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Sunday, May 7, 2017

Chomsky and the Syria revisionists: Regime whitewashing

Muhammad Idrees Ahmad recently published this important two part critique of Noam Chomsky. Idrees Ahmad is a lecturer in digital journalism at the University of Stirling. He is the author of The Road to Iraq: The Making of a Neoconservative War, and is currently writing a book on the war of narratives over Syria. The New Arab just published:
Chomsky and the Syria revisionists: Regime whitewashing

Muhammad Idrees Ahmad
5 May 2017

This is Part I of a two-part article examining Chomsky and the Left's relationship with Syria. Read part II here.

Early on the morning of Tuesday 4 April when General Mohammed Hasouri of Syria's Air Force Brigade 50 prepared his Sukhoi Su-22 for take-off, he may not have known that in the age of satellites and smartphones, crucial details of his flight would be recorded.

The jet's communications were intercepted by Syria Sentry spotters when, using the call-sign "Quds-1", it lifted off from al-Shayrat airbase at 6:26 am local time; CentCom recorded its flight path on its bombing run over the Idlib countryside; and, 12 minutes later, when it delivered its lethal payload on the town of Khan Sheikhoun, multiple witnesses reported the strike, posting videos online (which have since been verified and geo-located.)

A comprehensive Human Rights Watch report has since confirmed that the regime was responsible for this and at least three other chemical attacks since December as "part of a broader pattern of Syrian government forces' use of chemical weapons".
The attack killed 92 people and injured many more. The World Health Organisation (WHO) and Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) found the symptoms consistent with exposure to a nerve agent; the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) found "incontrovertible" evidence that the agent used was sarin; and, after testing samples of the chemical agent, the French government concluded that the attack was perpetrated by the "Syrian armed forces and security services". More...
Syria is the Paris Commune of the 21st Century!

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Syrian Revolutionaries celebrate victory of Macron over Le Pen in France

With the apparent victory of centrist Emmanuel Macron over neo-fascist Marine Le Pen in the French presidential election. The white nationalist juggerknot the took Britain out of the EU and put Donald Trump in the White House has been dealt its first major setback of 2017. Historically France has always been among the most socially and politically advanced, and once more:

France Leads the Way!

One thing you won't see at Le Pen rallies today that you will see an Macron rallies, besides celebration,😅 is many people of color, and prominent among them, those flying the flag of the Syrian revolution.

Syrians celebrates victory of Macron over Le Pen al Louvre
These are the Syrian Revolutionaries Noam Chomsky and other "anti-imperialists" claim don't exist.

This is but one more example of why I keep saying:

Syria is the Paris Commune of the 21st Century!



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Friday, May 5, 2017

Who runs Syria? Why are more sarin attacks coming?

The Godfather Revisited:
Tom Hagen: When I meet with Assad's men, should I insist all their thugs not use chemical weapons?

Don Corleone: Mention it, don't insist. But Putin will know that without being told.
Tom Hagen: You mean Assad...

Don Corleone: Assad is a pimp. He never could have outfought the FSA. But I didn't know until this day that it was Putin all along.

In Syria it hasn't been Vladimir Putin all along, but it has been for at least three years now. The "status of forces" agreement he signed with Assad in 2014, when the Russian military entered the Syrian Civil War much more directly, gave him complete autonomy, and the superior firepower of the Russian military insured that he would call the shots.

As if more proof was needed as to who really has command and control of the Syrian government, and all armies operating on its side, we have this from EA Worldview today:
Alexander Lavrentiev, the Russian envoy to the Astana political talks, told journalists, “As for [the coalition] actions in the de-escalation zones, starting from now those zones are closed for their flights.”

Lavrentiev said the ban was not in the Russia-Turkey-Iran agreement, but asserted, “As guarantors we will be tracking all actions in that direction. Absolutely no flights, especially by the international coalition, are allowed. With or without prior notification. The issue is closed.”
Assad isn't even a party to this agreement. Russia, Iran and Turkey, three foreign powers with military units operating on Syrian soil made this agreement, and they are establishing these rules of combat without any Syrian signer. This is but one more example of the assertion made by Pravada Report that "it is Russian headquarters that supervise all combat actions in the region. Assad will not be able to use any aircraft unless the Russian command in Hmeymim gives permission for this."

Even though both Putin, Assad, and their supporters, want the myth of a socialist-like nation coming to the aid of a sovereign third world country by invitation to be taken at face value, this is the hard truth of imperialist military occupation.

When atrocities were happening during the Vietnam War, the world's people didn't petition the head of the puppet government in Saigon to make them stop. They quite rightly made their demands to the puppet masters in Washington, DC and on Wall Street.

It was more than four years ago that Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov announced that Russia was taking control of Syria's stockpile of chemical weapons on 21 December 2012.  Linux Beach reported on it within hours of the Russian announcement. The Syrian conflict death toll at the time had reached 46,178, and we naively wrote:
If these reports are true it should bring a huge sigh of relief from the people he [Assad] might chose to use them on in his desperation. We should also hear a sigh of relief in the region and throughout the world if it means that those stockpiles are now in safer hands and now less of a pawn in the whole Syrian situation.

Presumably the Russians can keep them out of opposition hands as well, including the jihadists, and won't be inclined to share them with Hezbollah either. This would also relieve the West of the excuse of intervening after the victory in the name of protecting Syria's chemical weapons.
Within two days of this Russian announcement, we saw the first use of what probably was sarin in Syria:

There is no reason to doubt the truth of the Russian announcement of December 2012 that they were taking control of all of Assad's chemical weapons, and have controlled their use ever since. If they only announced it, but left Assad in control, they certainly couldn't be trusted later as the guarantor of Assad's CW disarmament. If they did take control of them, then it has really been the Russians that have been behind their use all along. Either way, it is Putin that should be held responsible for every chemical attack carried out by Assad supporters since December 2012.

It really does defy belief that the Syrians, on just Assad's authority, could load a Su-22 bomber with sarin bombs without the Russians on that base noticing, and then fly it "under the radar" to Khan Sheikhoun without Russian military air defense at Hmeymim noticing. The Syrian air force is now operating under Russian command. The responsibility for the Khan Sheikhoun attack should be placed first and foremost on Putin. Those that ask why would Assad used sarin in Khan Sheikhoun are asking the wrong question. That decision was not Assad's to make. The right question is: Why would Putin use sarin in Syria?

The answer has little to do with Syria.

What makes this conclusion all the more troubling is something Putin said on 11 April 2017, the same day Dr. Ted Postol was releasing version 1.0 of his changing "Assad didn't do it" thesis. Putin told reporters to expect more sarin attacks like Khan Sheikhoun in the near future:
"We have information from various sources saying that such provocations, I do not have a different word for it, are being prepared in other Syrian regions, including in southern suburbs of Damascus, where they are going to use some substance and accuse the Syrian official authorities of that."
This tells us that Putin is planning more sarin terror attacks in Syria. Putin, not Assad, not "the opposition," not "jihadists," Putin. It also means that soon we will be hearing how Putin's prediction was right and Assad didn't do it again, as more little children choke to death, and the "anti-imperialists" like Code Pink and Veterans for Peace once again play out their role as 21st century holocaust enablers. Putin is desperate to end this thing at any cost. He did his own "Mission Accomplished" dance 13 months ago, when he announced the Russian air force was going home. Then he brought them back right quick, and they are still there, slugging it out. It is Putin that has turned to sarin hoping its terror will end this thing quickly. That is why it is essential to his plans that the world do nothing in the face of these attacks and the Syrian people feel abandoned. That also why the Assad Loving Left in the United States has played a crucial role in sustaining the dictatorship through all its difficulties.

See also: A valuable admission: Russia controls Syria & Putin runs the war


Syria is the Paris Commune of the 21st Century!

Click here for my posts on the 2016 US Election
Click here for a list of my other blogs on Syria
Click here for a list of my other blogs on Libya

Thursday, May 4, 2017

Informed Interview with Anand Gopal on Syria on Democracy Now

It is rare for us to recommend or republish approvingly anything produced by Democracy Now, especially on Syria, but today we are happy to do so. Yesterday, Democracy Now aired an interview with Anand Gopal about Syria that was excellent. This interview was a long time in coming. It was taped at the same time as the segment on Iraq, which Amy Goodman aired on 20 April 2017. But she resisted airing the segment on Syria, and it was only after weeks of pressure by supporters of the Syria Revolution, and friends of the Anand Gopal, on facebook and Twitter that she finally relented and aired the segment yesterday.

Still Amy insisted on including clips from Stephen Cohen and Jonathan Steele to present Assad's viewpoint. When she regularly airs the views of Assad supporters of that ilk, she rarely sees the need to represent the opposition case.



Full Interview: Anand Gopal on Syria, Iraq, U.S. Policy in Middle East & More


AMY GOODMAN: We’re on the road today in Tampa, Florida. I’ll be speaking at the Seminal Church in Tampa tonight. We’re broadcasting from Tampa PBS, WEDU.

President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed Tuesday during a phone call to work together to seek a ceasefire in Syria. According to the Kremlin, Putin and Trump agreed to meet in July to discuss a resolution to the protracted conflict. The phone call came the same day ISIS militants attacked a makeshift camp for displaced Syrians and Iraqi refugees, killing nearly 40 civilians and Kurdish fighters near Syria’s northeastern border with Iraq.

Meanwhile, Human Rights Watch has concluded Syrian government forces have used chemical nerve agents, such as sarin gas, in attacks at least four times in recent months, including in the April attack that killed 86 people, including dozens of children. Human Rights Watch said new evidence, including photos and videos of weapon remnants, suggests the April attack came from a Soviet-made, air-dropped chemical bomb specifically designed to deliver sarin. One of the other attacks, on December 12th, reportedly killed 64 people. The Syrian government has denied using chemical weapons.

Meanwhile, U.S.-led coalition airstrikes continue in Syria. The journalistic monitoring group Airwars says these airstrikes reportedly killed at least two dozen civilians in the final week of April in and around Raqqa. Almost half a million people have been killed in the war in Syria, which has entered its seventh year, with more than 6 million Syrians displaced inside Syria and 5 million Syrian refugees living outside Syria’s borders.

Democracy Now!'s Nermeen Shaikh and I recently spoke about Syria with Anand Gopal, a well-known journalist who's lived in the Middle East for years, fellow at The Nation Institute, has reported extensively from the region. Anand Gopal is the author of No Good Men Among the Living: America, the Taliban, and the War Through Afghan Eyes. He began by talking about the U.S. policy in Syria.

ANAND GOPAL: Well, I think it’s important to understand that there’s no regime change policy from the United States toward Syria. And there never has been a regime change policy. The Obama administration said, innumerous times, Assad must go. But what they mean is, "Assad should step down, and somebody else in the regime should take over, and there should be a continuation of the regime in the interest of stability"—and I put that in quotes, because stipulating from their point of view—"and in the interest of fighting terrorism." This is essentially the model that took place in Yemen, where you had the dictator step down, but you had the continuation of the dictatorship, in a way. It’s also really a continuation of what happened in Egypt. And that’s been the goal from the beginning. And so, the U.S. has never actually pursued a policy of regime change. If you want to see how regime change looks, you can look at how the U.S. did that in Afghanistan in the 1980s or even in 2001 in the air war. And neither of those have actually taken place in Syria.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Well, so, in that sense, Russia and the United States are in agreement, in other words, that they would rather retain Assad himself or someone from his regime as the head of state or in control of Syria because of fears of who might take over in the event that he goes or that his regime goes.

ANAND GOPAL: Exactly. I mean, I would say the only difference between Russia and the United States is Russia probably wants Assad himself to continue, whereas the United States is more interested in stability and wanting the regime to continue. And we see this in many ways. For example, there’s cases where, when there’s rebel groups that are fighting against the regime, and they’re getting weapons and funding from the United States, the U.S. will cut off funding to them unless they focus their fighting on ISIS only. This has happened numerous times, and these groups have lost their funding. And then, once they were bereft of support, they went and joined al-Qaeda. So, there’s a narrative here that says that the U.S. is supporting extremists and al-Qaeda groups. It’s actually false. In fact, the U.S. is punishing groups that are trying to fight Assad, and when those groups are being punished, then they are going and joining al-Qaeda or extremist groups.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: But they are supporting the YPG, the Kurdish—

ANAND GOPAL: Absolutely.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: —militia force that is fighting the Assad regime.

ANAND GOPAL: Absolutely. The closest ally of the U.S. in Syria is a left-wing group called the YPG , and they are the main force which is fighting ISIS right now.

AMY GOODMAN: And talk about who they are.

ANAND GOPAL: The YPG is essentially an offshoot of the PKK, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, which was—which is a group in Turkey which has been waging, essentially, a left-wing insurgency against the Turkish government for Kurdish right for decades. And in the last three or four years, they’ve expanded extraordinarily rapidly in Syria. They have set up these councils all across northern and eastern Syria. And they’ve become the main partners of the United States in this battle against ISIS. So the battle for Raqqa, which is the de facto capital of the caliphate, it’s the YPG who is the main ally of the United States.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: And can you say a little, Anand, about what the impact of the Russian military intervention in Syria has been, in terms of the situation on the ground, in terms of civilian casualties and so on.

ANAND GOPAL: Well, in any discussion of Syria, it’s important to state at the outset that the two biggest sources of violence in the country—number one is the Assad regime, which has just killed incredible numbers of civilians, tortured, maimed, executed anybody who resists, essentially. And the second biggest source of violence in Syria is the Russian regime. And Russia’s role has been essentially to prop up the Syrian government at a time when it was looking very weak. When Syrian government—when the Syrian government retook Aleppo a few months ago, it would not have been able to do that without Russian air power.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Well, last week, Democracy Now! spoke to former Guardian Moscow correspondent Jonathan Steele. He questioned whether the Assad regime was responsible for the chemical attack in Idlib in Syria earlier this month, saying the principal beneficiaries were the U.S. military-industrial complex and those in the Trump administration wanting to prove the president is not a puppet of Putin. He went on to outline the benefits to the opposition groups in Syria from the chemical weapons attack.

JONATHAN STEELE: A third group that’s really benefited are the armed opposition to Assad, because they’ve suddenly got a new lease of life, when it looked as though they were on the verge of losing their last sliver of territory around Idlib in northwest Syria. They’ve been given the option, the—perhaps the option of being defended militarily by NATO with airstrikes. They’ve had one airstrike, and they’re obviously hoping for more. And they’re certainly not going to compromise in the Geneva talks. So everybody who’s benefited is on the non-Syrian, non-Russian side.

NERMEEN SHAIKH:
So that’s former Guardian Moscow correspondent Jonathan Steele speaking on Democracy Now! last week. So, Anand, can you comment on what he said and the speculation among certain people that the Assad regime could not have been responsible for the chemical weapons attack, because it didn’t benefit from it, and that it already, in fact, the Assad regime, is winning the war, so why would they do something like this, use chemical weapons?

ANAND GOPAL: The principal beneficiary of the chemical attacks was the people who carried it out, which was the Assad regime. This—you have to understand, this comes in the context of, just a week before that, you had statements from the American administration, from Tillerson and from Trump, saying that the Syrian question is up to Syrians to decide, which is a implicit way of saying that even our very weak statement prior to this, that Assad must go, even that we’re dropping. So, he was now operating from a position of what he saw as basically impunity. And that’s—it was under those conditions under which he carried out the chemical attack. It’s also coming under the circumstances that Russia was drawn closer to the YPG and was also having a rapprochement of sorts with Turkey, which is backing some elements of the FSA. And there’s speculation that the Assad regime carried out this attack as a way to force Russia back firmly in its corner.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about why the United States—why you feel Tillerson and Nikki Haley made these comments, saying that Syria, the Syrian people should determine who is their president, signaling some kind of change in U.S. policy, not as if President Obama took out Assad, but had a different rhetoric around it?

ANAND GOPAL: Well, I think this has been a logical culmination of eight years of Obama’s policy in the Middle East. And Obama said again and again that Assad must go, but didn’t give the opposition the means to actually make that happen, and, in fact, spent most of his time policing the opposition to make sure that Assad wouldn’t be ejected. When the Trump administration took office, they dispensed with that formality, and they said, "Look, our focus is ISIS. We don’t even need to talk about having Assad go." And that’s what that signaled, which was that, "Look, we just need to focus on ISIS, and Assad can stay as long as he wants, essentially." That’s what—that was the message that was sent to the regime, and it’s not a surprise that a week later you saw a chemical attack.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Well, I mean, the Russians themselves had said—have said, more or less, similar things, namely that it’s up to the Syrians to decide what happens after Assad, that their explicit goal is not retaining Assad. So, last week, Democracy Now! spoke to professor emeritus of Russian studies and politics at Princeton, Stephen Cohen. He explained why the Russians were backing the Assad regime.

STEPHEN COHEN: I would ask all these Americans who vilify Assad, I would ask all your listeners and viewers: If you destroy the Syrian state, who’s going to do the fighting against terrorists in Syria? Do you ask—are you going to ask Russia to send troops? Are we going to send troops? So, for Russia—and this is the point—it’s not Assad. They could give a hoot about what happens to him and their family. It’s what happens to the Syrian state. And that’s why they will stand with Assad until there is some kind of military victory, and then a so-called political peace process begins, and then Assad is on his own.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: So that was Stephen Cohen speaking last week on Democracy Now! So, Anand, can you comment specifically on what he said and also this idea that both the U.S. and Russia have that the Syrians will be able to decide for themselves, despite the fact that for decades Syrians have not been able to decide for themselves?

ANAND GOPAL: Well, it’s interesting, because what he said is basically a perfect summary of American policy in Syria, not actually Russian policy. And Syria is a dictatorship. Syrians do not have the ability to decide. When they wanted to try to decide for themselves, they had a revolution. And so, when people say it’s up to Syrians themselves to decide, when Russia or the United States says that, it’s a coded way of backing the Assad regime. And, you know, he said that the Assad regime is the main force fighting terrorism in Syria, and that’s absolutely false. The regime does not fight terrorism. It’s actually the single biggest cause of terrorism in Syria. It is the cause of ISIS in Syria. And from—if you talk to Syrians, Bashar al-Assad and the regime is the biggest terrorist in the country. The force that’s actually fighting ISIS, which I assume is what he’s referring to, is the YPG, which is backed by the United States.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Can you explain what you mean by that, that the cause of ISIS or what gave birth to ISIS in Syria is in fact the Assad regime? Because that’s not what’s commonly understood.

ANAND GOPAL: Well, I’ve spent a good portion of the last few months actually interviewing a number of ISIS fighters and defectors from ISIS. And one of the things I’ve made a point to do is actually ask them, "Why did you join this group?" You know? And to a person, they all say they witnessed some horrific atrocity or massacre conducted by the regime. I’ve never heard anybody give another reason other than that. And so, what has happened is that the sheer brutality of the regime has led people to—some people to join ISIS, especially in the context where they see there’s not a lot of support for other groups. And you have to remember, ISIS is one of the few groups in Syria that doesn’t get foreign support. It’s almost entirely self-funded, which gives it a sort of—sort of staying power, that some of FSA groups don’t have.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: And is it your sense that ISIS’s power or control over Syria is weakening?

ANAND GOPAL: It’s absolutely weakening—again, not because of the Assad regime, but in spite of the Assad regime. It’s weakening because—for the most part, because of the YPG. But we should also look back a couple years ago. When ISIS was taking over broad swaths of territory near Aleppo and pushing into Idlib, it was the Free Syrian Army and their allies that actually pushed ISIS back into eastern Syria.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about the gas attack, what you actually think happened? You have Assad saying not only didn’t the Syrian regime do this, but he says he doesn’t even believe that the children were dying.

ANAND GOPAL: So, to start with, we know that the children died. We know, through investigative reports, that they died of sarin. And we also know that there was a airstrike that took place. The claim by Russian intelligence and by the Assad regime was that this was an airstrike on a warehouse that contained chemical weapons, and those chemical weapons were being stockpiled by the opposition. We’ve had many, many, many Syrians actually go to the site to photograph this and show that the warehouse was never struck. And they have actually photographed the actual point of the impact of the bomb, which was on the street, not in the warehouse. We’ve also had a Guardian reporter go to this area and do the same thing. And also, you have to remember, the regime has actually carried out numerous chemical attacks against its own people, so this is nothing new. The idea that the opposition somehow stockpiled chemical weapons and waited for the regime to strike it so that it could then use it to its benefit, that’s just a conspiracy theory. In my view, that’s on the level of Big Foot or UFOs.

AMY GOODMAN: Anand Gopal, journalist and fellow at The Nation Institute, who has reported extensively from the Middle East. We’ll post our full interview with Anand at democracynow.org.

When we come back, we go back to North Carolina to look at how a group of African-American residents are fighting against factory farms that spray liquid hog manure on their communities. Stay with us.

Syria is the Paris Commune of the 21st Century!

Click here for my posts on the 2016 US Election
Click here for a list of my other blogs on Syria
Click here for a list of my other blogs on Libya

Wednesday, May 3, 2017

Reading Comprehension 101 for MIT Professor Dr. Ted Postol

Dear Dr. Ted Postol,

I'm a guy who never completed college, and English was never my best subject when I was in school, but if there is one thing I have learned it is that help can sometimes come from the most unlikely quarter. I know you have lengthy academic credentials when it comes to engineering and rocket science, but I've been reading your recent and varied reports about the sarin massacre that took place in Khan Sheikhoun, 4 April 2017, and it would appear that you have some issues with reading comprehension.

I know you faced a certain amount of ridicule along these lines because in critiquing the French Report, you "missed" that when they referred to the sarin attack that occurred on 29 April 2013 in Saraqib, they were talking about a different attack than the one that occurred in Khan Sheikhoun last month. So I'd like to begin with some words of encouragement. When last you wrote and made a "correction" to that original critique of the French report, you said you thought that report focused on the sarin attack of 29 August 2013, and "does not report on the details of the attack on April 4." With this new paper from you, I see that you have found those details. This shows that you are making progress already!

But I've just had a look at your most recent revision, publish on the Putin mouthpiece Global Research, dated 1 May 2017, and it looks like you still have some problems with reading comprehension, so allow me to offer some helpful pointers.

For example, you quote from the French Report, and emphasis a few phrases:
c) According to the intelligence obtained by the French services, the process of synthesizing sarin, developed by the scientific Studies and Research Centre (SSRC) and employed by the Syrian armed forces and security services, involves the use of hexamine as a stabilizer. DIMP is also known as a by-product generated by this process.

d) This intelligence on the process used by the regime, which is a sign of its responsibility in the attack on 4 April, is based notably on the analysis of the content of an unexploded grenade which was used with certainty by the Syrian regime during the Saraqib attack on 29 April 2013
Upon reading that you responded:
[A]n obviously flawed investigative finding would be a product of the same combination of irrational arguments and unsound scientific evidence that the FIR used as its basis to reach a conclusion that the Syrian government must have executed in nerve agent attack on April 4, 2017 in Khan Sheikhoun.
...
Aside from the lack of a rational linkage of asserted observations, the FIR falsely claims (or implies that) the presence of DIMP is a unique indicator that the sarin found by the French at Saraqib must have been produced by the Syrian government. As it turns out, DIMP is likely to be found at any location where sarin has been introduced into the environment. In the case of hexamine, this chemical can be produced by the military explosives in a sarin nerve agent dispensing munition or from explosives produced in military attacks unrelated to the use of sarin.
Does this mean that you now agree with my critique of your initial report on the Khan Sheikhoun sarin massacre in which I pointed out that most chemical munitions use an explosive bursting charge? I went to some length to make that case because I knew I was going up against your expertise when you asserted, in looking back at the Obama White House Report on the sarin massacre of 2013, that:
For example, the report claimed that the locations of the launch and impact of points of the artillery rockets were observed by US satellites. This claim was absolutely false and any competent intelligence analyst would have known that. The rockets could be seen from the Space-Based Infrared Satellite (SBIRS) but the satellite could absolutely not see the impact locations because the impact locations were not accompanied by explosions.
Now the rocket scientist has come around to the view of the layman. The impact locations of chemical munitions are, indeed, accompanied by explosions. So you see, unity is building already!

Where I think you make a mistake in the present case is in your reading of the phrase "is a sign of." The French say "the process used by the regime" involved DIMP and hexamine "which is a sign of its responsibility in the attack on 4 April," and you go off into a lengthy discussion of how there could be other explanations for the finding of those chemicals at the sarin attack site. Once you feel you have done that, you think you have disproven:
the same combination of irrational arguments and unsound scientific evidence that the FIR used as its basis to reach a conclusion that the Syrian government must have executed in nerve agent attack on April 4, 2017 in Khan Sheikhoun.
But the French Report did not rely exclusively on the presence of DIMP and hexamine in coming to that conclusion. They talk about the tactical military situation around 4 April, the presence of specialized Syrian army units in the area, and,
a Sukho Su-22 bomber which took off from the Shayrat Airbase on the morning of 4 April and launched up to six strikes around Khan Sheikhoun
They also considered UN reports that Assad had held out on the OPCW and did not voluntarily declare all his chemical weapons, and documented reports of his continuous use of chemical agents since 2013. To all of this evidence we now must also add the Human Rights Watch finding that the ordinance used in Khan Sheikhoun was an air dropped sarin bomb from the Soviet era.

So you see, the French conclusion that Assad was responsible for the sarin murders was based on many things and not just the presence of DIMP and hexamine along with the sarin at the site. Dr. Ted, you seem to think it did because you say:
the FIR falsely claims (or implies that) the presence of DIMP is a unique indicator that the sarin found by the French at Saraqib must have been produced by the Syrian government.
But that is not what they said. They claimed to have proved that sarin was used and the sarin used was like that (consistent with) sarin known to be produced by the Syrian government.

Dr. Ted, I think your misreading of the French Report this time comes from a misunderstanding of what the phrase "is a sign of" means. You seem to think it is synonymous with "a unique indicator." It is not!

Whenever we are unsure about the meaning of a word or phrase, we should never be afraid to consult a dictionary. That is one sure way to improve your reading comprehension.  When we look up the phrase "is a sign of"  on Thesaurus.com we find that "suggest" and "imply" are among the synonyms, so it would be accurate to say the French Report says that the finding of DIMP suggests sarin from Assad's stockpile, or that the report plainly states, not implies, that the presence of hexamine implies sarin made the Syrian Army way.  They are not here saying that "is a sign of" is as definitive as a fingerprint, which would be "a unique indicator."  Your understanding of what constitutes a sign of something is far too rigid. There is no need to go off accusing the French (of all people, you know how they can be!) of being "obviously flawed" and using "irrational arguments and unsound scientific evidence."  "a sign of" is not a "unique indicator," it is merely a suggestion.

Words are important. How we use them is important. If we don't understand what we are reading, we will have trouble communicating our ideas to others. It is better to read a passage twice, even three times, before putting pen to paper in criticism. And don't be afraid to look up unfamiliar words and phrases!

Sincerely your,

Clay Claiborne,
Linux Systems Administrator L2
Enterprise Linux, 2nd Shift <Wolfpack>
The Engine Room

Also related:
Postol's Apostles & the normalization of chemical weapons use
Dr. Postol's "correction" shows he still needs Reading Comprehension 101
Please Re-Tweet as Ted Postol beats a hasty retreat
Noam Chomsky on Democracy Now says Assad now best for Syria
Sincerely yours, Theodore A. Postol
A valuable admission: Russia controls Syria & Putin runs the war
Why is Russia Today attacking Rep. Maxine Waters?

Syria is the Paris Commune of the 21st Century!

Click here for my posts on the 2016 US Election
Click here for a list of my other blogs on Syria
Click here for a list of my other blogs on Libya