Monday, November 29, 2021

Why the OPCW Left Evidence Buried in Douma

Douma Chemical Massacre - Victim Analysis -  Why the OPCW Left Evidence Buried in Douma

November 29, 2021

last edits 11/30

On 1 March 2019, the OPCW Fact-Finding Mission (FFM)'s final report on the Douma incident, S/1731 (PDF link), was released . Its conclusions included that there were "reasonable grounds" to believe chlorine gas had been used in Douma on April 4, 2018 in an attack by Syrian military, "which witnesses said killed 43 people." 

This is generally read as saying the OPCW (Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons) found proof the Syrian government dropped chlorine on Douma, actually causing the deaths of those 43 people. But there was never proof that it was an attack as opposed to the staged incident it seemed, and no plausible explanation has ever been offered as to how that chlorine could have killed those people as reported. They might well have been murdered in another way and arranged at the scene, just like the chlorine cylinder seemingly was. 

The final report did seek the advice of at least two sets of forensic toxicologists, trying to secure that link. But the experts refused to correlate the sudden immobilization or other observed signs and were unable to link the deaths to any specific chemical. The report tries - at least in spots - to make it sound like this was because the FFM was unable to examine the bodies of the deceased. Paragraph 2.11 states: "with the absence of biomedical samples from the dead bodies or any autopsy records, it is not currently possible to precisely link the cause of the signs and symptoms to a specific chemical." 2.10 explains: "the team did not have direct access to examine dead bodies, as it could not enter Douma until two weeks after the incident (see paragraph 2.2), by which time the bodies had been buried." And once they're under the dirt, apparently, it's just too late.

Exhuming the bodies isn't mentioned as an option there, but it was mentioned elsewhere in the report, and it was a possibility that was much talked about at the time. A month after the alleged attack, on 3 May, departing OPCW Director-General Ahmet Uzumcu told the Financial Times they were looking into "ways to exhume and take some biomedical samples," to see if the suspected sarin could be confirmed. "It is a very sensitive process," Uzumcu said in the widely-reported interview. "That's why they are very cautious. Although our experts have been able to attend some autopsies in the past, this is going to be the first time we have exhumed bodies."  (via Taipei Times)

The OPCW had a chance to examine fatalities following on the Ghouta alleged attack in 2013 killed an "estimated" 1,429 people, but for dubious reason they had opted not to do it. UN disarmament chief Angela Kane was involved and spoke to this decision in an interview on RT: “there were so many victims who are still alive that there was really no need to exhume bodies.” Her bizarre and completely incorrect reasoning: “a dead body can’t tell how the person dies … a living person can tell you that.” (RT October 3, 2013. ‘No sarin detected in West Ghouta environment, only in human samples' - UN's Angela Kane. RT video, published October 3, 2013. (time-stamp: 12:29) https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x16udmn - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CcfIj6WLqRk ) 

And so, in 2013, the OPCW chose to extrapolate from insurgent-screened alleged survivors who claimed to be relatives of the dead. Many of these did test positive for sarin, but at what seems to be incongruously low levels, and their high rate of positives from Moadamiya wound up looking odd next to the almost total lack of sarin returns in the environment there. It seems likely these stand-ins had volunteered for token doses. Since 2004, tests can show sarin presence at concentrations as low as 5 picograms per milliliter of blood which - by my efforts to estimate it - is about 0.002% or 2/100,000 of a fatal dose at most - probably too little to even feel. And it seems the OPCW eschewed quantitative testing for that, just looking for presence at any level, allowing for such easy fakery. (See Sarin-faking in Syria)

As for the real reason to avoid confirmation: they might have been afraid of what they would find. As noted right away by Dr. Denis O'Brien, the fatalities in Ghouta did not appear to have died from sarin at all, especially the unusually pink ones in Kafr Batna, and especially the one whose neck the insurgents had to cut to finish the job. But without really checking, the OPCW decided sarin was to blame for, and that it came from the rockets widely believed to be fired by the Syrian military. (that belief has pretty well proven incorrect.)

From there, OPCW's second effort to even investigate on the ground in 2014 ended in disaster, but a fortunate one for the blaming of Damascus. A team from the newly-minted FFM set out to investigate some alleged chlorine attacks in Hama, but they were also given the locations where  insurgent allegedly assembled the "barrel bombs" and stored the chlorine associated with the claims. Perhaps learning of that, insurgents attacked and arrested the FFM team en route - maybe as "spies for Assad" - before sending them back to Damascus empty-handed. Soon a plan was arranged where the FFM would stay out of rebel areas and far away from any CW facilities they ran, and let insurgents and their closer allies like the "White Helmets" handle evidence collection for such investigation.

That was  always a gross violation of OPCW protocols. But after the attack and a "loss of trust," what choice was there but to go all-out trusting them or else sit out the whole regime-blaming exercise? That policy produced consistent results implicating the government time and again, mainly based on crediting any claims of aircraft involvement, however grounded they were in the evidence. This held until 2018 in Douma, where the establishment of government control made direct on-site examination of an alleged government attack possible, for the first time in nearly five years. Interestingly, this is where the blame machine ran into its biggest problems.

Uzumcu bragged this was "going to be the first time" bodies were exhumed and studied, but it hadn't been done yet by the 6 July Interim Report (S/1645/2018). All it said on the subject was the intention "was communicated to the Syrian Arab Republic" (some details given) and that "preliminary preparations were undertaken by the Secretariat for this eventuality." There was no word on progress, and three months after the event it was getting very late. 

In fact this heralded exhumation was never done and the reasons for that remain muddled. Three extremely different reasons have been proposed: 

1) Assad blocked the OPCW from finding the truth of his guilt

2) experts advised there was nothing to find, and so the FFM chose not to look 

3) the OPCW's investigators wanted to avoid an unacceptable and unclear "risk" related to reason 2 but predating it, perhaps concerned there was evidence of insurgent guilt they would rather not see.

Reason 1: Assad Kept OPCW From Finding the Evidence

It was on 26 April the OPCW communicated its interest in exhuming bodies, with a "note verbale NV/ODG/214827/18." On 3 May we heard those comments regarding that plan, and then the next day came the Syrian reply. Ten months later the final report would explain:

"The Syrian Arab Republic replied in Note Verbale No. 45 on 4 May 2018 and enumerated the conditions to be met in order to conduct the exhumation. With due consideration of the time elapsed since the alleged incident, the possibility was eventually not explored any further."

"Eventually" it had become too far out to bother. But the editing at least makes it sound like Damascus' conditions - which are never specified - had a part in this, perhaps in stalling it so long. In fact the Syrian government complained about this in another note verbale of 11 March, 2019, question 7:

"Paragraph 7.8 implicitly blames the Syrian Arab Republic for the fact that the bodies were not exhumed from their graves. The Technical Secretariat Sent Note Verbale NV/ODG/214827/18, dated 26 April 2018 and the Syrian Arab Republic replied, through Note Verbale 45, dated 4 May 2018, that it would continue to cooperate with the FFM and it was ready to provide all that is necessary to facilitate the work. However, the issue of exhumation is particularly sensitive and requires numerous procedures involving various entities (judicial, religious, medical). The Technical Secretariat, however, did not follow up on this issue with the Syrian National Authority, as mentioned in the same paragraph." 

The OPCW response: "No blame was understood or implied by the FFM in paragraph 7.8 of the report." Some people might read it that way, but they insist that wasn't their intention. (Source: S/1755/2019, 21 May 2019, Annex 1 pp 6-7 PDF link )

One especially vocal and diehard adherent to this reading is Scott Lucas, an English professor of American Studies and an affiliate of Jaish al-Islam, the Saudi-backed militants who are the prime alternate suspects for the Douma massacre.  Prof. Lucas has said "one of privileges of this job is meeting a lot of wonderful people on ground who, at risk to themselves, want to get story out. So that is why I have "facts", in and beyond OPCW report." (5/30/19) For example, as he posted on his EA Worldview page "Assad forces are digging up graves in a search for the bodies of victims, hoping to remove them before the OPCW inspectors can test for chemical exposure" - or at least that was claimed by "Mohammed Alloush, a senior official of the rebel faction Jaish al-Islam" (he was JAI's  political leader and a relative of founder Zahran Alloush) 

Along with representatives of US, UK, and France, the OPCW, and the United Nations, professor Lucas has suggested Syria and Russia had stalled the Douma probe in order to erase signs of sarin. The very possibility of that is debatable, and the only stalling anyone can identify was by the UN's security agency UNDSS, whose recon team was rushed into a grenade attack by militants, which stalled things a bit further (Monitor on Massacre Marketing: Swept Under the Rug, Part 1 and part 2 ) Lucas, for his part, has said "Evidence of an attack couldn't be completely scrubbed, but a lot of it could be put beyond inspectors, e.g., the bodies of the victims." (1/2/20 ) 

Lucas' extremist-linked sources have him unusually prone to believing sarin or similar was also involved: Early on he was firm: "From the multi-sources I have - Doctors, activists, Citizen Journalists - there was a stronger agent used, This was not just chlorine used in Douma." (video) He suggests this agent's total absence from the scene is because it was "scrubbed" away, and there was a similar effort to hide clues in those bodies. And while he's since accepted that chlorine alone could explain the deaths, at least with the help of a "funnel effect," as recently as September 6 (2021) he still suggests there was more to it that remains hidden: "So why were witnesses still speaking of "stronger agent" than chlorine in #Douma attack almost 3 weeks later? Because 43 victims had to buried quickly as #Russia-regime occupied city. So no one could verify actual agent." 

There was an effort to give the OPCW the location of the mass grave containing the bodies, but as Lucas explains, "Russia-regime control meant no way round talks w Damascus." (4/30/19) Those talks led to the airing of conditions, and "#Assad regime's blocking of exhumations came thru "conditions" which eventually brought OPCW withdrawal of attempt --- you can track this fm early May in other public sources." (4/30/19) This refers to the statements of intent followed immediately with the conditions and then by no exhumation, along with some "open-source" insinuations as to cause and effect. And so, he says, "OPCW never obtained “authorization” from #Assad regime to exhume bodies" (4/30/19

When the statement "No blame was understood or implied by the FFM"  was mentioned by Dr. Piers Robinson and Sander Hildenbrandt, Lucas replied "That's not what #OPCW final report on #Douma said so don't misrepresent it" and "That's very diplomatic language by OPCW about why they didn't go --- they refused #Assad regime conditions over further pursuit of bodies." Professor Lucas noted that the report sure read as blaming Damascus, and should be read that way, whatever they told the Syrians with tender diplomacy. Still no one can specify what these conditions were, but it's suggested they were so extreme they forced the OPCW to again abandon the study of actual fatalities in an alleged CW attack in Syria. 

And finally, Lucas asserts this is exactly why the OPCW could not prove that chlorine immobilized then killed all those people: "The reason why final #OPCW FFM report does not make definitive conclusion re chlorine is because inspectors were unable to examine bodies of victims." (12/20/19) He claims that was Assad's fault, and that the OPCW blames him for it, albeit with "diplomatic" language. And that alone suggests government guilt; after all, why block access if there's nothing to hide? It would seem like the bodies held the proof, and Assad just couldn't risk it being found. 

Reason 2: OPCW Told There Was No Evidence TO Find

Former Guardian Middle East editor Brian Whitaker was a bit less rabid in addressing the issue of exhumation in his recent book, made available at his Al-Bab website: "The Syrians didn’t refuse but their reply was discouraging – it raised legal and other complications." (DENYING THE OBVIOUS: chapter 13 | al-bab.com)
 
Unlike Prof. Lucas, Whitaker doesn't claim these conditions were the reason for the OPCW's failure to examine the remains of those killed. As he writes in Denying the Obvious, there were initial plans to that effect, but "as time went on the OPCW began to have doubts about pursuing their request." And so "[t]wo months after the events in Douma, OPCW staff sought advice from a group of toxicologists in Germany" and this, Whitaker asserts, is where they got the idea to not bother digging up the bodies. The OPCW stopped themselves from looking, he argues, because there was simply no point to it. And they learned this on a trip to Germany in June.

This June 6 meeting has been the issue of some controversy. In the end, two groups of toxicology experts were consulted for the FFM's investigation. One set in September and October, 5-6 months after the incident, was cited in the final report in 2019, while this earlier visit in June was omitted from all public sources until the minutes of the meeting were leaked later in 2019. (WikiLeaks - actual_toxicology_meeting_redacted and see also my post from then: Douma Toxicology: Erasing-and-replacing the Correct Answers)

Just the other day, Aaron Maté at the Gray Zone published an e-mail by OPCW whistleblower Brendan Whelan to then-former colleagues at the OPCW protesting how that meeting was erased from the record, and urging them to help elevate these concerns so they might be addressed. In part, Whelan said: "I believe it is our professional and moral obligation to ensure the DG appreciates the gravity of the matter. There may be a justified reason for the omission – though I can’t imagine what. At a minimum a satisfactory explanation has to be provided." This was on August 23, 2019 and it doesn't seem to have been much help. Soon the minutes were leaked so the public could help raise the issue instead and, as the article notes, the OPCW started a process of investigation and punishments against Whelan. 

It's worth noting Whitaker's effort to minimize this hushed-up consultation. As he explains its purpose: "[The investigators] wanted to know what information might be gleaned from exhuming the bodies and, in particular, whether this might reveal any evidence of exposure to chlorine gas." That sounds like the entire purpose. "The toxicologists advised that for a variety of reasons, including the time since burial, “there would be little use in conducting exhumations, as the chances of gathering evidence would be almost impossible.” 

Their input on the subject was sound, but that question alone hardly seems worth a whole meeting, even in-country. Exposure to a caustic gas like chlorine leaves little to no identifying chemical trace, just non-specific damage to the lungs that can be observed as consistent. See Australia study: "the absence of biomarkers and non-specific findings at autopsy complicate the diagnosis [of chlorine poisoning], particularly as environmental levels are not stable." This applies from the moment of death, but two weeks of decay couldn't help matters. 

In fact, the German experts "were unaware of any such exhumations being done in the past to provide evidence of chlorine exposure," and they saw little reason to expect otherwise in Douma. Furthermore, the lung tissue where signs would be clearest "would likely have degraded" too badly by then to say anything at all. And so, as the summary phrases it, "the highly experimental nature of of the exercise in such a public forum would represent a risk to benefit ratio that was unacceptably high." We'll return to this phrase. 

"Following that, the plan for exhumations was abandoned," Whitaker writes, and "the FFM based its decision on the toxicologists' advice." Later on, the FFM would claim "with the absence of biomedical samples from the dead bodies or any autopsy records, it is not currently possible to precisely link the cause of the signs and symptoms to a specific chemical." In fact even with these things it seems unlikely, as they privately knew. But this "inability" to access the bodies was semantically pinned on Damascus elsewhere in the report, and so they had to keep highlighting that as something that mattered. Publicly.

So... expert advice said don't bother digging up the bodies, and that's exactly why the FFM never did so. This is certainly a more grounded explanation than prof. Lucas offers or than the FFM's final report would suggest, and seems to be at least part of the real answer. But this reading does gloss over at least one important issue; exhumation might NOT have been a waste of time. 

Assuming the bodies buried are the same ones we've seen, there was probably little value in confirming the non-specific lung damage behind the pulmonary edema that was already evident in the images. An April, 2019 briefing note of the Working Group on Syria, Propaganda and Media (WGSPM) agreed, but explained:

"...it would still have been possible to obtain DNA samples, which might have allowed victims to be identified through matching with living relatives and with each other. Other identifying information might have been obtained from clothing, items in pockets or X-rays. Establishing the identity of the victims would have been critical in determining whether those who came forward to give interviews reporting that their relatives had died at Location 2 were telling the truth."

Noting bodies should be stripped, washed, and specially wrapped prior to burial - and some were seen so wrapped - the pockets clues would be unlikely (and of dubious value to begin with). But the rest all held some promise of shedding light on the mysterious circumstances of their deaths. I'll go into this in a little more detail below under reason 3, OPCW risk avoidance. 

Whitaker sums up the Working Group's thrust fairly enough before trying to rebut it (bolding mine): 

"Among those who defend the Assad regime against accusations of using chemical weapons, the quasi-academic Working Group on Syria, Propaganda and Media has previously criticised the OPCW for its "failure to proceed with exhumations". The Working Group suggests the bodies photographed in Douma were not local residents killed by the regime in a chemical attack but captives killed by rebels in a "managed massacre". It implies the OPCW didn't exhume them for fear of what might be revealed."

"However, the leaked minutes of the June meeting offer a far more straightforward explanation: that the FFM based its decision on the toxicologists' advice." 

They don't seem to have addressed DNA identification, or any other aspect aside from that of chemical exposure. Despite the limits, much could have been learned from a look at the fatalities. But the FFM tossed these clues aside without adequate explanation. There must be a reason, and we can guess it was "fear of what might be revealed."

Whitaker suggests exhumation was the only question raised in the June meeting, specifying "it appeared not to have been regarded as a full-scale “expert consultation” about the likely cause of deaths." This suggests it was always the plan to look into that central question only in September and October, at least 5 months after the incident. This is similar to the engineering study of how the cylinders came to be where they were seen, another important question officially un-addressed until October-November, but secretly addressed months before with an inconvenient and omitted engineering report. As such, the "on-going" work in these two areas that was mentioned in the public interim report of July (PDF) was allegedly still months away from even beginning. Or perhaps the reasonably-timed first tries had failed to produce the results they wanted.

Whitaker is also clear that the value of exhumation is what the FFM "wanted to know" in June. Maybe it was not the only thing they asked about, but "in particular" it was the meeting's "most immediate purpose" or (in an earlier piece) it was "the first topic raised" in Germany. Their meeting, he wrote, "lasted about an hour and after the discussion of exhumations it turned" - as conversations sometimes wander off course - "to the question of possible chlorine use" and whether it even could explain the observed fatalities. The experts offered a resounding NO. In fact, after seeing numerous images "the experts were also of the opinion that it was highly unlikely that victims would have gathered in piles at the centre of the respective apartments at such a short distance from an escape" to fresh air, and then just lay there and die, if they had simply been exposed to chlorine. Also: 

In the opinion of one employee who had been at the meeting and heard the fuller explanation, that suspicion was "fueled by" by how the deaths "do not match chlorine rather than corpses arranged for propaganda purposes." (WikiLeaks - correctly_redacted_emails_re_toxicology_minutes

These are notably astute observations, but luckily - as Whitaker tells it - those questions weren't really raised or relevant at the moment. A "full-scale “expert consultation” about the likely cause of deaths" was only slated for a few months later. These experts did chime in the point, but only the later opinions were actually sought and actually mattered.

However, it turns out cause of death was something they wanted to know already. The meeting minutes start by explaining "The purpose of the visit was two-fold:

1. To solicit expert advice on the value of exhuming suspected victims...
2. To elicit expert opinions from the forensic toxicologists regarding the observed and reported symptoms of the alleged victims ...more specifically ... whether the symptoms observed in victims were consistent with exposure to chlorine ..."

The chief expert's "propaganda exercise" comments were in response to this less "particular," less "immediate" "second item" of discussion. Furthermore, as related in the summary, "the team gathered after the meeting" and it was "agreed by all present that the key "take-away message" from the meeting" (my bolding) "was that the symptoms observed were inconsistent with exposure to chlorine..." (underlined in original). The uselessness of exhuming bodies was also discussed, but it wasn't the only subject, nor even the "key" one. 

It remains odd how no one at the time took down a record of this official meeting that would later also go unmentioned, and it was down to whistleblower Whelan to assemble one from memory. But this belated record was reviewed by others (e-mails seen - Wikileaks) and none of this was contested. Some wording was tweaked, and then the expert advice was included in the draft interim report: 
"The rapid, and in some reported cases, immediate onset of frothing described by victims is not considered consistent with exposure to chlorine-based choking or blood agents. The opinion of a number of toxicologists, specialists in chemical-weapons-related intoxication supported this assessment."
...
"It should be expected that on encountering the irritant gas, victims would instinctively have retreated and exited the building, which was within a few metres away." ... etc.  (source: WikiLeaks - FirstdraftInterimReport)
Brian Whitaker had to realize the June meeting was in fact an “expert consultation” about cause of death. Note how he had to qualify his disputation by saying that "it appeared not to have been regarded as a full-scale" one - whatever that means. 

The offered opinions were actually sought, but then rejected and withheld from the public record. The draft interim report's timeline stops on June 3, just before this meeting, but it was probably meant to be updated to note the source of several cited points. Then the public interim report in July dropped all of that and skipped the timeline, and said only that work on toxicology was "on-going," like "in progress." But if so, the first part of it was never published; it was totally replaced in the final report with the second set of toxicologists, and the consultation in Germany is not on the final report's updated timeline of activities or noted anywhere therein. 

The final report should reflect the preferred toxicologists' input, but they're not cited with any specifics for or against chlorine death, just mentioned as being consulted. The report says "[A]n agent capable of  quickly killing or immobilising" was suspected, but chlorine is not particularly capable of that. A string of observed and reported symptoms were found mostly inconsistent with chlorine, with a few being debatable and/or extremely vague. Therefore, " determination of the aetiology from these observations can be related to a wide scope of chemicals" but "it is currently not possible to precisely link the cause of the signs and symptoms to a specific chemical" - not even the only possibly relevant one they had found at the site. 

Whitaker writes "Alex’s supporters preferred the version set out in Whelan’s minutes of the June meeting and accused the OPCW of cherry-picking – listening to some toxicologists while ignoring others." ("Alex" apparently was Whelan, under a pseudonym Whitaker helped blow by doxxing this whistleblower.) But he offers no effective rebuttal; they clearly did pick one set and made the other vanish. The one they picked was a relative cherry compared to what they heard in Germany, although it seems far from ideal for their purposes (but we can guess the preferred set of experts refrained from theorizing about a staged "propaganda exercise" at least).

The FFM final report concludes it's "reasonable" to think a chlorine cylinder "impacted" the apartment building and that chlorine alone caused these deaths. But even with all this effort, they couldn't link it to any of the specific details OF those deaths. Maybe this is "why final #OPCW FFM report does not make definitive conclusion re chlorine." Even the B team wouldn't clearly say that, and they didn't want to drag it out looking for a C team. 

So ... "key" message aside, Whitaker credits the ignored German experts with the FFM's decision to leave the bodies out of the investigation. He says their reasoning was "straightforward," but if so, why did the FFM never publicly mention its basis, in fact ignoring or editing out all reference to the meeting it came from? And why did they instead lead people to read that Syria's "discouraging" but unspecified conditions were to blame? (and that was indeed implied)

While this all reflects a real aspect of the investigation, it may not be their full, true, or original reason.

Reason 3) OPCW "Risk" Avoidance
As we eventually learned, whistleblower Whelan was the main one drafting the FFM's interim report, which at one point cited a third reason never mentioned by OPCW leadership or their helpers in the media, like Lucas and Whitaker. By this, the decision to leave bodies unexamined hinged on the chemical analysis received two weeks before that Germany meeting and a resultant ... you could say "fear of what might be revealed." 

On 22 May,  the first laboratory results were received by the FFM team, and "no nerve agents or their decomposition products were detected" among them, just chlorine, a basic irritant or caustic agent. There should be nothing much to confirm, and this raised the question if that even could explain the deaths, and those are the two things they asked about in Germany. The draft report, circulating sometime in June, apparently after the Germany meeting, includes the same passage we've seen about intent to exhume, here as paragraph 6.8, followed by a second paragraph that was cut out of the public report, giving some follow-up we weren't supposed to see.


It's worth noting how Brendan Whelan primarily drafted this, perhaps as he was already forming his more "activist" views. As such, we can't be sure this is just what the FFM would otherwise be planning to say publicly. A passage like this can't show anyone's true and secret thinking, but this one... might include some "snark" or reveal more than usual. Otherwise, let's take it as what the interim report was planning to say. 

Here paragraph 6.9 says "the plans for exhumations were halted" as or because "proceeding with the exhumations presented a risk to benefit ration [sic] that was no longer acceptable." This was when they got back the samples in late May - NOT after hearing Assad's impossible "conditions" in early May, NOR after consulting with experts on June 6, as Brian Whitaker's book argues. 

The wording here does clearly recall the advice from the German exerts; as put in the summarized minutes, "the highly experimental nature" of digging for chlorine clues 2 months on "would represent a risk to benefit ratio that was unacceptably high." But it's not clear if that was the experts' own wording added to the pre-existing case against exhumation. It may also be an idea the Fact-Finding Mission had formed two weeks earlier, maybe tacked onto a prior consultation over cause of death, and the experts were just seen as confirming it. But either way, when the question was put to them, it may have been to secure a public reason for a decision the FFM had already made, perhaps for other reasons. 

It's not immediately clear what "risk" is referred to here. Again, no specific chemical signs were expected, which speaks to lacking the kind of "benefit" they had hoped for with sarin returns. And the same lack of specifics might be read by some as a lack of evidence that should exist, or as evidence against a chemical release. Although a solid case could still be made based on all evidence combined, a risk of confusion would be raised. The bit about it all being in "such a public forum" supports that.

Exhumation takes work and raises complications, but aside from misreading, it shouldn't pose any legitimate risk, although a few illegitimate kinds are possible. Consider that chlorine could hardly explain the deaths anyway, as the FFM had clarified by the same experts in Germany. The value of confirming something that doesn't even help the case might be low, and in fact it might be better left unconfirmed, to leave possibilities open. As Aaron Maté recently reported

"When the original report was being finalized, there were still dozens of samples remaining to be analyzed. Accordingly, the inspectors left it open that further analysis could in theory turn up new evidence and hypothesized that: "a. The victims were exposed to another highly toxic chemical agent that gave rise to the symptoms observed and has so far gone undetected." 

"This passage — with its mention of the toxicologists’ assessment and a hypothesis leaving open the possibility of a staged incident — was never published by the OPCW. And the team would never get the chance to continue this critical area of investigation."

Final lab results still showing no nerve agents at the scene would clarify that point only in February, 2019, allowing the final report in March. But until then hope was held out; in June, the toxicology minutes have team leader Sami Barrek pursuing this line of inquiry with little effect

Maybe the OPCW's investigation leaders didn't want to to risk their wiggle-room to hypothesize different agents to blame Syria with. Ruling that out with autopsies would end it. And then if it was found the victims died from sarin or similar after all - when environment samples didn't show the same thing - it could mean site-scrubbing if that were possible, OR probably that those Syrian people died somewhere else that the OPCW's insurgent partners were hiding. 

Or they might have found some contradictory clue as to how the victims died, like that they weren't gassed at all. The draft report had mentioned a possibility that "The fatalities resulted from a non-chemical-related incident," suggesting the scene was staged with corpses from elsewhere. And again there was the risk of finding by DNA that the victims were not the people claimed. It could even be shown that they specifically were other people last seen being kidnapped by the Jaysh al-Islam militants occupying Douma and Eastern Ghouta at large. And the search might have found signs of bondage during the gassing, or some other clues of how they died the OPCW leadership and its sponsors didn't want to risk seeing. 

When there can be no good answer worth proceeding on, what's the motive to find which bad answer is true? Especially if one is able to use the flexibility of ignorance to further one's agenda? The course the OPCW's investigators chose has left the situation mysterious and malleable for the Lucasses and Whitakers of the world, and that may be the main reason they left that evidence buried in Douma.

Conclusion

In summary, the clinicopathologic evidence was seen as presenting a stated "risk," and perhaps other secret risks, which the OPCW's Fact-Finding Mission wanted to avoid. The nature of that is still unclear, and may be innocent, as Brian Whitaker proposes; they risked finding nothing. But it seems the decision to leave the fatalities unexamined was internal to the OPCW and driven by a desire to actually avoid some of the evidence. 

This is what the WGSPM briefing note had suggested, and as it still seems was the case with Ghouta, as well as with all the incidents in between where the OPCW allowed the likely perpetrators to handle much of the investigation. Such avoidance would be in line with suppression or omission of engineering, toxicological, and other evidence that complicated the politically convenient findings for Syrian guilt. 

And whatever the true reason for neglecting this evidence, OPCW leadership saw fit to put forth unfounded suggestions of other reasons that would themselves implicate the government side. Altogether this suggests - as the global public is finally coming to realize - this corrupted organization's intent was never to ascertain the truth, but just to further the dirty information war against Syria on behalf of the corrupting powers that have seized it.

49 comments:

  1. Page 124 of Whitaker's book talks about the redaction of names on the toxicologist meeting, so there is also the possibility that this is how Whitaker got Dr Whelan's name - through someone who knew the names of attendees or it was even one of those who attended. But clearly, at least one person involved with that meeting -Dr Whelan - has integrity and actually wanted to investigate Douma.

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    1. Marc Blum's response Whitaker quotes and is the basis for claiming not "appropriate qualifications" even though subsequent toxicologists couldn't and didn't link the victims to chlorine either.

      Blum also appears to be friendly with..

      https://archive.md/GkM6c

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    2. Could be, as far as I know. I don't know all that far.

      Delete
    3. Blum, interesting. The hope for "limited" opinions, set off by theorizing that aimed at the reality ... then doubting qualifications, taking no record, deleting all record ... also interesting.

      Delete
  2. You say, "..in 2013, the OPCW chose to extrapolate from insurgent-screened alleged survivors who claimed to be relatives of the dead. Many of these did test positive for sarin, but at what seems to be incongruously low levels,.."

    The specifics of the biomed results are not publicly available, nor the type of procedures that would "demonstrate exposure". As far as I understand the presence of Sarin in blood or urine samples could not be shown, due to bonding of the agent and hydrolysis degradation. So really the results should be said to be 'consistent' with Sarin exposure. But the indeterminacy of the biomed testing procedures available to the OPCW, means that potential alternative causes for the 'indicating' results cannot be ruled out. http://images.shoutwiki.com/acloserlookonsyria/3/32/S_T_Biomed_Analysis_Poster-1.pdf

    I put a note on ACLOS in relation to the OPCW tests on novichok in Wiltshire.
    http://acloserlookonsyria.shoutwiki.com/wiki/Talk:Poisoning_of_Sergei_Skripal#They_confirm_the_findings_of_the_British_in_relation_to_the_identity_of_the_toxic_chemical.

    Do you think that microdosing would be a feasible explanation here also? From what is publicly available, I suspect that the biomed results were only weakly supportive (perhaps only breakdown products such as IMPA, MPA)

    ReplyDelete
  3. It's a bit of a side track from your post's main focus, but the main point I wanted to suggest is that: if a party wanted to give a false impression of exposure to an organophosphate nerve agent in a living person, then this could potentially be achieved by administering doses of less toxic breakdown products of Sarin (such as the commercially available IMPA and MPA) This would be, I think, a more practical method than administering micro doses of an actual nerve agent. As you say the OPCW doesn't reveal any the specifics of its blood and urine testing in its published results. As far as I can see there is nothing there (in published materials on eg Ghouta, Khan Sheikhoun, or Salisbury) to falsify the hypothesis that any positive biomed results on living subjects could be the result of dosing with such more readily available and easier to handle products. If the OPCW specified what exactly would and wouldn't count as a Sarin-like substance in these instances then perhaps that would rule out this line of thought.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If plausible and there was a plan involving microdosing, wouldn't they have also done this for Lataminah?

      Delete
    2. IMPA could be done with macro-dosing too, but if it was fluoride-ion linked to sarin or a sarin-like substance, it pretty well means sarin, and Ghouta was such a case. So micro-dosing with sarin would be needed, and would probably be micro, and it could be super-micro and still work, so my guess is it probably was. As for Lataminah, not sure w/o review.

      Delete
    3. The two tests for the Latiminah report mentioned were done 3 months after the incident. There wouldn't be any point for the rebels to try to manipulate a positive result then. The big show at Khan Sheikhoun had already delivered the result they were looking for.

      Delete
    4. Right, but the White Helmets were filmed collecting the parts that day (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pq_Ne3CnkKA etc.), before Khan Sheikhoun. The Lataminah soil samples were delivered 12 April (apparently at the same time as those for KS). Would they not offer e.g. positive blood samples like those taken by SAMS for KS? And if a 'bigger show' was planned at KS, would they not use the multiple bomb parts there instead of for a field in Lataminah?

      Delete
  4. I can't say as I'm not familiar with those incidents, or regrettably with alot of what is covered in Caustic's important work.

    I think the FFM wasn't able to take biomed samples in Lataminah - or at least any results are classified. Did the rebels provide their own supporting evidence?

    I'm just making a narrow point about blood and urine testing for Sarin according to what the OPCW has publicly available. The breakdown products of Sarin (IMPA and MPA) are commercially available. So it's one possibility among others that can't be ruled out. It could perhaps be falsified with much more detail from the OPCW on the specifics of its testing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. https://www.opcw.org/sites/default/files/documents/S_series/2017/en/s-1548-2017_e_.pdf

      Page 24 table 3- they tested 2 witnesses, both negative. But bomb parts complete with sarin were provided. Witnesses supposedly in hospital for 3 days, filmed by NGOs such as Idlib Health Directorate and with symptoms lasting up to 20 days- logically blood samples would have added greatly to their evidence.

      White Helmets' sarin evidence collection progressed from videos 'showing the world' on the same day (this incident) to later (for 24 March 2017) apparently only wanting to show recovered bomb parts to the OPCW. Keeping sarin-related chemicals in the 'right place', not filming people standing on 'sarin craters', not mixing up bomb parts for other attacks, providing bomb parts for Khan Sheikhoun etc. has apparently been problematic.

      Delete
    2. Off topic Lataminah and probably already noted, but it's interesting that the vegetation that looked like water had been poured over it (FFM's "burnt and faded") just happens to be in the *exact* place the river flows as seen in 2014

      https://imgur.com/a/FMAEDsT

      Delete
    3. Diagonal, hey. I had internet get broken just then, then waited for a fix yesterday that didn't happen, so ... first time seeing this, sorry. And maybe I missed the point, but if it's whether IMPA/etc. could be fooling the tests: possible where they just check for that, but at least sometime they use a fluoride ion regeneration test, it means sarin, pretty much ("sarin-like" is a super-narrow category). I'm not sure off-hand where that was and wasn't used, at least without some review, but it seemed like IMPA fakery was possible in a few cases, but not for example with Ghouta, Khan Sheikhoun, dome other high profile cases. Will come back to this as soon as I get regular internet back.

      Delete
    4. https://www.bellingcat.com/app/uploads/2017/11/Whitered-plants.jpg

      More 'sarin' in Cambodia, Missouri etc. etc.

      https://scx2.b-cdn.net/gfx/news/2013/3-2-1-newstudyreve.jpg

      https://apnews.com/article/la-state-wire-mo-state-wire-michael-brown-ar-state-wire-ia-state-wire-15f799240ef84204b5e2f2f42aaa8043/gallery/20bbc8cf0dda45a980f4c6fcb2eba693

      https://www.alamy.com/fresh-grass-breaks-through-last-years-dry-grass-after-the-flood-image248913642.html

      https://i2-prod.dailypost.co.uk/incoming/article11159862.ece/ALTERNATES/s615b/JS86873970.jpg

      Delete
    5. It would also explain the garbage around the crater quite well- not dumped, washed there by the river.

      Delete
    6. The results for Khan Sheikhoun did show anomalies S/1510/2017 5.89 (p42) IMPA in urine but negative blood samples. Which is not possible from exposure to Sarin gas. The report suggest cross contamination of samples as an explanation. Although it looks to be consistent with ingestion of IMPA.

      As far as I'm able to understand, an agent with the same structure as Sarin but with a different leaving group (when bonding) could give a positive a result for Sarin in the blood tests. I guess that is a small set of possibilities.

      But the reports sometimes just talk about metabolites of Sarin being found in biomed samples.

      Delete
    7. I can't find the part about cross contamination for those three 'inconclusive' witness samples, just that they note the anomaly? Could it just be explained by SAMS mistakenly providing blood samples and urine samples from different people?

      The OPCW would probably point to (6.10) the fact they did report it, they didn't witness SAMS taking these samples and that these were excluded anyway.

      Delete
    8. Sorry, it was in the later JIM report: 78 (p31)
      https://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/N1734930.pdf

      Mismatching samples would be a potential explanation

      --------------

      77 has this nugget: the commission did not investigate the time discrepancies of the early hospital arrivals "and cannot determine if they are linked to any possible staging scenario..."

      Delete
    9. Ah the JIM and their impeccable logic. At least they didn't leave it out of the report and just tell 60 Minutes about it instead (like their supposed pilot recordings evidence).

      SAMS have precedent as they provided the not-seen-in-any-video-or-photo Dr Mamoun Morad as witness (endorsed by Nikki Haley and RIP). I hope that before he died he found out that the boy he gave details of washing, treating and their subsequent death was actually a girl and is alive and well. Even rescued by the family friend who should have been able to help Dr Morad with her name and gender.

      But as the JIM notes, we also have "paramedical interventions that did not seem to make medical sense" and detecting sarin with an "ambient air monitor". So, even for those who haven't tied their career to Syria chemical attacks being completely genuine, also botching the samples might not be outside the realms of possibility.

      Delete
  5. I really should have read your 'Gareth Porter on Faking Khan Sheikhoun Sarin Results' beforehand. Obviously I can't say about when the flouride ion regeneration test was used or not. Were they using the term 'sarin-like' before that procedure was introduced?

    In a microdosing with sarin scenario the amount administered would have to account also for the IMPA found in the urine results given the half-life of IMPA and time between the alleged incident and the testing. That is unless both IMPA and a microdose of sarin were administered. I don't know the thresholds that would be consistent with IMPA being traced in urine. But would any fakers be aware of the flouride regeneration test and realise they would have to take it into account?

    My line stems from looking to reconcile 1. That the OPCW presumably had biomed results in Salisbury and Amesbury consistent with A-234 exposure and 2. The lack of any apparent lasting effects in the novichok nerve agent survivors. I thought it probable that perhaps only metabolites were found.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Doesn't Sergei Skripal have some lasting effects? Via Google translate but muscles in "his nasopharynx" https://www.mk.ru/social/2020/12/01/doch-otravlennogo-sergeya-skripalya-vpervye-raskryla-semeynye-tayny.html

      I haven't really studied the novichok (with spy games, maybe Russia has some reason to want to hurt Skripal or could just as easily have been Skripal providing things to 'anti-Putin activists' who then spray it in the Skripals' faces.. saving local children and ducks and causing the sudden epiphany that they are actually GRU), so apologies if I've missed some of the detail.

      Delete
    2. Whatever happened to the Skripal's that afternoon I don't believe they were poisoned with novichok. https://twitter.com/timtron2020/status/1387035867513069569

      Nor do I believe that Nick Bailey or Dawn Sturgess and her partner were poisoned by novichok as presented. John Helmer's site has the most extensive follow up on the cases. It looks like Sturgess had a heart attack after taking contaminated drugs. http://acloserlookonsyria.shoutwiki.com/wiki/Poisoning_of_Sergei_Skripal#Amesbury_incident

      Delete
    3. I've read some of John Helmer's articles, not too long ago I was searching for the source of his quotes about Navalny's flight being prepared in advance. I couldn't find any source but Helmer himself which left me with some doubts.

      My only knowledge of fentanyl comes from the hospital giving it to my mother as pain relief for travelling home (with late-stage blood cancer). FWIW, the effects were 1 hour of relief, a bit 'odd' to talk to and then a rush to go to bed and sleep. Not an overdose of course.

      With Salisbury Plain etc., I don't think having relatives in the army in Salisbury is as much of a stretch as it might look- especially to anyone outside of the UK. The same with the hospital 'no diagnosis for 36 hours' - seems an unecessary claim to make for fakery?

      Reading the account of Skripal beating people up in prison left me thinking he could have many enemies and FWIW Yulia Skripal's tracheostomy scar is definitely real (looks just like my brother's).

      Delete
  6. Lataminah - BC actually uploaded a video of the first collection. Mohammed Kayyal and friends, not bothering with the suits this time

    S/1548/2017 6.5 additional soil samples "5 July" (this video?), munition parts handed over on 17 July (+ 17 August although table 2 says 18 July)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b3W6mFzOr6c

    + videos of alleged victims on the Bellingcat channel

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 01SDS and 07SDS appear at least to be in the same place- so having taken 07SDS out of the crater for Halab Today to film, they simply left it there for months?

      Also shows that the position of things on this video and the FFM's map are worthless. Unclear how they go on to find 04SDS as not in the immediate area.

      Delete
    2. Not that it really matters I suppose, it's clearly just the stick with which to beat Syria

      https://reliefweb.int/report/syrian-arab-republic/report-director-general-organisation-prohibition-chemical-weapons-11

      "declare to the Secretariat the facilities where the chemical weapons, including precursors, munitions, and devices, used in the 24, 25, and 30 March 2017 attacks were developed, produced, stockpiled, and operationally stored for delivery"

      The chlorine cylinder from 25 March needs a 'facility' now? And happens to involve the bomb type that was repurposed, jets that don't leave a message on Sentry Syria, sarin that uses the same declared precursors + method, sarin that doesn't degrade after months outside, all of which has been kept completely secret from all those satellites and intelligence agencies. But Syria won't just claim precursors were stolen as plausible deniability.

      Perhaps Bellingcat can 'geolocate' the big shed with a "WMD" sign above the door. Get another 'award'?

      Delete
    3. + even with all the BC chemists and it being "obvious" and 'consistent' with chlorine, here Higgins was telling everyone to look out for "signs of sarin" at Douma

      https://archive.md/oCS0V

      Delete
  7. It would be good to get a translation of this

    https://www.aljazeera.net/programs/private-investigation/2020/7/20/%D8%A8%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A3%D8%AF%D9%84%D8%A9-%D9%88%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A8%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%87%D9%8A%D9%86-%D8%AA%D8%AD%D9%82%D9%8A%D9%82-%D8%AE%D8%A7%D8%B5-%D8%A8%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AC%D8%B2%D9%8A%D8%B1%D8%A9

    For one thing, I'd like to know why before they start scraping up the dust from the balcony, they appear to have pushed the cylinder into the crater

    https://imgur.com/a/hSpXYij

    And at the base of the 'funnel cap' appears to be the base of a lamp. Clearly a lampshade. They did share this footage with the OPCW, right?

    https://imgur.com/a/mV7si0m

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It really was a zipper on the stairs by the way, catches the light and shows up clearly here

      https://imgur.com/GiNlwVY

      Delete
    2. https://imgur.com/9zHBB79

      Also - the plant, is real or not?

      There also seems to be a shoe underneath that step ladder.

      Delete
    3. These are the casualties arriving at hospital (presume Point 1?) presented by AJ

      https://imgur.com/fd9jKkR

      Only 3 people, definitely not Diaa Mohammed, Amani and twins and from a White Helmets vehicle. So can only be after 9pm

      Entering the hospital flanked by concerned camo wearing men. Later - 2nd pic, inside a tunnel where the camera passes men who are clearly not being gassed (if entrance to Point 1: 8.42 supposed casualties "at the entrance of the vehicle-tunnel of Point One" + 8.61)

      https://imgur.com/Rr1E1Hq

      Delete
    4. Also on Youtube if interested

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBSguGHnA6o

      + a shot of the 30 March sampling of the crater to the south
      https://youtu.be/eFyF6i1v884?t=111

      Delete
    5. + cylinder doesn't appear to have moved between 8 April and 9 (see stones next to it). Comparing, it looks like the scratches were already there when the cylinder was first shown

      https://imgur.com/ov63nn0

      Delete
    6. Unclear if the new scene-tampering footage was ever handed over to the FFM-

      "Only one video showing the cylinder at Location 4 contained metadata and it was recorded on 10 April"

      ..and Mr Henderson's engineering assessment #28. Also unclear how they decided it was made of metal as it appears to be torn (and looks like a lampshade to me in other videos)

      https://imgur.com/JxmRZsn

      Delete
  8. Hilsman's article seems to have appeared (was behind paywall?)

    https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/12/05/conspiracy-theories-and-tragedy-in-douma-syria/


    "some civilians reacted by seeking higher ground"

    Insult the victims by saying most would go into a ground floor apartment with no front door


    "unaware that a canister was lodged above them, pouring deadly chlorine gas"

    Insult the victims by saying they can't smell or feel it even if they couldn't see it


    "conspiracy theorists who claim the moving of bodies was proof of the bodies having been planted"

    But what for what medical or any other purpose would you drag a girl a few metres down some stairs? Or place a dead baby on top of other corpses?


    "frost-covered canister"

    They never check the penthouse apartment in any of these videos. But someone must have? And seen this 'frosted' cylinder. But then no-one films it until the next day, even when they have gas masks. No-one is a witness about it to the FFM.


    "the much grislier scene [than the hospital] that had been filmed hours earlier"

    10pm is not "hours earlier" than the reported (FFM 8.49) "Shortly after 19:00"


    "uploaded by a Douma-based activist with the caption “last hug.”"

    https://archive.vn/5xMiM

    It came with a short story not just a "caption"


    "Conspiracy theorists have additionally claimed the hospital footage was filmed before the attack itself"

    FFM report 8.49


    "The night of ‪April 7 two very different sets of images began to circulate" .. the hospital and ... "one showing the gruesome footage of the victims of the actual crime"

    The hospital doesn't show "victims of the actual crime" now...


    "the White Helmets hurried to protect the bodies"

    FFM 8.67 "The bodies were doused with water and taken to Point One to be prepared for burial". They were supposedly buried by "local residents and members of the Jaish al-Islam rebel group"

    Dopey Hilsman links to the description of preparation for burial for deceased patients. FFM 8.47 is clear: "Prior to the military campaign, the SCD was in charge of burying the deceased".

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "Subsequent international coverage of the incident gave the impression that the panicked civilians filmed at the underground hospital were all victims of the chlorine attack"

      Nothing to do with the activists uploading the photos and videos together with those of the dead, with titles like this, the people in the hospital videos saying they lived at "al-Shuhada Square" and the entire international press all making the same 'mistake' that the videos were of chlorine victims. And nobody had any videos of actual victims to send them instead.


      "the conspiratorial scenario where the civil defense would serve master-chemist forgers"

      'Master chemists' would leave "chlorinated organic derivatives" in only "trace quantities"? They would obviously have had to have chlorine cylinders and releasing chlorine wouldn't make them 'master chemists'.


      "witnesses and survivors were shuttled between the hands of various intimidating military outfits."

      The same nonsense claiming that Hassan Diab was somehow coerced into not appearing sick in any way in any video. But they used a "military facility" to coerce a boy who by Hilsman's own admission hadn't been a victim of a chemical attack to say.. he wasn't in a chemical attack.


      "Rahaibani claimed the living victims there had been suffering from nothing more than inhalation symptoms from smoke and dust"

      But Hilsman has just conceded the people in the hospital videos are not "victims of the actual crime" how dare the doctor agree. And why did they not film the 'real' ones?


      "Robert Fisk had the opportunity to interrogate and interview medical staff on the ground, the OPCW still struggled to obtain full access to the Crime Scene in Douma"

      Because journalists didn't need a security detail to keep people away and sniper screens etc. How can anyone not understand this?


      "The Fact-Finding Mission, which was tasked with collecting evidence, and establishing if chemical weapons had been used, rather than making final conclusions or attributing blame, was even physically attacked by unidentified gunmen"

      Unless he is trying to conflate Douma 2018 with a previous incident, the UNDSS with Russian MPs not the FFM. And what a stupid thing to say having moaned about "being forced to rely on the regime along with the Russian military".


      "Syrian and Russian Officials chose to respond on behalf of the witnesses instead of risking an unscripted response" and "Russia had promised to produce a far greater number of witnesses to back up claims that were ultimately never substantiated"

      So the 'coercion' and 'military facilities' didn't actually coach any of the witnesses to be able to answer questions and apparently didn't work on enough people for Hilsman? Suspect he doesn't even know about Grigoriev's witnesses.


      "Hassan Diab had allegedly debunked with approximately 40 seconds of prepared remarks"

      Because it's not like Hassan Diab ever gave any additional interviews.


      In part 2 I suspect he will just cry over how Maté is a better journalist than he will ever be. Or maybe find some friends and relatives to tell us about the victims, show photos of when they were alive.. instead of just more activist tales? Of course not.

      Delete
    2. I'd at least like to think that anyone reasonable and not a shill would accept that Bellingcat 'matching' these two positions from below is not good evidence for a 'frosted cylinder'

      https://imgur.com/8j3xQzW

      Along with the lack of witnesses, photo/video or FFM mention..

      The soot is a good indication of the cylinder's position at the time of the fire

      Frost 2.5 hours later, with no valve and at a temperature above 25°C is stupid

      There is no visible chlorine gas from any recent release in the 10pm video

      The recorded rain the next morning would explain the marks in the soot (and can be seen on the metal remnants in the earliest video)

      Delete
    3. https://twitter.com/PatrickHilsman/status/1472625916358668290

      Hilsman also doesn't seem to understand that there won't be any substantiated facts for alternate injury without actually examining the bodies (unless those staging the scene are as stupid as he apparently is).

      Delete
  9. In fact, none of them seem to understand it.

    https://twitter.com/KostjaMarschke/status/1473053881185837056

    If they had exhumed and examined the bodies and then found no supportive facts they might have had a point. What do they expect, some kind of confession video?


    This is Hilsman's explanation for the wet hair-

    https://twitter.com/PatrickHilsman/status/1472794104304181251
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MNx2I8q6taA

    Ignoring the massive logical error about the apartment being full of choking chlorine gas, whether Syrians spend their time watching public information film from the 1940s in English (and on their phones that they wouldn't ever use to light up a dark room), the film being about "liquid gas" getting onto skin and assuming they were taught this -

    they haven't blocked any doors and windows in fact going into the apartment that doesn't have a door

    it's just wet hair (8.90) rather than entirely wet victims and "otherwise dry environment"

    they haven't removed contaminated clothing (and don't seem to have any baggage or other clothing at all.. beyond the couple of notebooks etc. where are their personal effects if they were "living" in the basement? Masa family at least has backpacks, clothes etc.)

    The 'removing clothing' part is interesting in terms of the hospital 'panic' about a nerve agent - recalling Lyse Doucet's boy from Khan Sheikhoun enveloped in a sarin cloud but still apparently wearing his "spider suit" in a Turkish hospital. This 'panic' only extends to hair... The activists who moved both cylinders mid-video can't have been too concerned about nerve agent either?

    ReplyDelete
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    1. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
    2. As a minor point, as the FFM consultations with "four toxicologists and one toxicologist and medical doctor" were so much better (because "longer".. better the expert the longer it takes them to diagnose..) than those with WIS, shouldn't they all be religiously arguing that the wet hair is due to profound diaphoresis?

      Delete
  10. Presumably given the logo, this was an official JaI video (with guest White Helmets vehicle?)

    https://youtu.be/decy4rVIm90?t=59

    No idea how old the footage is but I'm sure Clyde Davis would be pleased to see the strength training (they can always join in the Idlib weighlifting championship) and that towards the end of the video JaI really did have a crane.

    ReplyDelete
  11. This is Douma by Patrick Hilsman then...

    There was a conspiracy with the UNDSS to prevent inspectors entering Douma before the bodies were too far gone to exhume (and the OPCW too as they didn't even have the consultation about exhumations until June)

    https://twitter.com/PatrickHilsman/status/1473824613197099010

    "They" are "lying about the US position on Douma" because anon officials in the US press somehow trumps actual White House statements

    https://twitter.com/PatrickHilsman/status/1473398416189370374

    Victims ran out of the basement but in "pitch blackness"..

    https://twitter.com/PatrickHilsman/status/1471222043563733000

    ..they couldn't see where the chlorine was coming from (even those who are quoted as saying what colour the cloud was and didn't know it was coming from in the building even after going up a floor) but still managed to find "water sources"...

    https://twitter.com/PatrickHilsman/status/1473660399870431237

    ..where they all ignored the choking agent for a while and washed their hair..

    https://twitter.com/PatrickHilsman/status/1472794104304181251

    ..ignoring more modern advice (e.g. https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/323700#treatment "move somewhere where there is clean air, which may mean going outside", "remove the clothing and wash the entire body" etc.) then all fainted on 2 different floors and sides of the building in unison

    https://twitter.com/PatrickHilsman/status/1473649523708862469

    developing pulmonary edema + think foam quicker than Paul Blanc's timing and all dying before the White Helmets arrive 90 mins later.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Here Hilsman makes up that WIS were given..

    https://twitter.com/PatrickHilsman/status/1473679981360394244
    "almost none of the related information"

    Aside from the fact he has no idea what "related information" that is and all based on the erroneous suggestion that Marc Blum's line about 'limited insight' infers that the FFM actually had much more toxicology-specific evidence to share, subsequent toxicologists explicitly state they aren't given the additional information they need:

    (8.100) "the absence of additional and specific information"

    (8.103) "based on the information reviewed and with the absence of bio-medical samples from the dead bodies or any autopsy records"

    No exhumation = no greater insight to give them

    Perhaps instead of spending the night moving bodies about pointlessly, JaI and friends could have taken samples, maybe filmed an examination. Perhaps Riam Dalati's "brute and shifty" Dr Abu Bakr Hanan who apparently wasn't busy?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. So Hilsman thinks it was..

      https://twitter.com/PatrickHilsman/status/1474571036767236098

      "info about civilians seeking higher ground" and that they "wouldn’t have time to review witness accounts"

      but Blum is saying the toxicologists can't conclude 'bodies were placed', only whether what is seen is consistent with e.g. chlorine which it wasn't.

      Hilsman still doesn't seem to understand that it isn't about "feel[ing] safe outdoors at ground level"

      https://twitter.com/PatrickHilsman/status/1474569726173106177

      but that it would be unbearable to be inside the building. The subsequent toxicologists in 8.96 are clearly saying that given the chance, people would be "attempting self-extrication or respiratory protection". Whether victims died trying to escape is relevant (and discussed in 8.96) but based on what is *actually observed* not on what Nasr Hanan thinks they were doing.

      Timing and reported symptoms are relevant but were given to WIS.

      Delete
    2. More Hilsman stupidity- Dr Whelan's own notes were "second hand"?!

      https://twitter.com/PatrickHilsman/status/1474587247529836556

      Soumik Paul even agrees it's accurate. Marc Blum simply disagrees that the toxicologists could offer any conclusion outside their expertise (which is all the FFM would want for an objective opinion). Not one response said they had extra toxicology-specific evidence that wasn't shared and Hilsman has no idea what that evidence would be. What would be the point of holding any such evidence back anyway?

      Delete
  13. https://twitter.com/KostjaMarschke/status/1474563540665122816

    "Immediate frothing is not inconsistent with chlorine gas exposure. Which is why it was observed frequently in WW1"

    WW1 Chlorine mixtures aside, having looked through reports of accidents there doesn't seem to be enough distinction between excess salivation (imo it is this the lay person sometimes reports as 'foaming at the mouth') and the thick pulmonary edema foam relevant to Douma. Which is why no consulted toxicologist has said that the thick foam at Douma could appear "immediately".

    ReplyDelete
  14. Being generous, excess salivation as 'foam' could explain that part of the Masa story.. just not the timing.

    Hilsman is still sharing the 30 March photo of the woman in Huaian for the accident 29 March without knowing how long she was exposed for etc.

    Ignores the residents who tried to stay indoors but could not bear it, escaping but ending up in hospital

    https://www.scmp.com/article/497666/chlorine-spill-leaves-villages-toxic-legacy

    "Mr Zhu and his wife shut their doors and closed all windows, as they thought it would be the safest to stay at home. However, they could not put up with the irritating smell and decided to run to the neighbouring village. 'We just kept running and running, using our pants to cover our months.'"

    Another accident in China (100 litres)

    https://www.newsweek.com/chlorine-gas-cloud-engulfs-town-sparking-mass-evacuation-1587019

    Ignore the video at the top.

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