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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsObama’s National Security Advisor Delivers Myth-Addled Speech on Waging War on Syria
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/09/10National Security Advisor Susan Rice deliver speech on Syria. (Photo: Creative Commons-licensed photo by New America Foundation
***SNIP
. Administration continues to use inflated casualty number, 1429.
Doctors Without Borders has reported that 355 reportedly died from the August 21 chemical attack. The group also reported that 3,600 patients displaying neurotoxic symptoms over a period of less than three hours on the morning of August 21.
***SNIP
2. There is no doubt about who is responsible for the attack.
As the Associated Press reported on September 8, the American public has yet to see a single piece of concrete evidenceno satellite imagery, no transcripts of Syrian military communicationsconnecting the government of President Bashar Assad to the alleged chemical weapons attack last month that killed hundreds of people.
***SNIP
3. Only the Syrian regime has the capacity to deliver chemical weapons on a scale to cause the devastation we saw in Damascus.
The Hindu, a newspaper based in India, reported in January of this year that the Syrian opposition has claimed it can counter the governments chemical arsenal by assembling its own stocks of chemical weapons. Bassam al-Dada, a Free Syrian Army (FSA) adviser, apparently told Turkeys state-run Anatolia news agency the opposition has the raw materials and know-how to produce chemical weapons. Al-Dada warned Syrian President Bashar al-Assad not to threaten the opposition with chemical weapons as we also possess them. But Al-Dada said chemical weapons would not be used unless the Syrian government used chemical weapons to attack the opposition.
4. Every time chemical weapons are moved, unloaded, and used on the battlefield, it raises the likelihood that these weapons will fall into the hands of terrorists active in Syria
While this is certainly a valid concern, it masks a reality, which is that members of Congress do not even know if strikes would risk the spread of chemicals and more deaths. (See 67 questions the Congressional Progressive Caucus sent to the Obama administration to have answered.)
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snooper2
(30,151 posts)I was expecting something like this-
NealK
(1,867 posts)This will be a catastrophe.
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ProSense This message was self-deleted by its author.
bullwinkle428
(20,629 posts)given by Susan Rice to the New America Foundation in which the distance between Susan Rice in 2013 and Condoleezza Rice in 2002 vanished entirely.
Dear god. It would have been better if she'd just sent the transcript out in an aluminum tube."
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K&R.
ProSense
(116,464 posts)It appears some like to ignore the facts so they can claim other people's information is a lie or a "myth"
Syria's political and military opposition is severely fragmented. The U.S. figure more closely matches reports by pro-opposition organizations such as the Local Coordination Committees and the United Revolutionary Medical Office in eastern Ghouta, a Damascus suburb hit by the alleged chemical attack.
The latter group said it had documented at least 1,302 deaths, about two-thirds of which were women and children. That figure was cited by the U.S.-based Syrian Support Group, which has a federal license to funnel aid to Syrian rebels.
http://www.latimes.com/world/middleeast/la-fg-syria-casualties-20130904,0,681916.story
The opposition is fragmented, and there is no doubt a power struggle.
At least 9,838 others were wounded, he said.
2. In a Saturday report, the Foundation for Defence of Syrian Human Rights claimed the regime used chemical weapons 28 times between July 13th and August 21st. There were 23 incidents in and around Damascus, most recently the attack in Eastern and Western Ghouta, which killed a total of 1,845 and injured 9,924, it said.
http://www.setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/xhtml/en_GB/features/setimes/features/2013/08/28/feature-04 (h/t KittyWampus)
Clearly, Kerry didn't pull the numbers out of thin air. Other groups have reported similar casualties. Even if one goes with the number reported by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a group aligned with the rebels that accuses the government of the attacks, it is still a deadly chemical attack launched by Assad.
Background on SOHR.
The UK based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) is an information office opposed to the Government of Syria. There was conflict between Rami Abdulrahman,[1] a Syrian expatriate, and Mousab Azzawi about who rightfully ran the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.[2][3] Abdulrahman's UK based SOHR has been cited by virtually every western news outlet since the beginning of the uprising.[1][3]
The UK based SOHR is run out of a two-bedroom terraced home in Coventry, UK, by one person, Rami Abdulrahman (or Rami Abdul Rahman, or Rami Abdelrahman),[4] a Syrian Sunni Muslim who also runs a clothes shop. After three spells in prison in Syria, Abdulrahman came to Britain in 2000 fearing a longer, fourth jail term.[1]
In a December 2011 interview with Reuters, Abdulrahman said the observatory has a network of 200 people and that six of his sources had been killed. Abdulrahman reports on events in the Syrian uprising, including the deaths of civilians, rebels and army defectors (which he calls "martyrs" [5] and government soldiers.[6] SOHR's methodology for counting civilian victims has been questioned,[7] as the organisation includes opposition combatants among the number of civilian casualties, as long as these are not former members of the military.[8]
<...>
SOHR has been accused of selective reporting, covering only violent acts of the government forces against the opposition for the first two years of its existence. Although critics concede that its newsgathering has become less partial, the perception is it "continues to defend Islamic extremists to avoid losing support among rebel forces".[11]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syrian_Observatory_for_Human_Rights
The LCCS:
The Local Coordination Committees of Syria (Arabic: لجان التنسيق المحلية في سوريا: LCCSyria[3] or LCCs[4]) consist of a network of local groups that organise and report on protests as part of the Syrian uprising.[2][5] In June 2011, the network was described by The New York Times as beginning to "emerge as a pivotal force" in Syria.[1] As of August 2011, the network supported civil disobedience and opposed local armed resistance and international military intervention as methods of opposing the Syrian government.[6]
<...>
LCCSyria is financed by donations from individual supporters.[7] This is further facilitated by the "Adopt a Revolution" initiative.[8] Furthermore the Office for Syrian Opposition Support, which itself was founded by the United States Department of State and Foreign and Commonwealth Office[9] and is funded by the Friends of Syria Group, provides "material support" and "training assistance" to the LCCs.[10]
Human rights journalism
Rami Nakhle, who helps LCCSyria from exile in Lebanon, said that media activities documenting protests were the network's first main activity. The Syrian human rights lawyer Razan Zaitouneh, winner of the 2011 Sakharov Prize[11] and the 2011 Anna Politkovskaya Award,[2] has documented human rights in Syria for the network.[2] The network's text and photographic reports of injuries and deaths of protestors have been used by CNN,[5] Al Jazeera English,[12] The Guardian[13] and The Washington Post.[14][15] The network publishes reports on its own website and on Facebook.[4]
On 1 February 2012, LCCSyria criticised the international and Arab community as having been "unable to take any decision that contributes to stopping the cycle of violence in Syria". It estimated the number of deaths in the civil war is more than 100,000.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_Coordination_Committees_of_Syria
"3. 'Only the Syrian regime has the capacity to deliver chemical weapons on a scale to cause the devastation we saw in Damascus.'
That's not a "myth."
Human Rights Watch: Syria: Government Likely Culprit in Chemical Attack
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10023634928
mountain grammy
(26,621 posts)Perspective is definitely needed here. I'm no fan of Susan Rice, but, for the most part, I actually do trust this administration to do the right thing. The use of chemical weapons must be addressed and, like it or not, we are in the position of world police and we are really the only country who can act (not saying we should.)
I feel diplomacy was always at the top of the list, but look who we're dealing with; Putin is the same as many of our elected representatives.
Johonny
(20,851 posts)jsr
(7,712 posts)Bluenorthwest
(45,319 posts)Rice is all about war, she would say anything to get the war she desires, anything.