian border, has a
sizable Alawite Arab population that is sympathetic to the
Syrian government and hostile to the Sunni Islamist forces that
have waged the US-backed war for regime change on the ground in
Syria.
The Al
Nusra Front, which has formally declared its allegiance to Al
Qaeda, was declared a foreign terrorist organization by the US
State Department last December. The United Nations Security
Council added the group to the body’s Al Qaeda sanctions
blacklist Friday.
The Syrian
government had requested that the group be subjected to
sanctions as a terrorist organization last month, but the action
was initially blocked by Britain and France. Finally, an
agreement was reached to declare Al Nusra an alias for Al Qaeda
in Iraq.
The Al
Nusra Front has been universally acknowledged as the most
effective fighting force of the so-called rebels seeking the
Assad government’s overthrow.
Both Britain and France recently
succeeded in overturning a European Union ban on arms exports to
Syria, clearing the way for them to ship weapons to the
“rebels.”
None of
the arrested suspects have been identified. Turkish media
reported that five of them were released late Thursday, and
seven are still being held for questioning. The government of
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, which has provided
extensive material support for the Syrian opposition, has given
no public explanation of the police actions.
Adana
provincial governor Huseyin Avni Cos denied on Thursday that
sarin had been recovered in the raids but did allow that unknown
chemicals had been found and were being analyzed.
The
arrests come little more than two weeks after twin terrorist car
bombings claimed the lives of 52 people in the Turkish city of
Reyhanli in southern Hatay province near the border with Syria.
The Erdogan government seized upon the incident to blame the
Syrian government and call for international intervention to
topple Assad.
It simultaneously imposed an unprecedented gag
order on the Turkish press to prevent reporting on the extensive
evidence that the attacks were the work of Syrian opposition
groups, which use Reyhanli as a supply base and who have free
movement across the Turkish-Syrian border.
Subsequently, authorities arrested an army private on charges of
“crimes against the state” for allegedly leaking top secret
cables that indicated the government’s prior knowledge that the
bombings were being planned by the Al Qaeda-linked forces in
Syria. RedHack, the Turkish hacker group which made the cables
public last week, denied that it had any contact with the
arrested private, who was identified as Utku Kali.
The Adana
daily Taraf reported Thursday that police are mounting
road blocks and conducting searches in the area for a vehicle
loaded with explosives that is believed to have been sent to the
area by the US-backed anti-Assad forces.
The
discovery of sarin or some other lethal chemical weapons
materials in the hands of Al Nusra Front operatives in Turkey
prompted calls by Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov for an
immediate investigation.
He condemned the continuing failure to
send a United Nations inspection team to Syria to investigate a
chemical weapons incident last March outside of the city of
Aleppo.
“We are
highly disappointed that because of the political games, the UN
Secretariat failed to respond to that request swiftly,” Lavrov
told reporters.
These
“political games” refer to demands by Washington and its allies
that any UN team be given carte blanche to inspect any and all
Syrian facilities and interrogate anyone it chooses, along the
lines of the inspection regime created in Iraq in the run-up to
the US invasion of 2003.
The Assad
government has charged that the March attack, which killed 26
people, 16 of them government soldiers, was carried out by the
Western-backed forces.
The Obama
administration has repeatedly declared the use of chemical
weapons by the Syrian government to be a “red line” or “game
changer” that would trigger unspecified US intervention.
At the
same time, Washington and its European NATO allies have turned a
blind eye to evidence of chemical weapons use by the Islamist
militias.
There have
been repeated claims by the Syrian opposition groups, as well as
by the British and French governments, of chemical weapons use
by the regime.
Last month, however, Carla del Ponte, a leading
member of the UN commission of inquiry on Syria, stated that the
bulk of the evidence indicated chemical weapons use by the
rebels.
The latest
development in Turkey suggests that the Western-backed Islamist
militias were preparing to launch another chemical weapons
attack, apparently against a Turkish civilian population, with
the aim of producing mass casualties that would be blamed on the
Syrian regime and create the conditions for a US-led
intervention.
The
silence of the US media on the incident only demonstrates that
it is prepared to play the same role that it did in Iraq,
working to sell a war based upon lies to the American public.
The experience of the past decade of unending war, however, has
made this task more difficult.
A Gallup
poll released on Friday found that more than two out of three
Americans (68 percent) oppose any US military intervention in
Syria if “diplomatic efforts fail to end the civil war in
Syria.”
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2 comments:
Bruce, did you see McDonald's is planning on opening locations in Vietnam! I think it's REVOLUTIONARY! Starbucks, Burger King, Pizza Hut, and now MCDONALD'S. Viva The capitalist revolution! http://www.vir.com.vn/news/en/top-news/mcdonalds-is-coming-to-vietnam.html
Hi Anonymous.
Thanks for the link. We have often wondered how long before McDonald's would come to Viet Nam, and indeed why they did not come ages ago.
We assumed that was their choice, as many other foreign chains have been here for a long time.
Anyway, thanks for the link. I have posted the Vietnam Investment Review article onto my blog, together with my response to it.
Cheers!
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