Whose sarin?
London Review of Books
By Seymour M. Hersh
Barack Obama did not tell the whole story this autumn when he
tried to make the case that Bashar al-Assad was responsible for the chemical
weapons attack near Damascus on 21 August. In some instances, he omitted
important intelligence, and in others he presented assumptions as facts. Most
significant, he failed to acknowledge something known to the US intelligence
community: that the Syrian army is not the only party in the country’s civil war
with access to sarin, the nerve agent that a UN study concluded – without
assessing responsibility – had been used in the rocket attack. In the months
before the attack, the American intelligence agencies produced a series of
highly classified reports, culminating in a formal Operations Order – a planning
document that precedes a ground invasion – citing evidence that the al-Nusra
Front, a jihadi group affiliated with al-Qaida, had mastered the mechanics of
creating sarin and was capable of manufacturing it in quantity. When the attack
occurred al-Nusra should have been a suspect, but the administration
cherry-picked intelligence to justify a strike against Assad.
But in recent interviews with intelligence and military officers and
consultants past and present, I found intense concern, and on occasion anger,
over what was repeatedly seen as the deliberate manipulation of intelligence.
One high-level intelligence officer, in an email to a colleague, called the
administration’s assurances of Assad’s responsibility a ‘ruse’. The attack ‘was
not the result of the current regime’, he wrote. A former senior intelligence
official told me that the Obama administration had altered the available
information – in terms of its timing and sequence – to enable the president and
his advisers to make intelligence retrieved days after the attack look as if it
had been picked up and analysed in real time, as the attack was happening. The
distortion, he said, reminded him of the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident, when the
Johnson administration reversed the sequence of National Security Agency
intercepts to justify one of the early bombings of North Vietnam. The same
official said there was immense frustration inside the military and intelligence
bureaucracy: ‘The guys are throwing their hands in the air and saying, “How can
we help this guy” – Obama – “when he and his cronies in the White House make up
the intelligence as they go along?”’
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