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Showing posts with label Ted Postol. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ted Postol. Show all posts

Sunday, September 29, 2019

Syria CW Infowar Latest Moves in Review


in review moves regarding the high-profile CW allegations of Douma, 2018 and  Khan Sheikhoun, 2017. I'm not that read-up on the news, so these may not be the best sources - more may be offered in comments below.
Here my comments
first Douma

Douma: an Emmy for NYT's Thought-Impaired Analysis -A few months back was the leak of a report by an OPCW engineering sub-team. A complete lack of an answer the challenge it brought - the OPCW's own suppressed science agrees with that of Russian scientists and all credible independent experts who like myself, who consider the actual details and show their work - as if to help erase that victory for truth, someone re-endorsed one of the worst efforts to support the fake narrative of the powerful, granting a News Emmy to the New York Times for last June's program "One Building, One Bomb." It's described as "the most definitive reconstruction" of the event, using amazing visual analysis to "cut through government denials to reveal how the attack took place and assign blame to the Syrian authorities." The NYT team here worked with Forensic Architecture and Bellingcat so all the genius wound up tripping over itself. This was an especially stupid exercise full of invented science that makes no sense. I could find several other examples if I reviewed it now, but here's a quick list of some of those I compiled earlier in a lengthy rebuttal.

- super-deadly dose, death in minutes - No. Everything known about how chlorine (rarely) kills argues against this. Maybe 1-3 people would die, probably in hospital after leaving this site. Chlorine is not a nerve agent, does not cause instant death, paralysis or impairment, just a lot of corrosive irritation and a desire to leave. These people appear to have died suddenly while doing bizarre things, or to have died at unknown speed in some gas chamber before their bodies were dragged into place here. I've always suspected the latter, and deeper research suggests more and more to be the case.

- corneal burns - No. The "opacity" cited is from being dead. It's as standard as rigor mortis. They suspiciously LACK the redness of corneal burns you'd expect from chlorine or other caustic agents. Still, it seems they were exposed to a caustic agent...

- grid pattern on the cylinder's side means impact through the metal grill - No. It would mean the thing was laid sideways like a sausage on that grill, while its bars were heated red hot to get the lines "seared in" on the side. NYT fake experts need to go to a barbecue someday and try to think that out. Do the grill marks on those hot dogs prove they flew lengthwise, like little meat missiles, crashing right through the grill?

- frosted cylinder - No. Malachy Browne at least proudly posted the image at right following supposed frost on the top of the cylinder at location 4, lasting for days after the event, including where someone wiped it with their hands and it never re-frosted. That's clearly settled dust, from the impact or - considering the many, many problems with this scene and the precedent set at loc. 2 - just sifted on top for realism. There's clearly a white dust coating the whole bed area, not just the cold metal of the cylinder. And as anyone on that team who actually looked into this auto-refrigeration might know, it happens only on the parts of the metal in contact with the cold-boiling liquid gas inside - the lower half, then a shrinking portion of the underside as it slowly boiled away trough the open valve or whatever breach there is.

The cylinder at location 2 is frosted only on a small part of its underside, as the same NYT report times it abut 10 pm  - some 2-3 hours after the attack it's close to empty. At loc. 4 the valve was intact, might have a hairline crack, and there are signs of major chlorine release, besides additional liquids - but it never seems to be frosted, was noted as half-full and NOT leaking when inspectors went (noted by Sander H), suggesting any release here was after someone opened the functional valve and then closed it again. And anyway, if that were frost it would be on the underside, you morons.

- black rust from chlorine - No. Black rust can happen in low-oxygen environments, underwater, on the steel inside the concrete on bridges, etc. No examples of prior chlorine attacks show a black rust, just the usual orange kind, on bare metal. We see that in Douma as well. Here the "rust" is seen on the intact yellow paint, which doesn't "rust" at all. And it looks like the black soot everything below the cylinder was coated with. That's clearly from a fire deliberately set atop the rubble (so the after the alleged cylinder impact), and might be a clue to the staging of the scene. But NYT, Bellingcat, FA, et al. totally missed it.

- missed: besides all the basic issues about logic, timing, and motive that always argued pretty strongly against government guilt: actual deaths needing another explanation, specific and unusual signs of their death that also need special explanation (in progress) - details large and small proving the cylinders did not cause the damage. Here again is a decent view from above and then below the impact point.




"One building, one bomb," yes, or maybe a mortar shell. It hit that upper left corner and detonated, sprayed shrapnel all around the balcony, impacted the floor of it first with its blast wave, hurling the concrete and rebar inward. Also, someone laid a gas tank at the same spot later on, and shoddy journalism helped them pass of that cheap trick, and THAT is what gets rewarded around here. But news Emmies aren't about truth but about that "news" thing - here it's assured authority, distracting computer graphics, dark, though-simulating mood music, and most importantly a "plausible" or politically acceptable conclusion in line with the accepted findings of controlled agencies so far. Bad news: Someone gassed babies and other civilians in a horrible manner and got away with it. Eh. Go ask Madeline Albright about the kind of hard choices we have to make to do the amazingly righteous stuff we do in the world.

KS liberated, Grim Discoveries
Syrian government force finally re-reconquered the city from HTS militants by August 22, ending a five-year occupation (Al-Masdar). Syrian and Russian officials inspected the site of the cave "hospital" from the 2017 videos - where people were left dying in the mud - and found attached a sprawling underground base, they say, considered adequate "for stationing 3,500 terrorists," with various facilities including propaganda "studios." Some discarded weapons were found, along with "military equipment, helmets and gas masks" and flags and uniforms of the defeated militants. (Fars News) RT showed some video footage of the tunnels, along with apparent jail cells showing squalid conditions, and women's clothing left behind (RT video set to 1:10 to show the same well-known exterior). This is all allegedly from just behind where those women, children and men were seen dead and dying, some later developing head wounds, some sporting them already.

No word on gas chambers being found on this site, but it's not clear they've found everything nor that this part would be done right here. The number of loaded trucks involved does still suggest gathering from somewhere else within short driving distance they've still never shown us.

New Info on Staging of CW Attacks with Murdered Hostages?
The same recent Fars News article cited above adds:
"In a relevant development on Wednesday, Director of the Fund for Research of Problems of Democracy Maxim Grigoryev stated that members of the so-called civil defense group White Helmets have deliberately executed women and children for the purpose of disseminating false information about the situation in Syria."
...
Grigoryev highlighted that White Helmets, on certain occasions, have used the bodies of hostages executed by terrorists on their territories to take photos and make video records of a staged chemical attack.
“Some of them, including women and children, were deliberately executed for the purpose,” he added."

The basis and veracity of these exact claims is unclear at the moment, but of course I've long suspected the gist of the allegation (managed massacres of captives) is true, and that there is valid evidence around, some of which I find, some more of which Grigoriev's team might have just found.

KS: Postol - Chen Critical Analysis Derailed:
An anticipated mainstream journal publication of a report co-authored by MIT professor Theodore Postol had its publication postponed, maybe cancelled. Science Magazine reported on this story:

"Now, a manuscript questioning that conclusion has caused a heated dispute among U.S. scientists. Until this week, the paper was scheduled for publication by Science & Global Security (SGS), a prestigious journal based at Princeton University. But as Science went to press, SGS’s editors suspended publication amid fierce criticism and warnings that the paper would help Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and the Russian government."

Before, the journal had noted controversy existed, but "the scientific community has well-established practices for dealing with this challenge." But on 24 September, they mentioned "a number of issues with the peer-review and revision process" requiring they put it on hold to review those issues.

This comes after a concerted effort by regime-change activists to pressure SGS to refuse publication, raising concerns if their political pressure caused the journal to cave in.

The Bellingcat critique cited by Science Mag raises a valid point on lack of usual damage - Postol argues rebel rockets just don't fragment well, so they're pretty useless. He didn't seem to consider it was a non-explosive chemical rocket as I've always suspected.

Supposed expert J.P. Zanders' critique that Syrian sarin was used is faulty, based on a faith that past use as all by Syria. But that was always circular, accepted based on prior believed use, never on established fact. Or IF this is the real recipe Syria used, and not just the one that keeps turning up, he ignores that recipes can be replicated by people with a more rational motive than Damascus would have.

Still none of these critics can find anything but alibis in the radar record (right), and they all ignore key facts like that the observed wind was opposite of that needed for the allegations to work. (below, my classic wind graphic for upper-level winds - ground level is more westerly (to the east). Anyone who thinks this must be or can be shown wrong, be sure to check here first, and if you still feel that way, bring it there.)


CW expert and regime-change activist Gregory Koblentz "says Postol has disregarded overwhelming evidence and has a pro-Assad agenda," Science reports, and warned with some telling hyperbole "The paper would be “misused to cover up the [Assad] regime’s crimes" and "permanently stain the reputation of your journal."" To "cover up" "crimes" that were just bogus accusation to begin with, by demonstrating that they were bogus, is not an ethical lapse not something that should harm anyone's reputation. Mr. Koblentz probably has no special reason to be so sure his own obvious anti-Assad agenda is based in fact rather than just a politically convenient narrative that's been steered to emerge. He's a hypocrite.

But all these critics may have varying points. I'm not sure how to "properly" judge a scholarly paper, but I've looked at the Postol, Chen, et al. report and it seems to have some logic issues (at least the debatable answer to lack of fragmentation, as noted above, the insistence the metal fragments must be from the weapon used, and must be some kind of pipe or tube). Working alone these last years Postol's output is rather poor and error-prone, to the extent I've looked at it. Working with Richard Lloyd in 2013-14 the team output was excellent. With others, Goong Chen and his team, it seemed on quick review they came out somewhere in the middle.

I humbly suggest from my corner we take advantage of this pause. That exact paper should be cancelled, but considering the complexities, a slot should be left open. Perhaps Mr. Chen could lead a revision of the findings for a better product with no logical or factual errors, just political ones. That could be the test; as it stands, it's hard to separate political agendas from genuine technical issues. It seems from my end the truth tends to help Syria and Russia in the way Mr. Koblentz suggested Postol's paper would, and could be blocked for that reason alone. Is that the case here? I wish I could be more clear on that question.

KS: Bellingcat's Dying M4000 Narrative
Bellingcat founder Eliot Higgins was excited recently to solidify some fragment IDs they made last year, comparing scraps from the Latamnah and Khan Sheikhoun sarin attacks in March and April 2017 to a Syrian-made M4000 chemical bomb. This is taken as proving Syrian forces dropped that bomb from a jet that must have been over the town somehow, and ignores the possibility the pieces are planted. But the new twist is an old example of an M4000 seen in 2013, and then another from 2014, being noticed and brought to compare - the first visual comparisons possible so far. Neither of these, he thinks, was used for CW, both of them likely being re-purposed for conventional explosives (which he says Syria has claimed and which I don't doubt).

But in the 2017 cases, sarin turned up, so that would be the M4000 doing its original job. If that's what these scraps are from, and if they relate to the attack.

An earlier March 24 attack … did the M4000 turn up there too? I'm not so read up on that one, but it's thought to have caused a doctor to die the next day after a simple chlorine attack on the 25th. It went totally unreported at the time, but later had reports lodged, and samples gathered 10 months later that tested positive for intact, non-degraded sarin - meaning it was introduced to the source material probably just weeks earlier, not 10 months earlier.

The 2013 M4000 is said to fall from a jet ("gift of Mig") and landed near fighters in the southern Damascus suburbs, with no visible damage besides some mild denting of the tail assembly. This suggests it landed on its side, likely tail-end first, after a short and unstable fall, from maybe 50 meters up? Maybe at an angle, arcing in after it was hurled with some crude catapult? Or maybe I'm under-estimating the damage and someone dropped it off the bed of the delivery pickup truck? To me it looks more in that range than any range of plausible aircraft altitudes. Here it is (bottom) compared to the broken and distorted parts found at Latamnah.

Allegations: Both of these fell from jets and landed. Neither detonated with powerful high explosives. Aside from perhaps the drop altitude, no difference is proposed besides one having a small CW dispersal charge triggered upon impact. The 2017 story is debatable, likely involving high-explosives and thus ruling out sarin. But the 2013 story is out. If it makes no sense, it's not true. And if it's not true, wonder why they don't tell us the true story of how militant got at least one copy of a M4000 to play around with.

I've never been one to doubt that identification (see Postol-Higgins debate post), and I'm not about to start now. Others insist on challenging it as if it were central, as if it has to be from the weapon used and can't just be planted to sow a bogus story. But these things have a way of being in bogus stories. I was working on this subject is a little more detail for a post of middling importance I may not complete on "The M4000 distraction." If this seems to be needed, I'll finish it. In the meantime and in case, my advice is quit doubting the ID unless you can find a VALID reason, neither fully accept nor reject it, and just focus on the follow-up question: "if it were M4000 scraps, so what?" As Charles Wood proposes:
"In a spectacular own goal, Higgins has 'disclosed' that Syrian terrorists have long held bomb parts that could be used to fake the Khan Sheikhoun sarin bombing.
That's not to say an M4000 was even used, just that the parts in the crater are 'consistent' with Higgin's bomb parts."

Saturday, August 10, 2019

For the Tulsi 2020 Campaign

Yet Another Outside View on Syria CW Allegations
by Adam Larson (AKA Caustic Logic)
August 11, 2019
last edits: same day


Representative Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI), the surprisingly awesome 2020 presidential candidate, is taking flak for heresy against the U.S. foreign policy orthodoxy. It's not the first time, but maybe the first tie I can be of much help. Recently, the Tulsi 2010 website ran a critique of the evidence behind the April CW allegations president Trump has twice attacked Syria over - Khan Sheikhoun in 2017 and Douma in 2018.

"Reports on Chemical Attacks in Syria" - a short read.

This is a brave move, if imperfectly executed, with a laudable goal of frustrating what she rightly sees as a continuing pattern of lies supporting endless war. In that spirit of encouraging skepticism, I had to weigh in with some refinements of what she's said. This is not such a short read, and I've forced a late start to any review by taking so long to assemble it. The case for a decent skim read is quite strong.

Unlike those cited in the Tulsi 2020 article, I have no university degree or job experience to indicate credibility, except what I've built through years of volunteer reasearch on events in Syria, with work at this blog (Monitor on Massacre Marketing), the research wiki A Closer Look On Syria (ACLOS), in various articles at 21st Century Wire, The Indicter, and others, and most recently with the Working Group on Syria, Propaganda and Media (WGSPM).

Chemical weapons allegations have been a special area of interest since December, 2012, so I have a rather full understanding of the field. As such, my thoughts on the matter are bound to be of some value.

Long, semi-optional prelude: who to trust?

I'll start with a lame critical analysis of the Tulsi 2020 article penned by the highly-promoted "OSINT" investigator and regime-change hacktivist Eliot Higgins, at Bellingcat.

As usual, Higgins spends most of his time going off on Dr. Postol, Maram Susli, Dan Kaszeta, and their ongoing dispute over the role of "hexamine" in the sarin findings out of Syria. I've never tried to understand this well, but I think if one party can make sarin a certain way, someone else can use the same or similar method; a recipe is not a fingerprint. I'm not even sure about recipe similarity, and greatly doubt this can prove the government's guilt, especially when there's so much else contraindicating that, from general motive to all the case specifics. It seems to me like we "know" this impure stuff with hexamine in it is "Assad's sarin" because it keeps turning up and being blamed on him. But it also seems that this blame keeps being wrongly placed.

Higgins promotional tweet: "I just wrote 4000 words ... it's really bad." Yes it's really bad, but sadly, Mr. Higgins was also able to raise some valid problems with the Gabbard 2020 article (which he of course referred to). This is largely due to her impressive-seeming sources. For Douma, Gabbard relies mainly on a leaked internal OPCW engineering report. For Khan Sheikhoun she primarily cites Theodore Postol, esteemed professor emeritus of Science, Technology, and National Security Policy at MIT, an expert who's never afraid to rock the boat. The headings for both sections say "Inconsistencies found by Dr Postol, et al."

Higgins was able to show nothing wrong with the leaked OPCW report. No one can, really. But he's quite right about some of Postol's blunders like conflating two incidents years apart, for a big deal with an infographic - he did that. More relevant are several errors in his Khan Sheikhoun analysis, which leaves Rep. Gabbard's dependent position on it rather weak. These are partly explained below, but perhaps the worst was the poorly-considered wrong-sized-bombs theory I thoroughly refuted in the first half of this article, before my own reading of the related blast damage.

Postol has also weighed in on Douma, but belatedly and confusedly. Anyone overly-convinced of the professor's analytical prowess needs to read this passage from an interesting article by James Harkin for The Intercept back in February. After nearly a year to consider the case for himself, it seems Postol did little or none of that prior to a prompt from Harkin, who wrote:
"When I showed videos of the canisters to Theodore Postol in Boston, he was immediately certain that both had been launched from the sky by the Syrian military and that any “brouhaha” from the Russians to the contrary could be safely ignored. ... he immediately concurred with the analysis of internet investigators like Higgins, with whom he often ferociously disagrees."

What a strange position to adopt. As presented by Harkin, Dr. Postol thought it was unexpected how a hole was barely created in the roof (at location 2) after that fall from a regime helicopter. That unexpected turn allowing some gas to be released into the "enclosed" room below, "creating a gas chamber" with "several hundred times higher than a lethal dose." This is so wrong.

There's no "lethal dose" exactly. Chlorine is simply a gas that turns to acid on contact with water. It has no neurological effect and does not cause sudden death, paralysis, or diminished consciousness, despite frequent claims to that effect in Syria (claims there vs. reality everywhere else considered here in some detail). It burns the airways to varying degrees, causing physical damage and the production of protective mucous that combine to cause possibly fatal impairment of breathing. The risk therefore is all about severity and duration of exposure, and the quality of medical response. In the most extreme cases of sudden and total damage, and some fluke cases of laryngospasm, death can be just as quick as basic suffocation. But most fatal cases take longer to finish; in a hospital with constant suction, it can be drawn out for days (far more often, it's averted altogether). Absent medical help, death could happen much quicker, but not instantly.

In a vast majority of cases, people exposed to chlorine are bothered, walk away from it, and survive with little to no long-term effects. But circumstance that don't usually exist might come into play here. Anyone tied up in a sealed room with chlorine gas could die - eventually - from almost any amount. Conversely, anyone at liberty with only dispersed creeping gas - as the Douma victims allegedly were - would leave the scene and not die, again at nearly any level. Recovery times would vary, and a death or two out of ~50 is plausible, maybe more depending on the details. But zero remains the usual expected death toll in a case like the one the opposition alleges. Illogically, they staffed with 35 dead at location 2, plus 7+ others who died somewhere else with an explanation no one seems to have provided. This fits better with a different, deadlier poison, and/or with planned killings in a gas chamber type of scenario.

Furthermore, Postol makes it sound like everyone was crammed in the room under the cylinder at impact. But allegedly the 50 or so inhabitants were sheltering in the basement at the time, three floors below this super-deadly "gas chamber." Allegedly, the gas spread like this... through the ceiling hole, into and across the third floor as shown below - through an open door, or under a closed one - down the hall and the stairs, then a bit into second floor, down and into the ground floor, and out into the street, before some overflow would make it down into the basement - all before anyone smelled it. Some heard the valve 'pop' prior to the smell. Hmm. I guess that proves it all lines up?
Generally, it's said they ran upstairs in response, knowing this gas sinks. Considering the known building layout, this means they ran out to the street, and so escaped to open air - most people's instinctive goal in such a case. Maybe there were serious issues about being in the street as well, but they mostly ran back inside, into the washroom, or up the stairs towards other sinks they mostly dropped dead near. It doesn't appear that anyone tried to re-escape after running back inside.


Professor Postol - to be fair, with limited knowledge of these details - found it all quite likely. Or does he still? Is he torn here? After that leaked engineering report came out in mid-May, he came back whistling a different tune. Thanks to real scientist(s) and servants of the good who are still working somewhere in that Byzantine ruin of the OPCW - and no thanks to his own independent analysis - Postol seems to have decided the Russian case is not so easily-dismissed after all. His ensuing analysis appears to be pretty useful, while his prior thinking was far off-the-mark, so his overall current position on Douma is a bit unclear.

Former weapons inspector, anti-war and truth activist Scott Ritter tweeted "Dr. Postol confirmed he has been advising Tulsi’s campaign on these and other issues. After listening to Dr. Postol, I believe Tulsi is in good hands." Clearly, I'm not so sure. He's made too many important errors to ignore, including those I'll explain below. People keep citing his work, and especially the erred parts, and that's bad for the cause of truth. He's done good work, especially in 2013 with the late Richard Lloyd, whatever else I haven't assessed, and any number of his new and future arguments on varied topics might be spot-on. But anymore his assertions needs to be critically considered and double-checked, not credited blindly.

Shouldn't I take these criticisms directly to Dr. Postol and see if he can refute my findings or adjust his own? I tried once, and he made it clear to me he had no interest. Blaming my supposed bad attitude, the good professor imposed a learning embargo on himself. Too bad for him and his followers. I remain open to hearing back that it was a misunderstanding, but as it stands, further efforts on my part seem fruitless.

No one is perfect. I've made many mistakes. However, I try to learn and correct them, and so far my voice doesn't carry as much weight - and thus responsibility - as Prof. Postol's does.

When Postol debated Eliot Higgins in late 2018 (hosted by James Harkin, as it happens), it was a mess with no clear winner except ongoing confusion. When Tulsi Gabbard cites half of that problem as part of her foreign policy platform, and Higgins gets to play his familiar tricks in response, to the campaign's detriment, I needed to step in. I support Tulsi, and also I'm sick and tired of this being a long-running debate between Postol and Higgins and that stupid hexamine thing always brought to the front, eclipsing so much solid evidence ignored by both of them. Or as with Douma pre-leak, when these opponents were left agreeing on the ridiculous opposition narrative. I still don't know what to make of that, except that it underlines my point: we should not let these two men keep defining the discourse to such a degree.

My own analysis below is heavy on disputing Dr. Postol, an ostensible ally in the information war. So I thought it best preface and explained by this overview. Yes, it's an "attack," and one he can defend himself from just fine - if he actually can. If not...

Who else has the right credentials to cite? Maybe a new and improved Prof. Postol. And/or some of the sharp minds working with the Working Group on Syria, Propaganda, and Media. Our excellent approach to weighing evidence (including some of my own work) is some part of what secured the confidence of whistleblowers at OPCW and the leaked engineering assessment, allowing the latest shift in perspective that finally got prof. Postol on (the right page?) The findings were quite in line with the result of our own research at the time - some of us never did concur with Higgins, and have been on about the same page from the start up to now. Who has PhDs and professorships to make them more credible? Not me, but most other people in the WGSPM including Dr. Piers Robinson, Prof. David Miller, Prof. Paul McKiegue, and several others. None of them necessarily endorses this "attack" on Postol's credibility, but they do tend to agree on the points upon which it's based - as far as I know anyway.

In both of Trump's April CW stories, my approach is primarily based on strongest evidence - especially visual - read well and deeply. Whoever's holding it and telling whatever story, the camera in itself still does not lie. I also try to specialize in prioritizing evidence - visual and otherwise - as the best avenues to the truth of events. These are the leads I primarily follow and recommend to others, even if prof. Postol or whoever disagrees - other points I've skipped might be quite important. In those cases, someone else could be cited, or it could maybe be skipped.

Also note: The findings behind my suggested points didn't all originate with me - I'll adopt points raised in open sources, and points brought to me by fellow researchers, and it's hardly possible to cite the source for each idea. Especially in this article, I just present the amalgamated best I know. Fuller explanations by subject are available on request. I'll present raised points (with notes) and suggested points for each of the two CW incidents, for four long sections, followed by a shorter conclusion.

People with more scientific training (used properly), more "credibility" and with better tools, could improve on these findings, and maybe should.

Khan Sheikhoun, 2017: raised points

KS1: "The size and shape of the crater and the damage to the cylinder is inconsistent with an aerial bomb, but rather with an IED which was placed on the ground, and then detonated."

- First, this shows she is aware an airstrike is alleged - above is written "The OPCW report states that the chemical weapons were delivered by an airstrike at Douma, and by an artillery strike at Khan Sheikhun." Airstrike alleged in both cases. Was it a pipe bomb? No - Postol himself later backed off this point (as noted in debate with Higgins, and as Higgins reminds in his rebuttal, noting Gabbard also gives a wrong link to his later - and better - findings).He now thinks a rocket was responsible (a type of artillery, FWIW)

As for what it does look like: There's no "cylinder," just a half-tube of rolled-up metal - looks like a rocket tube bent forward on impact, but that's probably illusion. Original remnants are probably gone with these pieces set there later. A filling cap, other minimal details have led to various IDs, but I never formed a firm conclusion. These fragments are most likely planted, but could be parts of the relevant weapon, which could point either way, depending on what irrefutable ID ever emerges. And even that pointing could be true or "false-flag" ( a unique bomb, seized from the Syrian military somewhere, modified into a rocket and fired, for example). I'm not the one to cite here, but those are some thoughts.

Impact damage to the pavement to me (non-expert but somewhat versed) suggests a surface rocket from the north (roughly - signs too mixed for me to be more exact), not like the alleged gravity bomb, which usually has virtually no direction but down. Postol's revised view suggests a rocket impact, as Higgins noted, involving computer modeling. That sounds like valuable work. I'm curious what direction they found, and embarrassed now that I haven't even checked. Two explosive impacts look to me like small FAE weapons by damage, and are both clearer in suggesting a north or NNW firing direction (when these too are supposed to be gravity bombs). Those are probably not from the same firing spot as the (sarin rocket?), but a related one, obviously, all somewhere north of town. The third impact way in the south of town also looks different, with no clear firing direction suggested. It would be too far off to hit with the same rocket launcher. I don't claim to have the full picture here, but you can see how it would be a good picture to get clarity on. One could start from my work. (scene analysis, plus first Postol ctricism over his own.)

KS2:"Videos of smoke plumes show the wind blowing in a different direction than weather reports for the day of the attack, suggesting the videos were taken on a different day."

- Actually, "weather reports for the day of the attack" are of limited value. Some are unreliable, modeled predictions (a historically informed guess), others might be actual readings at a nearby time at an airport x miles away. One needs to check. And one direction "reported" is a wind from the northeast that's built into the opposition's claims, with an unusual emphasis on where people died, all southwest of the alleged sarin impact point. The best method to know the wind is to measure it at the site, or estimate it from video, if that's available (it is!). And when you do this well, you find videos show a wind opposite of that needed - it blew to the northeast. Carefully established from multiple angles to account for all directions and degrees of movement with the single wind direction there can be at one time and place, this is a fact (estimated, not precise but accurate, open to refinement). No one can show otherwise, so far or ever. (Serious challenges are best brought here.)
Below: my graphic - later revisions suggest this is the right direction for upper-level wind, while at ground level, it's harder to read but similar - a bit more to the east and less to the north, but still essentially opposite of what it "should be."

For their part, the OPCW's approved investigations concluded without basis that there was "no discernable wind" (activists likely aware of the problem described the wind as roughly nil = whole basis, except for citing the result...) so they decided the sarin vapor would roll downhill to the SW, and fit the given story, which in turn supported that guess (circular reasoning and besides, OPCW mapped it wrong, making their case look plausible - by coincidence? see below). But it would roll just west or maybe northwest in general by topography, perhaps killing to the SW but also in other areas never reported - IF there were no real wind. But many activists and "survivors" claimed there was a wind to the southwest, and the video shows one as well, just opposite of what they said. You can't just take those two opposite and average them to zero.


Now, it's hard to imagine someone actually reading that wind so far off it's opposite, or by chance finding some other reason to decide on a wind that happens to be opposite of the true one. By far the most logical reason is a simple and common misreading the same mistake Prof. Postol made in his first analysis: he misread an irrelevant wind prediction - given properly by direction of origin, but misread (as many do) as the direction it blows to , which makes for opposite of the prediction. (He corrected that error and flipped his arrows, but persisted in taking that prediction as the actual wind). I suppose their narrative spinners wanted to make the wind spread a central point of proof here. One person was tasked with assessing the wind for that. Then he or the next person, through some misunderstanding, made the same basic error so a wind FROM SW meant they would map their fatalities as living TO the SW. Oops.

Perhaps there's another cause, but I can't think of what it would be. Either way, elaborate stories, filmed returns to the scene, and mapped areas from multiple sources materialized, all based on this inversion of reality. The opposition's story - and the basis for US-led missile strikes - was built around this gross error. It's been stuck that way this whole time, and hardly anyone has noticed.

KS3: "Photographs indicate that the crater had been tampered with."

- This is probably so - original munition remnants likely removed from the area, a couple discrete chunks of another set right in the crater. It's possible that sarin traces were planted there then, or never, but ...

KS4: "Photographs show persons standing around the bomb casing wearing only gloves and dust masks, which would not be sufficient to protect them from sarin residue in the crater."

- It might be safe enough within a few hours - it evaporates about as quickly as water (about as fast a dielsel fuel - Charles Wood). The air would be long clear. Soil, best not dug into bare-handed. A man in sandals might want to avoid side-sliding into the soil. It's not a major issue. People in full biohazard suits the next day or later are playing it safe, by several degrees. Besides, traces of sarin and/or breakdown products were reportedly found in and near the same crater, by sources working for the Syrian government and for its enemies. All seem to agree on this, which doesn't guarantee it's true, but either way, the sandals in the crater point seems pretty moot. And it doesn't seem this sarin, if it existed here, is what killed people that day.

Proposed: terrorists fired a rocket, likely releasing a small amount of the same black fluid often released in incidents that yields positive results for sarin (see here). Any sarin released here would not spread widely enough to kill many (the black splash says it simply splashed - no real mist, just large droplets = very little dispersion and spread). Furthermore, no one at all was reported to be affected downwind, to the northeast. The only alleged exposures are the falsely-reported upwind cases.

It's plausible the massacre managers would use sarin to kill their victims, so everything lines up. Some autopsies are said to turn up sarin traces. But it's most likely those were a few special cases killed that way for that reason. The bulk we were shown dead and dying that day lack in consistent visual details ... the last work of my colleague, neuropharmacologist Dr. Denis O'Brien in 2017 was to argue against sarin as the cause in some detail.
http://logophere.com/Topics2017/17-04/17_017-BLA-Sarin.htm

KS5: "Other inconsistencies include a picture of a dead goat which, judging by the rope around its neck and marks in the ground, had been killed and then dragged to the scene from another location."

- Was the goat dragged? I didn't look into that. It might have walked. It was very close to release point, may have been closer, may show little to nothing about spread direction. It might show planting, but I'd like to see the evidence, and I may just skip the goat as I mainly have.

KS6: "There are also inconsistencies of timing, where hospital records show victims arriving before the air strike had supposedly occurred."

- I once suspected this is a false lead, but heard some counter-arguments that made me doubt that. But I forget where that left off exactly. My first question came after looking over the discrepancies and noting they were one hour too early - perhaps exactly - to match with the opposition story. It seemed some time-zone confusion and/or variance with the recent DST time change could explain it. Has this been ruled out? Sorry, I'm not sure myself. The other option, proven or not, always seemed dubious to me; a bunch of people were gassed or sent in to act like it, an hour before the planned attack? That would show planning, and a lot of faith. What if things didn't line up right to openly claim the attack? What if the explosions on video couldn't be managed, or matched-up right, or there was no jet pass even nearby at the right time to help their story? The smartest option always seemed; plan it out with the deaths, wait for the exact time of an expected jet pass near by, launch the rockets, release their special effects fog, cause any genuine open-air exposure, and/or send out the actors to put on nebulizer masks, move the bodies to presentable spots and present them, all at the right basic time on the right day. But if something this important was proven, then it would be. I should probably know that with more certainty ...

Khan Sheikhoun, 2017: suggested points

Obviously without a full grasp of all points, I would presume anyway to offer this imperfect roster of seen suggested points of evidence.

KSS1 - wrong wind: as eagerly pre-explained above, this is a crucial fact and lucky break that cannot be challenged, and yet one that hardly anyone has noticed.

KSS2 - inflicted wounds: Strange, acute injuries appear on several of the victims, especially children. Some to the head and neck appear likely fatal, some others are perhaps unseen, and some are superfical or to the arms, for example. In at least two clear cases, young children suffered serious wounds to the face and head after "rescue" by the White Helmets, suggesting those lauded "heroes" caused or allowed this further harm. It's not obvious due to the apparent randomness involved, but this all might suggest abuse of hated prisoners and/or deliberate killing those the gas didn't finish off (because the Islamist opposition forces, the White Helmets, and the poison were all on the same side in this effort).

There's a well-illustrated precedent for this in other CW attacks reported by Islamists in Syria. In the big one at East Ghouta, 2013, a man in Kafr Batna who survived the gas was placed alongside the dead in a morgue, until he finally died of a very bloody neck injury inflicted right there between allowed images. (my video explanation (graphic), based on findings from the late Dr. Denis O'Brien.

KSS3 - other signs of managed massacre of captives: In-line with suspicions of a managed massacre, there was in Khan Sheikhoun a notable lack of in-situ body imagery; corpses appear suddenly in the beds of pickup trucks and at the White Helmets mud "hospital." It's said several hundred were affected, and nearly 100 died, yet victims are never seen in their homes or where they fell in streets. That could just be a curiously total omission, or suggest they were killed centrally at a place the responsible terrorists don't want us to see, and were then driven to White Helmets places for the public footage.

Some 250 civilians, including women and children, were reportedly abducted just days before, during brief occupation of nearby towns led by HTS (al-Nusra Front). The shown victims are quite likely from a different pool of captive, or you'd think the government side would know about the match-up and prove it somehow. You might think wrong if so, but still ... This might connect, or just illustrate the general idea - the Islamist terrorists freely abduct their fellow citizens, especially along sectarian lines, but often targeting Sunnis who support the government or just oppose the militants' agenda. Then, in this case and others, they seem to use abducted citizens to provide the corpses for their CW allegations, if not for other allegations as well.

However, detailed research disproves the widespread claims that Alawite civilians kidnapped in Latakia province in August, 2013, were used as the bodies for the Ghouta massacre later in the month. Widely-parroted claims had a few dozen of them gassed and shown in videos filmed near Latakia, perhaps in Turkey. However, no proposed visual matches were definitive, and several were clearly wrong. The Latakia victims were mostly accounted for after, and were always too few in number; the bodies shown for Ghouta numbered well into the hundreds, and most can be geolocated to the Damascus suburbs, clear across the country. Therefore, I reason the captives used for that were from a larger, less-known pool of prisoners held in that area, presumably by the dominant Jaish al-Islam, who are heavily implicated in that massacre. A similar less-obvious source for the victims may be at play in Khan Sheikhoun.

KSS4 - radar questions: After some deeper analysis, this is not the smoking gun lead I once thought, but still a valid question: this jet seen on radar passing near or perhaps over Khan Sheikhoun - can it possibly explain the gravity bombs dropped on those four spots (three explosive, one sarin), when "witnesses" said it took two jets and more passes, and even then disagree on flight directions and fail to account for the pattern of impacts ? Not likely, and it can't explain the alleged spread exactly against the observed wind.

KSS5 - various problems with "eyewitness" accounts: This guy counts as a more distant "witness" - Mahmoud al-Hasna makes several weird and suspicious claims. But there's just one compound example of a survivor-witness from my own work, on a crucial player in the story: Abdelhamid Al-Yousef, analysis with a lot of detail and sub-posts, including a number of serious issues raised about his testimony and claim to have lost hos wife and two young children. Others have done more work on him and other alleged witnesses, reported fatalities, and relations between them, but I'd have to dig for where.

KSS6 - Event timing: This is mentioned for Douma, but applies for KS as well. A number of context points are included here at ACLOS, working to similar effect on the Trump end: amid signs of terrorist plots to re-emerge sarin allegations, Trump threatens to allow Syria's government to stay in power, until Damascus has to go and change that and force a Trump attack, here for the first time (with Douma it was just a repetition)

KSS7 - alternate origins for "sarin fog": I find this all very important, but so far it's hard to get others to see it. There were several accounts of a caustic, poisonous fog coating the town, reportedly the deadly sarin itself. In videos of the day, vast fields of white mist or smoke can be seen coating most of the town, including the area of reported deaths (besides other areas with no reported deaths). It loks a bit like a natural fog, but has no natural reason to appear in those areas, and so suddenly (span between videos, presuming same day, in 15-30 minutes). My analysis clearly suggests this mist originated in two or more "wrong" (unexplained) locations - one well south of the city, and one in the north, where I think it can be seen starting to form in the accepted some plumes video (connecting the fog scene to the same day). This "fog" spreads east and north from these areas on that wrong wind noted in the other videos (same wind also support same day). Possibly toxic, but surely not sarin, this fog seems to be released as a visual effect for their CW attack fakery, but it makes little sense by immense volume and observable release points. For whatever reason, it was never clearly explained with videos linked to accounts, and the whole fog issue went virtually unnoticed, not to mention poorly-understood. (Initial fog explanation - refining the origin of the SW fog field) Below: panoramic views from roughly the same spot, facing south or SSE, showing post-attack (smoke plumes slant left = east, north slant not so visible), then 15-30 min. later (fog spreading north and east, but less so at the flat hill ("tel"), which casts a 'wind shadow' at billowing fog origin just NE of it.



End suggested points. See also: Indicter article


Douma, 2018: raised points

D1: (from the intro) "...Douma was attacked with chlorine gas bombs that were dropped from a helicopter onto the roofs of multi-story apartment buildings, where they exploded, propelling chlorine gas down into the building, and killing the people inside."

- This is all just alleged and could stand clearer marking to that effect, and refers only to the one uilding dubbed location 2. Noting how Gabbard reportedly worked with Prof. Postol, I have to wonder - did he still, recently, confirm all that so it could be stated as fact? If so, that's bad for the cause of truth.

FWIW no one alleges the cylinders "exploded" - the tanks or valves were damaged or just opened, (having suffered extremely minor damage maybe months earlier...) and pressurized 'liquid' gas would pour or drip out, depending, instantly expanding into chlorine gas that would slowly expand and flow - outward with pressure and downward with gravity - to cause its almost totally non-fatal irritation of the eyes and airways of anyone it rolled over. Most or all of them would cough, leave, recover. Chlorine has no neurological effect, is not an incapacitant. It burns, mildly to badly, compelling and allowing escape to fresh air, normally. 35 dropping dead is entirely unexpected.

D2: "A leaked engineer’s assessment, which was completely omitted from the OPCW report, contradicted the report’s findings."

- Indeed, and it did so in a way that reads completely sane to those of us who had already reached about the same conclusions from the available evidence. It's hard to deny the conclusion of all reasonable observers; these cylinders did not fall from the sky to cause this damage. They were simply placed near some damage in hopes it would look right. But as the FFM's engineering sub-team found, it didn't look right. The clearly political decision to suppress these findings, to allow for unchallenged nonsense, is a major scandal.

To this observer, it seems this kind of thing happens frequently at OPCW. The difference with the Douma case is for once the scandal was exposed from within by whistleblower(s). While we're in their debt for the clarity this leak has brought to the picture, it's worth noting we were able to largely solve the crime on our own from open sources, as we have before. Going forward, more people yet have to be prepared to do the same in the near totality of cases (including Khan Sheikhoun) where we never get such a lucky break.

D3: "A cylinder dropped from a helicopter would not have lodged partway into a hole punched into the roof, but would have penetrated the roof and possibly one or more floors below."

- Indeed - it could hardly make a hole while also stopping outside of it. Those remaining bits of re-bar in the top layer didn't stop it - some force went further down, scattering the concrete below that, breaking the rebar below that and bending it in past 90 degrees. For a heavy, air-dropped gas cylinder to do that with just a tap to the surface before tipping over there just defies the laws of physics.

D4: "The size of the hole was too big. An explosive device in the shape of a cylinder dropped from height would have created a hole just slightly bigger than its own diameter."

- "The hole" at location 4 is, noted by the engineering report and others (including WGSPM's Michael Kobs) as too small to allow entry for the assembled gas cylinder bomb alleged. At the central loc. 2, I'm not aware of the hole size being an issue. At entry it's close to the right size, while being wider at the bottom of the roof slab, likely because it was excavated by an explosive blast wave radiating outward. Note that a blast wave, unlike a physical object, could do all this while passing around some rebar, leavit it intact as we see. It's such details of the damage more than its basic size that raise problems.


D5: "The hole in the roof at Douma is consistent with an artillery rather than an airstrike, which suggests that the cylinder was placed in an opening created by an earlier artillery attack, and its contents released into the building below."

- "The hole" at loc. 2 is well-noted as such, loc. 4 not as clear but most likely the same. Loc. 2 has extreme rebar bend, with some rebar intact, radial disruption of concrete, marks from that (secondary fragmentation), all most consistent with a blast wave, not an object, moving through. There's also a clear patterns of primary fragmentation (sharp, deep, unifrom "shrapnel" holes in a dense, radial pattern) around the balcony, between first impact and the hole in the cieling the cylinder was found next to. It's obvious this was an explosive device, not just a heavy thing hitting. Below: the damage as seen from inside/below, then the primary fragmentation as seen above.



D6: "The official OPCW report failed to include the discovery of a nearby weapons lab that contained several identical yellow gas cylinders, which clearly suggests that the terrorists themselves were in possession of chemical weapons devices."

- Hm. It did include mention of the place where one cylinder of a different kind was seen. The lab didn't contain sarin or any key ingredients. It might still relate, depending what toxin actually killed these folks, but it's far from proven. This is a bungled point for team Tulsi. It deserves that "Hm."

Douma, 2018: suggested points

DS1 - Damage mismatch at both locations demonstrates likely planting of cylinders at sites of prior blast damage, as pre-explained above and largely grasped by Rep. Gabbard and thankfully by many others now. We're on track here, but not finished.

DS2 - Unexplained mass death: Only chlorine-related compounds were found at location 2, no sign of a quickly fatal agent like sarin. As explained above, chlorine is rarely fatal and never kills instantly. There's no place at loc. 2 that looks like the gas chamber they could use to make chlorine more deadly. Therefore, the chemical findings suggest the victims were probably killed elsewhere in what we're calling a managed massacre, using what could be called a gas chamber, with the toxin unknown. Verbal accounts and much visual evidence suggests the same - the bodies were brought here already dead and arranged at the site. Khan Sheikhoun had no victims shown in-situ (where they fell). In Douma they tried to show that, perhaps to avoid the same criticism, but it had to be faked, because they still don't want us to see where they actually died.

Below: what may be the last 4 victims unloaded, laid along the curb prior to placement, barefoot -shoe or boot prints in the dust (best seen on the metal hatch lid, center), to no bare footprints or signs of crawling out. The woman appears more like she was being dragged in by the elbows. The older man of course is on a stretcher. Prepared for early rescue? Whatever kind, it seems that effort was abandoned suddenly - perhaps the 7 left on the truck were dumped somewhere else nearby to flesh out the 42 bodies they were able to confirm? Inconclusive, but compelling...


An older woman apparently dragged some by the ankles, just outside the ground floor washroom entrance - note how someone took this door off its hinges and set it aside...

... which would make it much easier to drag in a number of bodies. And this is where the largest portion of them was found. For example, they might pile some bodies on a big rug (below, marked with green) and drag it right up to the shower, to help wash them for some reason (see below). They might use rags, a green air-filter mask, etc. and maybe just leave these clues all laying there.


DS3 - "mask of death" An unexpected and strange point of great power, that's still hard to grasp, is best explained here - yellow-brown discoloration and red irritation corresponding to a liquid flow from the mouth and nose across the upper face, except for an area around the eyes just the size and shape of small swimming goggles, in fact darkest and sharpest in a ring where they would be. Looking a bit like a "domino" mask, this pattern only appears clearly on some half-dozen victims, but various mixtures of its sub-features appear on many more, suggesting to me these clues apply to all seen fatalities; it left no visible signs in perhaps 1/4 of the cases, mixed signs in at least half the cases, and a very clear "mask" pattern in the other 1/4. This pattern has no natural cause to appear on living or dead people, but it's perhaps universal in this pool. This is a unique and valuable clue to their manner of death.

Below: the basic pattern, extracted from the clearest example, a woman, with colored areas singled out, the rest faded. Lighter or non-selected areas had faster flow of fluid = less contact time = less discoloration. Where it slows, it's darker: under the goggles and behind that, rolling around the goggles, perhaps pooling before dripping off the brow or forehead. Here the exclusions show likely goggles, and tight straps across the cheeks, crossing up the nose (besides a likely random bit of something on her nose). These areas were unaffected.
Not just the eyelids but the eyes of these victims, as far as can be seen, were protected from all exposure to an irritant, displaying almost zero discernable redness. The foam means pulmonary edema, which suggests their lungs were exposed to a corrosive agent, so their eyes should be exposed as well, and redness would result. (Note: a white clouding is cited by some as showing the expected burning, but it doesn't - everyone's eyes cloud over after death, and these ones did so with no redness. The burn-related opacity such experts refer to is the later scarrification suffered by survivors, not by the dead. See here.)

So again, eyes should be red, considering burned lungs and also irritated, discolored skin, but they aren't. Natural clenching of the lids can't explain it; that usually happens after first contact, so even the best efforts would yield many pink eyes, and some very red, perhaps even worse-off under closed lids swollen with mysterious orange fluid - this does happen, if the exposure is severe. The only possibility anyone has suggested is eye protection. It needn't be, but might be, as total as that from goggles, which the exclusions in the mask pattern already indicated. Exactly why that was decided on isn't obvious, but we have at least a few thoughts on it, and it's essentially proven, motives aside.

Any goggles and face-straps, etc. were of course removed at the gas chambers, or prior to display, constituting a cover-up. Furthermore, a denied last-minute washing of victims' faces and hair suggests an effort to erase these signs of - perhaps - a botched mass-killing.

This theory raises many questions, but I'm confident they are or can all be answered. A more formal assessment of the clinical signs, pathologist opinions, etc. is in progress, and will hopefully pave the way for this important lead to be understood and taken up by others. So even if one is tempted to, one should not discard this notion until seeing the better explanation.

DS4 - staging of hospital scene: From Hassan Diab to Riam Dalati, pretty much everyone agrees on this. Therefore, I haven't bothered with much detailed consideration of the whole hospital scene, nor even a ready list of good links. I looked enough to note no red eyes, so no serious chlorine exposure - a common pattern suggesting these scenes are often faked with unaffected children, who are given carrots over sticks for taking part (as described amply in relation to the Douma incident). And why would the opposition need fake scenes to show supposedly poisoned people? Because they lacked real ones they were willing to show?

DS5 - timing: noted fairly well.

DS6 - enemy family targeted? A rare family name - Bakriyeh - is given for 12 of the 35 identified fatalities. The same name appears in the records of the Douma-based VDC at an average rate of about one death per year prior to that, including an opposition military commander, Mohamed Diab Bakriyeh. In 2012 he founded a Douma Martyrs' Brigade to fight government, but by late 2014 DMB had come into open conflict with the ruling Islamists of Jaish al-Islam (JaI - Army of Islam, Saudi-backed). In fact the Douma Martyrs' Brigade spearheaded the most ambitious rebellion against JaI which, sadly, was crushed in short order. All fighters who survived re-grouped and sided with the Syrian Government, helping them shut down the rebellion they were once part of.

Fascinating story. That began a few months after commander Bakriyeh's death in battle, as they say, on 4 April, 2014. But a likely brother (Haitham Diab Bakriyeh) is listed as dying the same day from random "shelling." Perhaps they were both murdered over growing friction with JaI that had the commander's family targeted. Years later, at least 12 other apparent relatives died at once in this shady incident. A few names include other parts of the commander's, suggesting a close relation. Considering the unclear number of maiden-name wives of Bakriyeh men, and husbands of Bakriyeh women (where he and any children they have will bear a different name) it's possible a majority of the dead, or even all of them, were relatives. Were they kidnapped and finally gassed to death over the same friction initiated in 2014? We can't be certain these are even the real names, nor that it relates in such a way. But it seems likely they are and do, and the power of this possible lead begs for more exposure and, if possible, some further investigation to clarify the matter.

DS7 - bigger massacre claims called-off: Several sources gave a rising death toll that climbed to 70, 85, 100+, 120, 150, all with expected rises to come. Finally an estimate of 180 sounded final. A couple reports of 185, 190, and a rounded 200 appeared, but nothing higher, before the White Helmets and all 'credible' soures settled on "more than" 42 killed, but no more than that verified. (35 with IDs, 7 without). (see-sawing death toll reports) A year later, the story stood except for knowledgeable Islamist insiders reviving the other count to claim 187 people had in fact were killed. Until the 2019 allegations, no one indicated how many "more" than 42 had died, or explains why the rest were never "confirmed" despite so surely existing. Were those higher numbers made up or were that many truly killed? Did they suffer this botched job and "mask of death" even worse, too horribly to show off or even "confirm"? That's plausible. Did they realize too late they couldn't lace the site with sarin, had to drop sarin and claim chlorine, and realize 187 was far too many deaths to claim? That's possible, considering even the number they settled on is about 40 times bigger than it should be.

End suggested points. See also: Indicter article

Conclusion
The Tulsi 2020 article explains in its intro: "There is evidence that both the Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad as well as the armed opposition groups aligned against him have used chemical weapons (CW) during the Syrian war."

That's a safe starting point prior to flipping the picture right-side up like it deserves. But we should note that "evidence" is a word with little inherent meaning - some kinds are strong and true, others can be totally fake. Furthermore, evidence in both directions - or even actual guilt in both directions - doesn't mean an equal division of blame. One side is probably more guilty, or exclusively guilty. The evidence for government use tends to fall apart on closer inspection, in favor of use by terrorists in false-flag events. If there's any one side to blame, and I suspect there is, it's the foreign-backed Islamist "opposition."

"The bottom line is that I and thousands of my brothers and sisters-in-arms went to war in Iraq based on false intelligence and lies from our leaders—our president, our military officials, and our political leaders. We should have been skeptical then, but we weren’t... "

Weren't we? There was a lot of skepticism then, as there is now. But soldiers have to fight either way, and missiles fly regularly, sanctions are imposed somewhere with a shrug every week, etc., all regardless of the truth. It takes more than skepticism to prevent false wars. But what it takes does have to start there, and start well.

"... The cost in blood and treasure was thousands of lives lost and trillions of hard-earned taxpayer dollars down the drain. I believe it is my duty, as a veteran and member of the House Committees on Armed Services and Foreign Affairs, to make sure such false intelligence and lies are never again used to justify use of American military force."

Yes, or something towards that end. Never again, and ensured - that would be quite a feat. It's hardly ever been stopped before. What the public and its servants need is this kind of skepticism, followed up on, and more of it. We're several steps behind the warmongers and their lying lackies and need to not only catch up but get out ahead of them.

Congresswoman Gabbard, responsible assistants on such matters, thank you for your time. I hope I didn't take too much for too little gain. Any intriguing points that seemed worth a fuller explanation, let me know.

- Adam Larson, independent researcher
Spokane, WA
August 10, 2019
@CL4Syr on Twitter
e-mail: caustic_logic@yahoo.com

Sunday, February 17, 2019

A Change of Thinking on the Douma Chemical Massacre?

February 17, 2019
(rough, incomplete)
Completed enough March 3

The last week or so saw a rather interesting turn of events in the information war, and it's taken me this long even to make this space for the issue, comments from the brilliant Andrew and others, and maybe better thoughts from me.

Riam Dalati's Investigation Bombshell
As Charles Shoebridge tweeted
"Notable how journalists who for years were at the forefront of pushing #Syria rebel narratives and smearing those who had the courage to question them, are now belatedly coming clean eg re #Douma, fearing perhaps the truth will soon emerge and leave their reputations in tatters"

That refers to the BBC's Syria editor Riam Dalati, with new findings regarding the Douma incident from a (personal?) 6-month investigation, creating controversy. He sparked a bit last year, complaining how activists pose the Douma incident dead for emotional effect (tweet deleted under criticism). But this new turn was far more dramatic. Four 13 February tweets collected by Beyond Party Politics:
https://twitter.com/beyondpartypolt/status/1095683810627325952

Is this Dr. Hanan maybe related to the star witness with the stupid survival story, Naser Hanan? This all sounds intriguingly plausible, for a change, and merits more explanation - from Mr. Dalati, when and how that's possible. I sense he has a serious motivation to finish that work. The criticism this time left him going non-public with all his tweets, amid concerns he's wrecked or risks his career to try and raise these points. Some call for the BBC to "sever ties with this troll" (crypto-Islamist Idrees Ahmad. As for Ahmad's claim of a BBC distancing - they say it's his personal opinion, but defend it by pointing out he's not denying the attack (per a BBC spokesperson's comments to Sputnik News), and they may come around to embrace his limited revelations in the end. 

Harkin's Investigation 
It seems this 6-month investigation was concluded about the same time as another prominent article had raised new questions, in this area we were led to believe was pretty well understood. As Zero Hedge noted:
"The BBC’s Dalati made the statements in response to a lengthy investigative report by James Harkin writing for The Intercept. Harkin had examined the scenes and physical environs of the alleged Douma attack and interviewed eyewitnesses on site. His report paints a complex picture of propaganda and deeply compromised rebel sources such as Saudi-backed Jaish al Islam, which had control of Douma amidst a Syrian government onslaught to retake the town."
https://www.globalresearch.ca/bbc-producers-syria-bombshell-douma-gas-attack-footage-was-staged/5668724

James Harkin is a (director?) at the Centre For Investigative Journalism, who personally hosted the
Higgins-Postol debate last year, the winner of which I declared to be confusion. I don't blame Harkin for that - directly anyway. His sprawling article at The Intercept, published on 9 February, raises some interesting points I didn't even know, but also manages to achieve confusion, and little in the way of a clear overall narrative that makes sense. I will need to review it more closely sometime, but - for example - he decided the famous and disputed hospital scene was the result of natural confusion and panic. But it was a staged faux-crisis, as described by the boy Hassan Diab and several medics seen in the videos, as could be seen by intelligent observers, and as Dalati has now claimed proof for.

Again, I still haven't reviewed Harkin's piece in detail, but one thing that struck me in a quick read was the odd inversion where the good points come from an OPCW investigator (unnamed), and some of the worst from revisionist hero Ted Postol, whose reasoning I was already questioning (see debate review link above). He's sure the regime dropped that chlorine tank from on high, it made a hole because the roof was weak (and stayed outside the hole why?), it filled the room with 'fatal concentration' of chlorine in a couple of minutes (but was still frosted/releasing after 10pm), and people died because of the building layout and stuff (it made them drop dead from just chlorine? weird house...) - it was sort of a fluke, he thinks, probably not basis for airstrikes, but neither can the opposition be held to account for much in the line of fakery or murder. But this comes nowhere near explaining any of the evidence, as the OPCW investigator notes in a some spots.

GPPI's holistic logic and some gaps in it
On the other side, the Germany-based Global Public Policy Institute releases a report on "the logic of chemical weapons use in Syria."
https://www.gppi.net/2019/02/17/the-logic-of-chemical-weapons-use-in-syria

This compiles 300+ reported chemical attacks, including and ending with the most recent one;  07/04/2018 - Douma - Chlorine - Assad regime. It has a verification level of 3 - extra clear in its documentation and well-placed to draw logic lessons from. Stupid stuff. A quick review shows they have these 300+ CW attacks listed, 98% by "Assad regime," 2% by ISIS/Daesh, ZERO by anyone else. The Jaish Al-Islam attack on Sheik Maqsoud in April 2016 (sort-of admitted), is listed as Assad regime, who weren't in on the Islamist assault, using chlorine (wrong properties, wrong symptoms and death toll). Khan al-Assal in March, 2013, is noted as sarin, but said to be launched by the regime, killing their own soldiers and protected Shia civilians. This had Assad demanding an OPCW probe, finally getting inspectors there on 19 August - just in time to distract them with the 21 August sarin attack next door that killed a supposed 1,000+ civilians. A string of chemical attacks on Syrian soldiers in the same area and following days is poorly treated here: Bahariya on the 22nd was by the regime itself, they feel. No sarin was verified, so it's "unknown." Soldiers were attacked nearby on 24-8 from the approximate firing spot for the missiles of 21-8. OPCW later verified sarin. The GPPI list somehow missed this event, doesn't pin blame. Soldiers were hit again in Daraya on 25-8, again verified as sarin by OPCW, but the GPPI list somehow missed this event, doesn't pin blame. 

But 15/02/2015 in Darayya, the GPPI notes an attack, that was on SAA soldiers (none of whom died - see here). They admit it was sarin used, as the OPCW verified - and that's also part of the 98% by "Assad regime." It goes on like that. 

Countless details crucial to determining the case logic - that will build up the campaign logic - are glossed over. Consider Sept. 24, 2014 in Adra, East Ghouta - no explanation for the logic of Assad's chlorine poking holes in the left sides of the chests on at least 3-4 men described as "prisoners" (forced labor workers?), among a reported 7 men from different places who died there. We see one who's old, one who's ill, one with a hand and leg injuries, all left behind as the ruling Islamists here packed up their valuable and fled the area under government assault the following day. More valuable (workers?) probably were brought along, but not these ones.
https://libyancivilwar.blogspot.com/2019/01/fall-2014-east-ghouta-cw-attacks.html

Because what does this say about the logic of Assad chemical attacks, particularly in the East Ghouta area run by the Saudi-backed Jaish Al-Islam? When their forces are about to flee an area, Assad conveniently gasses some prisoners that weren't worth taking? Because in 2018, the coming surrender was total. They couldn't take any prisoners. As every prisoner becomes expendable, to be killed or just released, some 35+ men, women, and children wind up dead under a staged chlorine attack scene, inexplicably dropped dead with bizarre symptoms someone tried to wash off...

None are claimed as prisoners this time, but this man has wrist marks suggesting he spent some time shackled. I think that was previous, since healed, and he then spent some time with no shackles, along with these others who don't have such marks that I noticed. (the arm posture here looks perhaps recently cuffed, frozen that way, but is likely just from post-mortem body position and/or movement).

SMART News photo, mid-day 8 April, located just recently by Qoppa999, showing victim #20 or M2 an numbered here, seen in situ with woman and baby - he's one of those with a clear 'mask of death' pattern. He's mask 4, like most with a washed-off face, but note in one view the underside of his nose still appears smoke-stained. Some but not all of the seen victims were kept somewhere with a lot of smoke and soot, I think. From his fingers, I'd say this man was there for some time, doing things in the ashes with no washing available. 

But that's all got nothing to do with the logic of Assad's chlorine killing him in his own home, right? 

Between these, ratings up for:
* BBC Syria editor Dalati + (a bit ambiguous)
* Harkin at CIJ + (2 bits ambiguous)
* unnamed OPCW investigator +  (unambiguous)

Ratings down or steady for:
* Ted Postol -  (unambiguous)
* GPPI and their "logic" study  (unambiguous)
* The usual diehard apologist for every Islamist crime or deception  (unambiguous)
* Bellingcat/Higgins were barely even cited... Eliot verified Harkin's video as the same place, and that's it, aside from their noted role in shaping the early understanding by which US missiles were fired.

My thoughts on what this means, if anything
Considering these 2 mainstream people in journalism but sort of above it (producer, center director), turn to fresh skepticism with an oddly sudden onset in a few days, it's reasonable to wonder if they're assisting in some planned change of thinking. Considering the many problems with this case, it's possible some parts of that proved unsustainable under scrutiny. The way the OPCW's final report still refused to appear, going on a year after the event. already suggested a problem like this. Damage control would be called for to keep the full truth from emerging.

Consciously or not, exercises like those of Harkin and Dalati may serve a purpose in the larger script. For example, they could conceal a managed massacres of hostages, which holes in the evidence point towards, by connecting some of those holes to other, more innocent explanations. Both still suggest the government did launch chemicals and that is what killed the people, and that seems to be the central flaw in even these "off-script" analyses.

Now that the OPCW final report comes out March 1 (my in-progress review), less than 3 weeks since Harkin started the counter-noise 10 months after the incident, suspicions of coordination will be sharpened. But that could just be a leading illusion. There some natural reasons for this turn:

- For once, government control over Douma makes reporting from there relatively safe and feasible. People can go, ask around, gather information they could have learned with other attacks, except it was never safe to do so. Same applies to media and OPCW, who were able to do their own site inspection for once, and find none of the necessary sarin, etc.. It could be deduced from this limited example that access reveals opposition lies, or at least the seams of them.

- The open questions largely forced by Russian-backed infowar counter-measures that continue to resonate with the global public, the exceptionally large stakes of the incident, and no high-profile CW incidents since then to distract us, allows for more clarity than usual. Perhaps that chance was simply taken?


Anyway, guesses aside, it means what it does, and no one can be sure what that is, as events move on and I have finally finished this post.