Re: More on Syria
Posted: Wed Apr 11, 2018 7:40 am
No evidence of a chemical weapons attack at all has been found - Galloway
So it seems they have such weapons themselves.Zhivago wrote:Reading wiki I note that Jaysh al Islam was accused of carrying out a chlorine gas attack on them, back in 2016... So it seems they have such weapons themselves. I think it's a desperate attempt to get US to attack Assad. Or maybe their stores of these weapons were bombed...
This is the Peter Ford who is President of the British Syrian Society and close friends with Bashar al-Ashad's Father-in-law Dr. Fawaz Akhras?rowan wrote:This bears all the hallmarks of a false flag in the finest traditions of American warmongering propaganda:
Do I have a problem with someone who is President of an organisation that is a propaganda outlet for the al-Assad regime? Not really, he has a right to represent who he wishes. Do I believe much of what he says? No.rowan wrote:President of the British Syrian Society is a problem for you? Somebody who is actually the leader of an organisation devoted to the interests of a nation in which they have served as ambassador should be dismissed as a reliable source? What's your idea of a reliable source? The Saudi & US-backed terrorists who are attempting to overthrow the government? How about Assad's major internal enemy, the Muslim Brotherhood? Would you rather hear from them on the issue? It's clear from your comments that you have bought into the warmongering, demonizing propaganda and have a problem with Syria as a nation, not the terrorists, nor the external forces who have instigated a war by proxy to try and destroy it.
rowan wrote:Just a month ago Syrian government forces uncovered a chemical weapons plant in an area of Eastern Ghouta recently held by Saudi-backed terrorists. This was actually reported in the mainstream news but created little interest and appears to have been completely forgotten. The equipment was also Saudi-made, while other materials were of Western origin. Meanwhile, the governments of both Syria and Russia warned that the terrorists might use chemical weapons again as they were leaving in a last desperate attempt to draw America into the conflict on their side. That too created little interest. In fact, the area concerned this time was also held by Saudi-backed terrorists. & these ones are notorious for public executions and parading women as human shields. So why are we looking at images of (seemingly healthy) kids having water splashed over them? Where did they come from, unless they had also been human shields? The Syrian government has been giving the terrorists themselves free passage out of town. So why would there be children in the very spot they had been holed up in? It's a blatant false flag.
Ah right, so facts reported by the Telegraph are in fact, not facts, but a man who represents a propaganda outlet for a totalitarian regime is in fact a fountain of truth.rowan wrote:Right, so Stones has dismissed the comments of a man who was ambassador to Syria and now serves as head of an organization devoted to that nation's interests, but wants to quote Torygraph propaganda to us. Talk about cherry-picking your news sources. The very fact the BBC chose to interview Peter Ford should indicate they regarded him as a qualified and useful source. Or was that only if he said what they wanted him to say? Instead he has joined a rising number of voices suggesting there is actually no evidence against the government, and certainly no plausible motive. It is de ja vu all over again. We've just has the Salisbury saga, where no evidence against the dastardly Russians was ever produced, and not long before that the US backtracked on claims it had evidence Assad used chemical weapons last year - having already fired a missile at them as punishment. & of course the White Helmets et al had already convicted the government on that one as well. Your comments clearly indicate that you are with the terrorists and their supporters, and against the government which has been fighting them, and that is because you have bought into all the propaganda which is part and parcel of every regime change operation the US carries out - or attempts to.
Here, the Queen must be an evil old bat too, liaising with the Assads![]()
You're dismissing the expertise of a former ambassador to Syria who is now head of a British organization devoted to that nation's interest (a man the BBC itself deemed sufficiently qualified to interview on the subject), and presenting us with propaganda from the warmongering British press instead.Stones of granite wrote:Ah right, so facts reported by the Telegraph are in fact, not facts, but a man who represents a propaganda outlet for a totalitarian regime is in fact a fountain of truth.rowan wrote:Right, so Stones has dismissed the comments of a man who was ambassador to Syria and now serves as head of an organization devoted to that nation's interests, but wants to quote Torygraph propaganda to us. Talk about cherry-picking your news sources. The very fact the BBC chose to interview Peter Ford should indicate they regarded him as a qualified and useful source. Or was that only if he said what they wanted him to say? Instead he has joined a rising number of voices suggesting there is actually no evidence against the government, and certainly no plausible motive. It is de ja vu all over again. We've just has the Salisbury saga, where no evidence against the dastardly Russians was ever produced, and not long before that the US backtracked on claims it had evidence Assad used chemical weapons last year - having already fired a missile at them as punishment. & of course the White Helmets et al had already convicted the government on that one as well. Your comments clearly indicate that you are with the terrorists and their supporters, and against the government which has been fighting them, and that is because you have bought into all the propaganda which is part and parcel of every regime change operation the US carries out - or attempts to.
Here, the Queen must be an evil old bat too, liaising with the Assads![]()
And so it is in the world of Rowan through the looking glass.
I'm surprised that you're that much of a royalist Rowan. Though I suppose it's because she was cosying up to your child-killing man-crush in that photo.
I’m dismissing the opinions voiced by someone who clearly has chosen to represent Bassar al-Assad who is as much a hereditary monarch as Queen Elizabeth, having been nominated and prepared by his Father to run Syria following his death after his elder brother was killed in a car crash. Al-Assad Senior was every bit as much a tyrant as his son. Holding mock elections doesn’t change that.rowan wrote:You're dismissing the expertise of a former ambassador to Syria who is now head of a British organization devoted to that nation's interest (a man the BBC itself deemed sufficiently qualified to interview on the subject), and presenting us with propaganda from the warmongering British press instead.Stones of granite wrote:Ah right, so facts reported by the Telegraph are in fact, not facts, but a man who represents a propaganda outlet for a totalitarian regime is in fact a fountain of truth.rowan wrote:Right, so Stones has dismissed the comments of a man who was ambassador to Syria and now serves as head of an organization devoted to that nation's interests, but wants to quote Torygraph propaganda to us. Talk about cherry-picking your news sources. The very fact the BBC chose to interview Peter Ford should indicate they regarded him as a qualified and useful source. Or was that only if he said what they wanted him to say? Instead he has joined a rising number of voices suggesting there is actually no evidence against the government, and certainly no plausible motive. It is de ja vu all over again. We've just has the Salisbury saga, where no evidence against the dastardly Russians was ever produced, and not long before that the US backtracked on claims it had evidence Assad used chemical weapons last year - having already fired a missile at them as punishment. & of course the White Helmets et al had already convicted the government on that one as well. Your comments clearly indicate that you are with the terrorists and their supporters, and against the government which has been fighting them, and that is because you have bought into all the propaganda which is part and parcel of every regime change operation the US carries out - or attempts to.
Here, the Queen must be an evil old bat too, liaising with the Assads![]()
And so it is in the world of Rowan through the looking glass.
I'm surprised that you're that much of a royalist Rowan. Though I suppose it's because she was cosying up to your child-killing man-crush in that photo.
So totalitarian regimes hold elections, do they? Assad has. Of course it was dismissed by the West. You could dismiss the last elections we had too, but we're a NATO ally so no problem, and when were Saudi's last elections, by the way. But you're on Saudi's side here, clearly. So who exactly is supporting the totalitarian regimes? Your man-crush is obviously on King Salman the butcherer.
I'm not a royalist. I think the monarchy of the most murderous empire of the past few centuries should be abolished. I posted the photo merely to point out how duplicitous the British are.
Murray's latest: https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives ... ent-734946
Ah, the false flag argument again.rowan wrote:The US has been accusing the Syrian government of chemical weapons attacks since the conflict began. It has also conceded that the terrorists have used chemical weapons. ISIS used them 52 times in Iraq, in fact, while the US was itself accused of doing so in Falluja. So if the terrorists were completely surrounded by the Syrian army, who was the more likely to have carried out a chemical weapons attack on children - the government on the point of victory, even as the US was preparing to pull out, or the terrorists seeking to draw the US back into the conflict? In 2013 the US accused Assad of a chemical weapons attack, though Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist Seymor Hersh found that the US had 'deliberately framed the evidence,' which had pointed to Al Nusra, known to have access to nerve agent and used them. UN weapons inspectors Richard Lloyd and Ake Sellstrom, along with Department of Defense scientific advisor Theodore Postol, also discounted Washington's claims. A year later the UN confirmed that Assad had destroyed his stockpile of chemical weapons. But that didn't stop the US pointing the finger at the Syrian government again last year and firing missiles at an airbase - effectively bombing the evidence before the investigation. This time former UN weapons inspector in Iraq Scott Ritter, joined Postol in expressing doubts that Assad was responsible, stating there was absolutely no evidence. Finally, just two months ago, Secretary of Defense James Mattis conceded there was no evidence against the Syrian government. So here we go again. De ja vu. Once more there is not a scrap of evidence against Assad, and absolutely no motive - quite the reverse, in fact. Besides which, a military response would only make matters worse and probably kill more civilians. As Noam Chomsky said, if the US has humanitarian concerns it could start by withdrawing its support for Saudi war crimes in Yemen and Israel's sniping of unarmed protesters in the Gaza strip. In fact, the US is actively bombing and causing widespread suffering in at least seven nations across the region - including Syria.
Amazing that you would make a statement like that after the Iraq War. 2.4 million dead was not enough for you perhaps? & Wikileaks has revealed that the invasion of Libya was also based on lies. We know about the false testimony of Nayirah, that helped set the stage for America's first invasion of Iraq. We know also about the Gulf of Tonkin false flag. & the list goes on, right back to the false claims that got the US involved in a brief war with Spain 140 years ago and resulted in its first colonial acquisitions. & then some clown comes along and says Ah, the false flag argument again.canta_brian wrote:Ah, the false flag argument again.rowan wrote:The US has been accusing the Syrian government of chemical weapons attacks since the conflict began. It has also conceded that the terrorists have used chemical weapons. ISIS used them 52 times in Iraq, in fact, while the US was itself accused of doing so in Falluja. So if the terrorists were completely surrounded by the Syrian army, who was the more likely to have carried out a chemical weapons attack on children - the government on the point of victory, even as the US was preparing to pull out, or the terrorists seeking to draw the US back into the conflict? In 2013 the US accused Assad of a chemical weapons attack, though Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist Seymor Hersh found that the US had 'deliberately framed the evidence,' which had pointed to Al Nusra, known to have access to nerve agent and used them. UN weapons inspectors Richard Lloyd and Ake Sellstrom, along with Department of Defense scientific advisor Theodore Postol, also discounted Washington's claims. A year later the UN confirmed that Assad had destroyed his stockpile of chemical weapons. But that didn't stop the US pointing the finger at the Syrian government again last year and firing missiles at an airbase - effectively bombing the evidence before the investigation. This time former UN weapons inspector in Iraq Scott Ritter, joined Postol in expressing doubts that Assad was responsible, stating there was absolutely no evidence. Finally, just two months ago, Secretary of Defense James Mattis conceded there was no evidence against the Syrian government. So here we go again. De ja vu. Once more there is not a scrap of evidence against Assad, and absolutely no motive - quite the reverse, in fact. Besides which, a military response would only make matters worse and probably kill more civilians. As Noam Chomsky said, if the US has humanitarian concerns it could start by withdrawing its support for Saudi war crimes in Yemen and Israel's sniping of unarmed protesters in the Gaza strip. In fact, the US is actively bombing and causing widespread suffering in at least seven nations across the region - including Syria.
If you're just going to respond with ad hominem attacks could you at least have the decency to come up with a "witty" nickname for me along the lines of Hapless.rowan wrote:Amazing that you would make a statement like that after the Iraq War. 2.4 million dead was not enough for you perhaps? & Wikileaks has revealed that the invasion of Libya was also based on lies. We know about the false testimony of Nayirah, that helped set the stage for America's first invasion of Iraq. We know also about the Gulf of Tonkin false flag. & the list goes on, right back to the false claims that got the US involved in a brief war with Spain 140 years ago and resulted in its first colonial acquisitions. & then some clown comes along and says Ah, the false flag argument again.canta_brian wrote:Ah, the false flag argument again.rowan wrote:The US has been accusing the Syrian government of chemical weapons attacks since the conflict began. It has also conceded that the terrorists have used chemical weapons. ISIS used them 52 times in Iraq, in fact, while the US was itself accused of doing so in Falluja. So if the terrorists were completely surrounded by the Syrian army, who was the more likely to have carried out a chemical weapons attack on children - the government on the point of victory, even as the US was preparing to pull out, or the terrorists seeking to draw the US back into the conflict? In 2013 the US accused Assad of a chemical weapons attack, though Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist Seymor Hersh found that the US had 'deliberately framed the evidence,' which had pointed to Al Nusra, known to have access to nerve agent and used them. UN weapons inspectors Richard Lloyd and Ake Sellstrom, along with Department of Defense scientific advisor Theodore Postol, also discounted Washington's claims. A year later the UN confirmed that Assad had destroyed his stockpile of chemical weapons. But that didn't stop the US pointing the finger at the Syrian government again last year and firing missiles at an airbase - effectively bombing the evidence before the investigation. This time former UN weapons inspector in Iraq Scott Ritter, joined Postol in expressing doubts that Assad was responsible, stating there was absolutely no evidence. Finally, just two months ago, Secretary of Defense James Mattis conceded there was no evidence against the Syrian government. So here we go again. De ja vu. Once more there is not a scrap of evidence against Assad, and absolutely no motive - quite the reverse, in fact. Besides which, a military response would only make matters worse and probably kill more civilians. As Noam Chomsky said, if the US has humanitarian concerns it could start by withdrawing its support for Saudi war crimes in Yemen and Israel's sniping of unarmed protesters in the Gaza strip. In fact, the US is actively bombing and causing widespread suffering in at least seven nations across the region - including Syria.
Human stupidity knows no bounds!
In fact, Russia has always supported a proper investigation into the use of chemical weapons in Syria. What it has vetoed are biased reports. Indeed, one of those reports blamed Assad outright, yet the Americans themselves were subsequently forced to backtrack on its claims and concede there was no evidence at all. Investigative journalists and independent journalists on the ground in Syria have also disagreed with the reports.
Looks like the ad hominems are going both ways, but in fact this debate has been a relatively clean and constructive one by usual standards, with comments based mostly on the "evidence" and supporting arguments either way. So, yes, let's keep it that way. I was simply astounded that someone would dismiss the false flag argument when it is well-known and documented that this has been a standard method of getting the US involved in conflicts for the past 140 years, and never has this been more evident that during its most recent series of invasions, interventions and proxy wars across the Middle East. Would you respond to someone accusing ISIS of terrorism by saying: Ah, that old argument againcanta_brian wrote:If you're just going to respond with ad hominem attacks could you at least have the decency to come up with a "witty" nickname for me along the lines of Hapless.rowan wrote:Amazing that you would make a statement like that after the Iraq War. 2.4 million dead was not enough for you perhaps? & Wikileaks has revealed that the invasion of Libya was also based on lies. We know about the false testimony of Nayirah, that helped set the stage for America's first invasion of Iraq. We know also about the Gulf of Tonkin false flag. & the list goes on, right back to the false claims that got the US involved in a brief war with Spain 140 years ago and resulted in its first colonial acquisitions. & then some clown comes along and says Ah, the false flag argument again.canta_brian wrote:
Ah, the false flag argument again.
Human stupidity knows no bounds!
In fact, Russia has always supported a proper investigation into the use of chemical weapons in Syria. What it has vetoed are biased reports. Indeed, one of those reports blamed Assad outright, yet the Americans themselves were subsequently forced to backtrack on its claims and concede there was no evidence at all. Investigative journalists and independent journalists on the ground in Syria have also disagreed with the reports.
"What [Russia] has vetoed is biased reports..."
You talk utter shit a lot of the time. Only Russia is demanding editorial control of the investigation's report. That fact undermines their and you position.
You may note that the investigation into whether the Skripal's were attacked using Novichok reports today. That's investigation rather than obstruction. Should they find no Novichok then the British government will have a lot of questions to answer, but they, unlike Russia, have allowed an investigation.
for my statement that you talk utter shit a lot of the time to be ad hominem, it would have to be fallacious.rowan wrote:Looks like the ad hominems are going both ways, but in fact this debate has been a relatively clean and constructive one by usual standards, with comments based mostly on the "evidence" and supporting arguments either way. So, yes, let's keep it that way. I was simply astounded that someone would dismiss the false flag argument when it is well-known and documented that this has been a standard method of getting the US involved in conflicts for the past 140 years, and never has this been more evident that during its most recent series of invasions, interventions and proxy wars across the Middle East. Would you respond to someone accusing ISIS of terrorism by saying: Ah, that old argument againcanta_brian wrote:If you're just going to respond with ad hominem attacks could you at least have the decency to come up with a "witty" nickname for me along the lines of Hapless.rowan wrote:
Amazing that you would make a statement like that after the Iraq War. 2.4 million dead was not enough for you perhaps? & Wikileaks has revealed that the invasion of Libya was also based on lies. We know about the false testimony of Nayirah, that helped set the stage for America's first invasion of Iraq. We know also about the Gulf of Tonkin false flag. & the list goes on, right back to the false claims that got the US involved in a brief war with Spain 140 years ago and resulted in its first colonial acquisitions. & then some clown comes along and says Ah, the false flag argument again.Human stupidity knows no bounds!
In fact, Russia has always supported a proper investigation into the use of chemical weapons in Syria. What it has vetoed are biased reports. Indeed, one of those reports blamed Assad outright, yet the Americans themselves were subsequently forced to backtrack on its claims and concede there was no evidence at all. Investigative journalists and independent journalists on the ground in Syria have also disagreed with the reports.
"What [Russia] has vetoed is biased reports..."
You talk utter shit a lot of the time. Only Russia is demanding editorial control of the investigation's report. That fact undermines their and you position.
You may note that the investigation into whether the Skripal's were attacked using Novichok reports today. That's investigation rather than obstruction. Should they find no Novichok then the British government will have a lot of questions to answer, but they, unlike Russia, have allowed an investigation.
So the best you could manage was "I know you are, but what am I" and an attack on a group of people who you believe think in a certain way based on how they look. Can we add "bogans" to women when it comes to groups of people you are unable to interact with?rowan wrote:Ditto my comments referring to you as a clown would have to be fallacious to be ad hominem, whereas anyone who treats the false flag argument as some worn-out empty phrase is clearly ignorant of the nature of American military interventions over the past 140 years - and most notably in the Middle East during the past quarter of a century - and therefore most worthy of the epithet. Has there been a bigger false flag in history than GW's WMDs claims?
You talk shit is bogan-speak, indicative of a juvenile mentality and narrow mind. Are you also sporting a mullet and copious tattoos by any chance?
As for vetoes, we know how frequently the US has used this procedure and that this passes without much comment from the Western media. What Russia has actually called for is a fair and impartial investigation into the use of chemical weapons. Scott Ritter of the Irak weapons inspection team has agreed with current weapons inspectors in Syria that there has been no evidence against Assad in any of them alleged chemical weapons attacks, while independent journalists such as Pulitzer Prize-winner Seymour Hersh have suggested the blame lies with the opposition. That UN inspectors actually blamed Assad for one attack that the US itself later backtracked on and conceded there was no evidence for is sufficient grounds for the Russians to claim bias and call for an independent inquiry, wouldn't you say?
What has happened in Syria is that the US and its cronies have attempted a regime change operation by proxy, arming and training mercenaries and jihadists, many of whom inevitably turned to terrorist activities, and then used the very presence of that terrorism as a pretext for direct involvement. But despite claiming to be fighting terrorists, the US has openly bombed pro-government forces on a number of occasions. It is also currently occupying the oil-rich north-east of Syria in direct violation of international law. This is all part of America's grand strategy to seize control of the entire Middle East, as revealed by former US general Wesley Clarke shortly after 9/11. But Russia has stepped in to prevent it this time because it has a vested interest in Syria, a close ally since the CIA attempted to stage a coup there in the 1950s (around the time it staged one successfully in Iran) and has a naval base at Tartus - one of only 3 military bases Russia maintains outside the borders of the former USSR (compared to approx. 800 American bases all around the world, including right along Russian, Chinese and Iranian borders). So there is no doubt Russia has defended Syria from a marauding, racist, brutal imperial force which has butchered millions across the Middle East since the beginning of the 1990s. Only in the twisted mind of the utterly brainwashed could they be regarded as the villains in the piece.