9/7/13, "Direct link between Assad and gas attack elusive for U.S.," Reuters, Mark Hosenball
"With the United States threatening to attack Syria, U.S. and allied intelligence services are still trying to work out who ordered the poison gas attack on rebel-held neighborhoods near Damascus.
No direct link to President Bashar al-Assad or his inner circle has been publicly demonstrated,
and some U.S. sources say intelligence experts are not sure whether the
Syrian leader knew of the attack before it was launched or was only
informed about it afterward.
While
U.S. officials say Assad is responsible for the chemical weapons strike
even if he did not directly order it, they have not been able to fully
describe a chain of command for the August 21 attack in the Ghouta area
east of the Syrian capital.
It
is one of the biggest gaps in U.S. understanding of the incident, even
as Congress debates whether to launch limited strikes on Assad's forces
in retaliation.
After
wrongly claiming that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction before
the 2003 U.S. invasion, the U.S. intelligence community, along with the
Obama administration, are trying to build as solid a case as they can
about what it says was a sarin nerve gas attack that killed over 1,400
people.
The Syrian government, backed by Russia, blames Sunni rebels for the gas attack. Russia says Washington has not provided convincing proof that Assad's troops carried out the attack and called it a "provocation" by rebel forces hoping to encourage a military response by the United States.
Identifying
Syrian commanders or leaders as those who gave an order to fire rockets
into the Sunni Muslim areas could help Obama convince a war-weary
American public and skeptical members of Congress to back limited
strikes against Assad.
But penetrating the secretive Syrian government is tough, especially as it fights a chaotic civil war for its survival.
"Decision-making
at high levels within foreign governments is always a difficult
intelligence target. Typically small numbers of people are involved,
operational security is high, and penetration - through either human or
technical means - is hard," said Paul Pillar, a former CIA expert on the
Middle East.
One
possible link between the gas attack and Assad's inner circle is the
Syrian government body that is responsible for producing chemical
weapons, U.S. and allied security sources say....
Much of the U.S.
claim that Assad is responsible was initially based on reports from
witnesses, non-governmental groups and hours of YouTube videos. U.S.
officials have not presented any evidence to the public of scientific
samples or intelligence information proving that sarin gas was used or
that the Syrian government used it.
The
United States has also not named any Syrian commanders it thinks gave
the green light to fire gas-laden rockets into Ghouta. But U.S. and
allied security sources say they believe that Syrian military units
responsible for the areas that were attacked were under heavy pressure
from top commanders to wipe out a stubborn rebel presence there so
government troops could redeploy to other trouble spots, including the
city of Aleppo.
An
analysis by the Congressional Research Service, a branch of the Library
of Congress, reported that a declassified U.S. government paper
summarizing intelligence findings concludes that Syrian government officials were "witting and directed" the gas attack. But the evidence of who ordered it was not watertight,
the analysis said. The findings were partly based on intercepted
communications "involving a senior official intimately familiar with the
offensive" which "confirmed that chemical weapons were used by the
regime," it said.
As
more information has been collected and analyzed, early theories about
the attack have largely been dismissed, U.S. and allied security sources
said.
Reports
that Assad's brother, Maher, a general who commands an elite Republican
Guard unit and a crack Syrian army armored division, gave the order to
use chemicals have not been substantiated, U.S. sources said. Some U.S.
sources now believe Maher Assad did not order the attack and was not
directly involved." via Atlas Shrugs
.
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