US Bombs Syria - Paul Rigby - 07-04-2017
David Guyatt Wrote:The following post is from Tooth who texted me this morning while I was navigating the wilds of Cambridgeshire with the faint hope that I might be confronted by the wild, bare-chested Iceni women who live there - but no such luck. I was on a bus while Tooth was on a train
I had the enormous misfortune to be seated opposite a very beautiful woman en route to Aintree. I naturally offered her the benefit of my renowned knowledge of all things equine & told her to bung a large one on Go Pontinental, only to discover said nag had expired at the first or second in a mid-1970s Grand National.
There is a moral here, it's just that I have no idea what it is.
US Bombs Syria - David Guyatt - 07-04-2017
Paul Rigby Wrote:David Guyatt Wrote:The following post is from Tooth who texted me this morning while I was navigating the wilds of Cambridgeshire with the faint hope that I might be confronted by the wild, bare-chested Iceni women who live there - but no such luck. I was on a bus while Tooth was on a train
I had the enormous misfortune to be seated opposite a very beautiful woman en route to Aintree. I naturally offered her the benefit of my renowned knowledge of all things equine & told her to bung a large one on Go Pontinental, only to discover said nag had expired at the first or second in a mid-1970s Grand National.
There is a moral here, it's just that I have no idea what it is.
Just like my betting tip on Dustin Johnson in The Masters. It's the kiss of death.
US Bombs Syria - David Guyatt - 07-04-2017
Salutary insight by Peter Dale Scott.
I was one of those children who were told to hide under the school desk in the event of nuclear war....
US Bombs Syria - Anthony Thorne - 07-04-2017
Peter - I was viewing the release of the photos as a reminder of past events. Nothing new would have been requested or required. More just - Donald, remember all this? You wouldn't want it to happen again too soon, right? Maybe play ball with us for once if you don't.
As a hypothetical, the release of the photos would be more potent if it had been mirrored by internal events or messages that we're not privy to - info, a discussion, a report, a signal. For us, the pictures just suddenly appeared in the news after the FBI released them. If Trump's team encountered something pointed or ominous the same afternoon, from quarters that they knew were affiliated with the more poisonous of the Neocons who were (a.) the source of 9/11, and (b.) agitating for the Syria attack, it would probably affect how they thought about things.
Either way, something forced the Trump team to do a damaging 180 degree turn on their prior positions.
US Bombs Syria - Lauren Johnson - 07-04-2017
For me, the attack is the secondary to the stated goal of regime change. Caesar the Yellow Haired has announced he is sending in forces to accomplish that goal. Should Syria even be allowed to exist. That is the question. Putin will be batted aside, as this story line goes, telling him, "You had your fun. Now quiet down and we will let you keep Assad in power. For now."
IMO. WWIII will not happen. Things will be tense. Israel will more land called a "safe zone." The US will help out on that. The US will develop a large presence in the Northern Syria "safe zone." They will control the water and the oil. Russia cannot fight a war in Syria and win, short of of a thermonuclear exchange. And there are no winners in that. Russia will put on an awesome demonstration of diplomacy, pointing it how mistaken the US/NATO positions.
US Bombs Syria - Lauren Johnson - 07-04-2017
by Andrew Korybko
Quote:[FONT=&]Trump's latest [/FONT]press conference[FONT=&] on Syria was a public repudiation of everything which he previously said that he stood for, representing a shocking volte face which has surprised many observers, not least of which are those who had previously supported him because of those said policies that he promised towards the Arab Republic. It looks like a single [/FONT]false flag chemical weapons attack[FONT=&] was all that it took to get Trump to surrender to the neoconservative foreign policy advocated by the previous administration's "deep state" holdovers.
[/FONT][B]The Psy-Covert Ops Masterstroke[/B]
[FONT=&]In a masterstroke of psyops meet covert ops, the CIA and other intelligence agencies which have hitherto been extremely hostile towards Trump appear to have rightly calculated that a recreation of Obama's 2013 chemical weapons false flag attack would suffice for pressuring the President to recant his earlier stance towards Syria and return to the openly aggressive one advocated by his predecessor. The reason for this is straightforward, and it's because Trump doesn't want his Mideast legacy to be "just like Obama's" in the sense of "backing down" in the face of what is falsely being presented by the Mainstream Media as a gruesome chemical weapons attack committed by the Syrian Arab Army (SAA).
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Judging by Trump's newfound "change of heart" towards Syria as articulated during his press conference alongside the Jordanian King, this twofold hybrid operation of pairing a psyop with a covert one has thus far been a success, as the President has now openly hinted that a conventional military strike on the SAA might be in the cards. Moreover, UN Ambassador Nikki Haley also left open the option of a unilateral attack if the Security Council failed to approve a Libya-like resolution which could create the legal' pretext for one anyhow.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]In hindsight, the latest chemical weapons false flag drama in Syria looks to have been orchestrated in order to advance a series of predictable scenarios that the Pentagon and CIA have been working towards for months already. The author wrote about these more in detail for his 21st Century Wire analysis titled "Syria: Approaching the Finishing Line, Geopolitical Jockeying for Position' Intensifies", in which it was put forth that the US is actively working to carve up Syria into a "federation" of quasi-independent identity-centric statelets, which now looks set to expand past its Kurdish core to include a Salafist one in Idlib or elsewhere through multilateral coalition of the willing' or UN peacekeeper' support.
[/FONT]
[B]Domestic And International Contexts[/B]
Domestic:
[FONT=&]All of these fast-moving events are occurring in particular domestic and international contexts for the US, and for Trump personally. On the home front, it was just revealed almost immediately prior to the false flag attack that Susan Race by her own admission had "unmasked" members of Trump's campaign and transition teams, strongly suggesting that despite her expected denials, the former National Security Advisor had broken the law to spy on Trump and probably did so at Obama's bidding. On the same day as Trump's shock policy announcement about Syria, it was also disclosed that his Chief Strategist Stephen Bannon had left the National Security Council (NSC), though the ideologue insists that this was only because his mission to "de-operationalize" Rice's legacy had been completed.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]The curious domestic timing of the false flag attack lends credence to the idea that it was designed to deflect attention away from the Rice-Obama wiretapping scandal, and there are grounds for speculating that Bannon's dismissal from the NSC might have been part of the Clintonian Counter-Revolution which has been incessantly waged against Trump ever since his election. The latter has among its chief goals a Machiavellian divide-and-rule outcome in which external forces succeed in turning Trump and his close circle against one another just like what they ended up doing with Flynn recently.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]If any of these two assertions are true that the false flag was carried out to distract from the Rice-Obama scandal and/or was somehow timed to coincide with Bannon's NSC dismissal then it would signify that the "deep state" is manufacturing international crises in order to achieve domestic dividends.
[/FONT]
International:
[FONT=&]There's also the international context which needs to be considered, too, and it's that reports had just begun to circulate right before the false flag attack that Trump had given Rep. Tulsi Gabbard a secret message to convey to President Assad during her January visit to the country. One day prior to the attack, Trump had also called President Putin to convey his sympathies over the suicide bombing in the St. Petersburg metro and, in the words of Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, "The presidents noted that terrorism is the evil against which it is necessary to fight together." All things considered, there's a chance that Trump was on the brink of defying the "deep state's" plans for Syria and unprecedentedly cooperating with both Presidents Assad and Putin in fighting Daesh.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]As it turned out, however, the false flag chemical weapons attack occurred almost immediately thereafter and put a sudden stop to any realistic possibility that such a scenario would unfold, or at least not in the near future. Whether he's paying lip service to the neocons or is sincere in what he said, Trump has been backed into a corner by this hybrid psy-covert op and is now on the horns of a dilemma. He has to either swallow his pride and have his 2016 Syria false flag moment "ignominiously" compared to Obama's 2013 one in also failing to militarily respond to a chemical weapons false flag attack (despite Trump interestingly speaking out against such a response previously), or fall for the trap of "protecting" his desired "anti-Obama" legacy and going forward with the neocons' plans.
[/FONT]
[B]Deep State Designs[/B]
[FONT=&]The "deep state" wants Trump to take an even more direct and conventional approach to internally partitioning ("federalizing") Syria than he already is, which they believe is necessary in order to both "send a message to Russia" and safeguard their anticipated gains. This might ultimately see the large-scale and rapid insertion of US troops into the battlespace, perhaps alongside Turkish and Saudi-led "coalition" forces and eventually followed by UN peacekeepers'. This isn't baseless guesswork, either, since Sputnik reported earlier this week that the US was "developing a ground force to defeat Al Qaeda in northwest Syria", an effort which they quoted a senior State Department official as saying had thus far been "very difficult".
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Now that the false flag chemical weapons attack has taken place, however, there's a renewed impetus for assembling a multitude of American-aligned forces to commence this operation, one which might begin with the typical "no-fly zone" (which infers bombing the SAA's anti-air units and installations) and quickly develop into a fulfillment of the "safe/security zones" blueprint that's been spoken about for years already. Given that Erdogan just pledged that "there will be [operations] from now on (in Syria)" and that Ankara has "very good surprises for all terrorist groups, including…Daesh", it's indeed possible that Turkey might be planning to work hand-in-glove with the US on the prospective Idlib "no-fly zone" operation.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Although Turkish-US relations have been very frosty ever since the failed pro-US coup against Erdogan last summer, both sides might be betting that a joint operation in Idlib could be what's needed to reset the relationship and compensate for the US' scandalous support of the Syrian Kurds. The successful completion of this possible campaign could see Turkey becoming the guardian' of the new "moderate opposition rebel" alliance (Daesh 2.0) that the US is reportedly assembling around Idlib, which would consequently allow Turkey to guarantee the future existence of a Salafist "federalized" buffer statelet in northwestern Syria modelled off of the Kurdish one in the country's northeast.
[/FONT]
[B]Rethinking Russia's Syria Strategy[/B]
[FONT=&]Changing Calculations:
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]It's difficult to predict how Russia would react to any of these newfound strategic and military challenges, though possible indications might be seen in its recently changed attitude towards Syria.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]The author published a two-part series for the Islamabad-based Regional Rapport analytical outlet critically examining "What In The World Just Happened To Russia's Syria Strategy?", which was then expanded upon in two articles for 21st Century Wire about "SYRIA: Cradle of Civilization and Pivot for the Global Power Games" and "SYRIA: Digging Into The Details Of The Russian-Written Draft Constitution'".
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]The most important conclusion that was reached in pertinence to the present piece is that Russia may have resigned itself to accepting the internal partition of Syria (which it euphemistically refers to as "decentralization") and is unlikely to resort to military means in reversing what its strategists might already believe to be a fait accompli.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Reality Check:
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Relatedly, it needs to be underscored that the Russian military mandate in Syria does not extend to protecting its ally's borders or even intervening on behalf of the SAA, but is solely focused on fighting terrorism in the country. What this equates to in practice is that Moscow is under no military obligation whatsoever to defend Damascus, however much the author and many others in the Alt-Media Community may wish that it was.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]The world has already seen how Russia repeatedly turns a blind eye to "Israel's" occasional bombings of the SAA, Hezbollah, and Iran's Islamic Republican Guard Corps; Turkey's conventional military intervention in northern Syria through "Operation Euphrates Shield"; and the US' conventional military intervention in northeastern Syria to help its Kurdish-led "Syrian Democratic Forces" proxy. All of these events have been officially condemned by Damascus as illegal violations of the country's sovereignty, though the basic fact that they even occurred proves that Russia is not the military protector of Syria like some in the Alt-Media inaccurately portray it as.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]A New Strategy:
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Moreover, it can even be argued that Russia's passive (or in the case of Turkey, active) acceptance of each of these three military occurrences is part of its new "19th-Century Great Power Chessboard" strategy whereby it seeks to maximize its Great Power engagement with its peers in pursuit of what it believes to be the "greater good" of multipolarity through deal-making, though at the perceived (key word) expense of its small- and medium-sized partners such as Syria in this case.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]For example, Russia and "Israel" are allies despite the outright fake news that has taken hold of social media in pretending that President Putin is some sort of "anti-Zionist crusader", which the author meticulously debunked in a two-part article series for The Duran on this topic. Likewise, Russia's relations with Turkey are predicated on the concept of the fledging Tripartite that it aims to construct together with Iran, which was comprehensively elaborated on in a series of articles listed under the author's 2017 Mideast forecast. Finally, as was touched upon in the author's previously cited Regional Rapport articles, Russia's blind eye to the US' activities in northeastern Syria could be understood as a unilateral concession' out of goodwill' which the Kremlin might have mistakenly expected would result in reciprocal measures elsewhere and further the wished-for goal of a New Détente.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Russia's new strategy in Syria follows the Neorealist principles of International Relations theory which are premised on the goal of power aggrandizement and geostrategy (regardless of how perceptively "amoral" or "cynical" it might come off as in the pursuit of the multipolar "greater good"), though with a touch of stereotypical Liberal optimism as it relates to hoping that the US and Russia could possibly be partners under a Trump-Putin New Détente. With an understanding of the impetuses which drive Russian policy towards Syria, it's possible to prognosticate its reaction to the aforementioned scenario that the US might be planning for the Mideast country.
[/FONT]
[B]Will A Russian Reaction Translate Into A Russian Response?[/B]
[FONT=&]Reacting, But Not Responding:
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Given all that was analyzed in the subsections above, there aren't many reasons to be hopeful that Russia would militarily intervene to stop a joint US-Turkish conventional intervention in Idlib, though it's likely that Moscow will issue very sharp and highly publicized rebukes in conveying its supreme disapproval of this possible operation. No matter how much people might fantasize that it were any different, the provable reality is that US and Turkish troops are already in the country (with Russia occasionally entering into direct battlefield cooperation with the latter), and Moscow has a history of ignoring Tel Aviv's periodic airstrikes against the SAA.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]No S-400 "Air Bubble" For The SAA:
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]The US is already operating over Syrian airspace and could therefore suddenly launch air-borne cruise missiles against the SAA without any advance notice as part of its "no-fly zone" plans. Russia has never shot down or even fired at any of the "Israeli" jets which hostilely entered Syrian airspace with the express objective of attacking the SAA and its allies, so it might very well avoid doing so for the American ones which could seek to do the same thing. Remember, Moscow's military mandate only covers anti-terrorist operations, not defending Damascus' forces, and Russia probably wouldn't even want to have that enlarged responsibility if it was being offered by the Syrian side.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Foreign Tanks And Troops Won't Be Bombed:
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Accepting the unlikelihood of Russia shooting down an American cruise missile barrage against Syria and/or directly targeting the aircraft tasked with carrying out this operation, the next question comes down to whether or not it would attack the conventional American and Turkish ground troops which might stream into Idlib at the same time. The answer, as painful as it is to write, is a resounding no, since Russia already hasn't resorted to these measures against the Turkish troops in northern Syria or the American ones in the northeast, so it probably won't change its mind just because they've joined together and are now invading Idlib.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Libya Redux:
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]To sum it all up, Russia will assuredly react to any intensified American aggression against Syria, whether executed unilaterally or together with its Turkish and possible Saudi-led "coalition" allies, but it won't militarily respond to these moves in any way that would risk setting off a larger Great Power conflict.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Russia's expected rhetoric would represent a moral victory, especially if it emphasized that the US was behaving in contravention of international law just like it was in Iraq and Libya, but this would actually be a pyrrhic one because its words would be powerless to change any of the rapidly unfolding events on the ground. [/FONT]
[FONT=&]They might align with the prevailing "politically correct" zeitgeist in the Alt-Media community which self-righteously preaches the primacy of international law and Russia's relative "moral" standing, but the "realpolitik" motivations which are guiding Russia's strategists for better or for worse contradict these slogans.
[/FONT]
[B]Concluding Thoughts[/B]
[FONT=&]Trump has been backed into a dangerous corner as a result of the neocons' successful psy-covert ops masterstroke, which saw the US-backed "moderate opposition rebels" pull off a chemical weapons false flag attack almost identical to the one which happened in 2013, all for the effect of pressuring the President into going along with the "deep state's" designs for Syria or risk "repeating Obama's legacy". For an individual as influenced by the public's (manipulated) perception of himself as Trump is, and personally dedicated to being the "anti-Obama", there's a high chance that he might go along with the neocon agenda in order to "save face" and "protect his legacy".
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]This means that the US might escalate its conventional War on Syria to the point of finally delivering on its years-long talked-about plans in setting up "safe/security zones" through a corresponding "no-fly zone" around Idlib, which would inseparably entail direct attacks against the SAA's anti-air units and installations. Such an unprecedented move would instantly be met with a Russian rhetorical reaction but would more than likely lack a military counter-response owing to the "19th-Century Great Power Chessboard" and related "realpolitik" motivations which are guiding Moscow's strategists at this moment.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Just as they passively allow (and in the case of "Operation Euphrates Shield", sometimes actively work with) "Israel", Turkey, and the US' conventional military operations in Syria (in spite of occasional polemics against them), so too will Russia expectedly permit any unilateral or multilateral US-led mission around Idlib. This doesn't mean that Russia is "selling out Syria" or "betraying its ally", but only that Moscow is following its original anti-terrorist military mandate to a T in order to avoid being drawn into a larger Great Power conflict which it has no inclination to participate in.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]On the other hand, there's always the distant though still plausible possibility that Trump's paying lip service to the neocons in order to buy some time for his speculated anti-terrorist cooperation with President's Assad and Putin to eventually play out, which in that case would indicate that his words should only be taken at face value for the purpose of placating his rebellious "deep state" domestic audience. It would be ideal if this is the scenario that's really happening right now, but at this point it seems to be a lot more wishful thinking than an objective reflection of reality.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]In closing, the author would be delighted if forthcoming events proved him wrong and Trump was revealed to have been strong enough to bravely stay the course and stick to his previous strategy for Syria (however imperfect it originally was), though his decisive change of rhetoric in openly admitting that he "changed his mind" on the country and that Assad has "crossed many, many lines" point to the President being on the cusp of contemplating a major game-changing escalation in the War on Syria. [/FONT]
[FONT=&]______________________________________[/FONT]
US Bombs Syria - Dawn Meredith - 07-04-2017
David Guyatt Wrote:The following post is from Tooth who texted me this morning while I was navigating the wilds of Cambridgeshire with the faint hope that I might be confronted by the wild, bare-chested Iceni women who live there - but no such luck. I was on a bus while Tooth was on a train.
Quote:Sic Semper Tyrannis
(A Committee of Correspondence)
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« US Intervention in Syria is imminent. | Main
07 APRIL 2017
Donald Trump Is An International Law Breaker
by Publius Tacitus
Donald Trump's decision to launch cruise missile strikes on a Syrian Air Force Base was based on a lie. In the coming days the American people will learn that the Intelligence Community knew that Syria did not drop a military chemical weapon on innocent civilians in Idlib. Here is what happened:
The Russians briefed the United States on the proposed target. This is a process that started more than two months ago. There is a dedicated phone line that is being used to coordinate and deconflict (i.e., prevent US and Russian air assets from shooting at each other) the upcoming operation.
The United States was fully briefed on the fact that there was a target in Idlib that the Russians believes was a weapons/explosives depot for Islamic rebels.
The Syrian Air Force hit the target with conventional weapons. All involved expected to see a massive secondary explosion. That did not happen. Instead, smoke, chemical smoke, began billowing from the site. It turns out that the Islamic rebels used that site to store chemicals, not sarin, that were deadly. The chemicals included organic phosphates and chlorine and they followed the wind and killed civilians.
There was a strong wind blowing that day and the cloud was driven to a nearby village and caused casualties.
We know it was not sarin. How? Very simple. The so-called "first responders" handled the victims without gloves. If this had been sarin they would have died. Sarin on the skin will kill you. How do I know? I went through "Live Agent" training at Fort McClellan in Alabama.
There are members of the U.S. military who were aware this strike would occur and it was recorded. There is a film record. At least the Defense Intelligence Agency knows that this was not a chemical weapon attack. In fact, Syrian military chemical weapons were destroyed with the help of Russia.
This is Gulf of Tonkin 2. How ironic. Donald Trump correctly castigated George W. Bush for launching an unprovoked, unjustified attack on Iraq in 2003. Now we have President Donald Trump doing the same damn thing. Worse in fact. Because the intelligence community had information showing that there was no chemical weapon launched by the Syrian Air Force.
Here's the good news. The Russians and Syrians were informed, or at least were aware, that the attack was coming. They were able to remove a large number of their assets. The base the United States hit was something of a backwater. Donald Trump gets to pretend that he is a tough guy. He is not. He is a fool.
This attack was violation of international law. Donald Trump authorized an unjustified attack on a sovereign country. What is even more disturbing is that people like Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis, CIA Director Mike Pompeo and NSA Director General McMaster went along with this charade. Front line troops know the truth. These facts will eventually come out. Donald Trump will most likely not finish his term as President. He will be impeached, I believe, once Congress is presented with irrefutable proof that he ignored and rejected intelligence that did not support the myth that Syria attacked with chemical weapons.
It should also alarm American taxpayers that we launched $100 million dollars of missiles to blow up sand and camel shit. The Russians were aware that a strike was coming. I'm hoping that they and the Syrians withdrew their forces and aircraft from the base. Whatever hope I had that Donald Trump would be a new kind of President, that hope is extinguished. He is a child and a moron. He committed an act of war without justification. But the fault is not his alone. Those who sit atop the NSC, the DOD, the CIA, the Department of State should have resigned in protest. They did not. They are complicit in a war crime.
Source
This is the best explanation I have read on this subject. Will someone post it on fb so that I can share, and send as a PM to a Canadian friend with whom I am in a dialogue about this as he believes the MSM lie.
Apparently everyone's fb button works here but even others see the phantom of what used to be mine. I will never understand how technology tricks me so often. Demonic!
US Bombs Syria - Lauren Johnson - 07-04-2017
Rigby put it up.
US Bombs Syria - Albert Doyle - 08-04-2017
Dawn Meredith Wrote:This is the best explanation I have read on this subject.
Agreed. That is probably it. Only nothing will happen to Trump...
US Bombs Syria - Lauren Johnson - 09-04-2017
b @ MoonofAlabama speculates the biological gas attack was a Trump operation. I am surprised b would say this. He is usually very reserved. If he is correct, we are seeing the real Trump. The most favored explanation from a deep politics pov is that Trump chose this option in order to get the dogs off his back. But he has been floating hints for some time of this different direction for some time, especially in saying was in favor of safe zones in Syria. Safe zones require an occupying force. Amazingly he now has his excuse.
Quote:The "chemical attack" at Khan Sheikoun was fake and a show, though some people in there were probably real victims of war. This video for example, of doctors and patients in emergence roomswas theater, taken over a longer time period. The main presenter was a well-known Takfiri but with links to British services. The whole show was perfected, by specialists one would think, to fit for U.S. screens. The male "victims" were clean shaven, despite living in al-Qaeda land. They even had two blond "Syrian" kidsin there (vid) to convince the racists that "revenge" was needed.
Dilbert creator Scott Adams, one of the few who understood Trump's persuasion style and predicted his win, remarks:
It is almost as if someone designed this "tragedy" to be camera-ready for President Trump's consumption. It pushed every one of his buttons. Hard. And right when things in Syria were heading in a positive direction.
...
I'm going to call bullshit on the gas attack. It's too "on-the-nose," as Hollywood script-writers sometimes say, meaning a little too perfect to be natural. This has the look of a manufactured event.
...
So how does a Master Persuader respond to a fake war crime?He does it with a fake response, if he's smart.
The response by the U.S. was not completely fake but as small as it could be. The base was warned and had been evacuated. All movable and valuable stuff had been taken away. The attack was even smaller than planned. Russia says only 23 out of 59 cruise missiles hit the base. The others were shot down by air defense or diverted by Electronic Counter Measures. The Pentagon insists that all 59 hit. But the pictures and video from the base only show damage to 11 aircraft shelters. Additionally one radar, one missile launcher and a fuel depot were hit. That effect is too small for 59 impacts. The base was in use again 12 hours after the strike. The attack on it was not really serious.
Adams makes it look as if Trump did not sign off on the whole stunt before it happened. As if it was made for Trump's consumption. Why does he think so? Does he believe the CIA bureaucrats would not ask for a direct order from the president before launching such a risky operation? The pictures and scenes were not constructed for Trump's consumption. They were constructed for consumption by the "western" public. They followed Trump's persuasion style. The same style he used during the campaign and that let him win. Trump had several reasons to create such an incident. This was a stunt to his liking. It was his production. The blond children allowed for his Beautiful babies were cruelly murdered ... punch line. Trump proudly produced and presented to you: "Trump the President".
The whole show was designed to let Trump look strong and presidential and to get rid of the "Russia Gate" nonsense the neocons ran against him. The prospect of stopping those attacks was an offer he could not refuse. Here a tweet of mine sent on the evening before the attack was launched:
Moon of Alabama†@MoonofAPrediction:
If Trump now commits to war on Syria the anti-Trump "Russia spies" campaign will immediately stop.
Ransom paid, hostage released
8:23 PM - 6 Apr 2017
Those who warned that Trump would launch a new world war now laud him for nearly doing so:Editorial boards of NYT, WaPo, WSJ, USAToday, DailyNews, SJ Mercury News, Houston Chon & Chicago Sun Times all endorsed Trumps Syria strikes.
"Russia Gate" is - for now - forgiven and forgotten. The NeverTrump-ers laud the strike and want more of them, ever more war and "regime change" in favor of al-Qaeda's rule.
More strikes may well come. The precedent has been established. Whenever al-Qaeda in Idleb comes under pressure and needs help we will see another fake "chemical attack". Will Trump follow up on those? Or will he manage to set aside the outrage that will follow such "attacks" when it does not fit his plans? Was this a one-time show? Or will Trump serialize it?
The open Syrian, Iranian and Russian response will be an intensification of the operations in Idleb. They will smash the "rebels" there by air and push more troops into that direction. The Russian organized flight coordination over Syria has been called off. Belgium already said its airforce will no longer take part in any U.S. "coalition" operation over Syria. Others will follow that example. An asymmetric response elsewhere will follow later. U.S. forces in the wider region better watch their backs.
Some people have wondered why the Chinese criticism of the attack at the UN Security Council or during Xi's meeting with Trump was rather mild. The Chinese believe that the best that can happen to them is a United States bogged down in further Middle East calamities. If the U.S. is busy in Iraq, Yemen and Syria it will have fewer capacity to mess up North Korea or seek a conflict over this or that atoll in the South China Sea. I can not blame them for that position.
Bonus: A truly journalistic highlight in U.S. news coverage of our time is this recommendation by CNN:Jake Tapper @jaketapperFor more on Syria follow @AlabedBana
4:59pm · 4 Apr 2017
Do it! Be informed! Follow the 7 year old daughter of a Syrian Takfiri in Turkey. She can not understand, speak or write English but knows the depth of international relations. Her producers will let her look more intelligent that Tapper will ever be. (For background on that M.I.T./MI-6 child exploitation see here.)
Posted by b on April 8, 2017 at 12:35 PM | Permalink
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