
	by Felicity Arbuthnot
	November 14, 2013
	
	from 
	
	GlobalResearch Website
	
	
	
 
	
		
			
				
				"The individual is handicapped by coming 
			face to face 
				
				with a conspiracy so monstrous 
				
				
				he cannot believe it 
			exists." 
				
				J. Edgar Hoover
				
				1895-1972
			
		
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	Since the fairy tale about weapons of mass 
	destruction that can be launched against Western targets "within forty five 
	minutes" is well past it's sell by date, the trans-Atlantic 
	
	hasbara industry 
	has dreamed up 
	a new Grim Reaper for Syria, their latest quarry: chemical 
	weapons.
	
	Stephen Zunes succinct quote that: 
	
		
		"U.S. policy regarding chemical weapons has 
		been so inconsistent and politicized that the United States is in no 
		position to take leadership in response to any use of such weaponry by 
		Syria" (i) hits the chemical warhead on the nose cone.
	
	
	Never mind Israel's lethal stockpiles, for ever, 
	seemingly, blind eye territory, as apparently is the United States 5,449 
	metric tons chemical weapons arsenal, which cannot be disposed of until at 
	least 2021 due to the hazards involved (Japan Times, 12 September 2013.).
	
	However the storm troopers of the Organization for the Prohibition of 
	Chemical Weapons (OPCW) joined the other insurgents in Syria and in 
	under a month: 
	
		
		"…completed the functional destruction of 
		critical equipment for all of its declared chemical weapons production 
		facilities and mixing/filling plants, rendering them inoperable." 
		(ii)
	
	
	President Assad, his country, this year 
	alone, being five times an illegal target of Israel's fearsome destructive 
	power from just across the Golan Heights (iii) stated that 
	his weapons were purely defensive - to use the cold war adage, a balance of 
	terror.  
	
	 
	
	All nations have the legal right to self-defence 
	- unless they are majority Muslim, it would seem.
	
	Compared to the might of the countries threatening its destruction, Syria is 
	now, if not quite a sitting duck, certainly a lamer one and must be mindful 
	of the fate of Libya, when pressured and Iraq when forced to disarm.
	
	Coincidentally, President Assad's assertions are almost exactly those used 
	by the United States regarding chemical weapons - at a time when the U.S. 
	was certainly at no threat from external forces.
	
	On 28 March 1990, the Los Angeles Times reported that: 
	
		
		"The U.S. government is considering forcing 
		two defiant chemical companies to sell the Pentagon a key ingredient for 
		producing nerve gas, Pentagon officials said …"
	
	
	Further,
	
		
		"The United States has said that it would 
		need chemical weapons to deter the Soviets' use of chemical weapons 
		during a non-nuclear conflict in Central Europe - a prospect even (the 
		then) Defense Secretary Dick Cheney (termed) 'extremely remote.' "
	
	
	This was five months after the fall of the 
	Berlin Wall (9 November 1989) and fifteen months after 
	then President Gorbachev had committed, at the UN, to cutting Soviet 
	troops by a massive 500,000, including withdrawing significant military 
	presence in eastern Europe. (iv) A hand of reconciliation to the U.S., by any 
	standards, after approaching fifty years of hostilities.
	
	Given the circumstances, was the US really concerned about the "Soviet 
	threat" or was an un-noticed elephant lurking round the corner? 
	
	 
	
	The LA Times article was headed: 
	
		
		"Firms Balk at Selling Nerve Gas Element to 
		U.S.: Two chemical companies cite corporate policy and ethics. But the 
		Pentagon may invoke an old law and force them to deliver the compound."
		
		"The Occidental Chemical Corp., and the Mobay Corp., said company 
		policies forbid sales that would contribute to the proliferation of 
		chemical weapons. Both refused to fill Defense Department orders for 
		thionyl chloride, a widely used industrial and agricultural chemical 
		that is needed to make a lethal nerve agent."
	
	
	Thus,
	
		
		"The U.S. government is considering forcing 
		two defiant chemical companies to sell the Pentagon a key ingredient for 
		producing nerve gas …
		
		"Defense officials said the two firms are the only ones in the United 
		States that now commercially produce the chemical agent. The firms' 
		unwillingness to sell has brought the production of a new generation of 
		U.S. chemical weapons, which began in 1987, to a halt.
		
		"The Army needs 160,000 pounds of the ingredient by June to proceed on 
		schedule, the Pentagon said. Government officials said they can compel 
		the companies to sell the chemical under the Defense Production Act, a 
		1950 law designed to give the Pentagon first priority on war materiel."
	
	
	What war did the Pentagon have in mind, since 
	the Administration of the President 
	
	George H.W. Bush was working, "to negotiate a worldwide ban" 
	on chemical arms production and just four months earlier Bush had also:
	
		
		"proposed to Soviet leader Mikhail S. 
		Gorbachev that the superpowers sign an accord at their summit this June 
		that would call for the destruction of 80% of their chemical weapons…"
	
	
	Yet regarding the purchase of the potentially 
	lethal chemicals: 
	
		
		"If the United States invokes the Defense 
		Production Act, the companies will get the message that this is 
		important and that they should reconsider their policies", said one 
		official.
	
	
	Occidental Petroleum Corp's,
	
		
		"Chairman and chief executive officer Armand 
		Hammer (was) a longtime champion of improved U.S. relations with the 
		Soviet Union and has been critical of the pace of U.S. arms control 
		efforts."
	
	
	A spokesman for Mobay, subsidiary of German 
	giant, Bayer,
	
		
		"said the Pentagon approached Mobay with an 
		order for 160,000 pounds of thionyl chloride…"
	
	
	It was needed by June (1990) for use in the 
	production of the nerve agent Sarin, noted the New Scientist (7 
	April 1990.)
	
	Mobay's man was robust:
	
		
		"We have told the government... that we have 
		no intentions of selling thionyl chloride for these purposes."
	
	
	So, to the lurking elephant. 
	
	 
	
	It seems it was 
	less about deterring "the Soviets'…" and more about an Iraq, financially on 
	its knees and fiscally relentlessly undermined and targeted by the U.S. 
	since the end of the Iran-Iraq war (September1980-August1988) in which the 
	U.S. had backed Iraq (and armed both sides.)
	
	During and after a U.S., driven war, devastating both countries, Kuwait, 
	Iraq accused, had been slant drilling in to Iraq's Rumaila oil fields.
	
	 
	
	In addition, since the end of the war, Kuwait 
	had hugely exceeded OPEC production quotas, costing, Iraq claimed, $14 
	billion a year, in addition to the $2.4 billion estimated loss from the war 
	period extractions of,
	
		
		"some millions of barrels" - additionally 
		"capturing some of Iraq's customers." (v)
	
	
	Saddam Hussein had told a session of the Arab 
	League:
	
		
		"We cannot tolerate this kind of economic 
		warfare. We have reached a state of affairs where we cannot take the 
		pressure." 
	
	
	Whatever else, he was the proudest of men, the 
	admission must have cost him dearly.
	
	That America did not know something was about to give in the near future is 
	unthinkable. The U.S. had flagged Kuwait's oil tankers with U.S., flags in 
	1987, to protect the statelet with the world's fifth largest oil reserves, 
	from Iran - and they remained U.S. flagged. 
	
	 
	
	An attack on Kuwait would be an attack on a 
	U.S., protectorate.
	
	Interestingly, some in Washington were sympathetic to Saddam Hussein's view:
	
	
		
		"Henry M. Schuler, director of the energy 
		security program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies 
		in Washington, said that from the Iraqi viewpoint, the Kuwait Government 
		was 'acting aggressively - it was economic warfare.' "
		
		"Whether he's Hitler or not, he has some reason on his side", Mr. 
		Schuler said, adding that, "American officials needed to appreciate the 
		economic and psychological significance the Rumaila field holds for the 
		Iraqis and why Kuwait's exploitation of Rumaila, in addition to its high 
		oil output in the 1980′s, was an affront to the Iraqis.
		
		"It's not just the emotional man in the street in the Arab world who 
		finds the Iraq case appealing," he said. 
		 
		
		"So do many of those who are thinking, 
		intelligent people. If the Iraqi people feel they are the victims of 
		aggression, and that their legitimate claims are being stifled now by 
		American intervention, they will hang in there a lot longer than if that 
		were not the case."
	
	
	As recently as 2011, veteran, ten term 
	Congressman Ron Paul talked in Congress on the slant drilling claims 
	pointing out that: 
	
		
		"Historian Mark Zepezauer notes that the 
		equipment to slant drill Iraq's oil illegally was bought from (US 
		National Security Advisor to President George H.W. Bush) Brent 
		Scowcroft's old company. 
		 
		
		Kuwait was pumping out around $14-billion 
		worth of oil from beneath Iraqi territory… Slant-drilling is enough to 
		get you shot in Texas, and it's certainly enough to start a war in the 
		Mideast." (vi) 
	
	
	However, it was not just Kuwait targeting Iraq's 
	frail finances, as Brian Becker wrote in a detailed account. 
	(vii) 
	
	 
	
	The U.S., betrayal of their ally in the regional 
	ravages of the Iran-Iraq war, was total:
	
		
		"Having weakened Iran, the goal was then to 
		weaken Iraq and make sure that it could not develop as a regional power 
		capable of challenging U.S. domination. 
		
		 
		
		After the war ended, U.S. policy 
		toward Iraq shifted, becoming increasingly hostile. The way it shifted 
		is quite revealing; bearing all the signs of a well-planned conspiracy.
		
		"The cease-fire between Iran and Iraq began on August 20, 1988. On 
		September 8, 1988, Iraqi Foreign Minister Sa'dun Hammadi was to meet 
		with U.S. Secretary of State George Schulz. 
		
		 
		
		The Iraqis had every reason 
		to expect a warm welcome in Washington and to begin an era of closer 
		co-operation on trade and industrial development."
	
	
	In the event, two hours before the meeting, 
	without warning to Sa'dun Hammadi, State Department spokesman 
	Charles Redman called a press conference charging that: 
	
		
		"The U.S. Government is convinced that Iraq 
		has used chemical weapons… against Kurdish guerillas. We don't know the 
		extent to which chemical weapons have been used but any use in this 
		context is abhorrent and unjustifiable.
		 
		
		We expressed our strong concern to the Iraqi 
		Government which is well aware of our position that the use of chemical 
		weapons is totally unjustifiable and unacceptable."
		
		"Redman did not allude to any evidence at all" and further mislead, 
		since seemingly the Iraqi government was not informed of the charges.
	
	
	When Hammadi arrived at the State Department for 
	his meeting with Schulz, he was besieged by the media asking about the 
	massacre and unable to give coherent answers. Bewildered, he repeatedly 
	asked the journalists the basis for their questions.
	
	The meeting with Schulz was a dismal: 
	
		
		"with Iraq's expectations of U.S. assistance 
		in rebuilding after the Iran-Iraq war dashed."
		
		"Within twenty-four hours of Redman's press release, the Senate voted 
		unanimously to impose economic sanctions on Iraq which would cancel 
		sales of food and technology."
	
	
	Whilst the genocidal and ecocidal U.N. blockade 
	on Iraq from August 1990 is remembered, this previous U.S. stab in the back 
	to a former ally on its financial knees is forgotten.
	
	Thus, in addition to Kuwait's alleged fiscal sabotage was, from September 9, 
	1988,
	
		
		"…a two year record that amounts to economic 
		harassment of Iraq by the American State Department, media, and 
		Congress."
	
	
	However, after the chemical weapons 
	announcement, the near daily rhetoric regarding Saddam from Washington and 
	Whitehall was that: 
	
		
		"he gasses his own people", "uses chemical 
		weapons against his own people." 
	
	
	And the drums of war beat ever louder.
	
	In fact,
	
		
		"US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld helped 
		Saddam Hussein build up his arsenal of deadly chemical and biological 
		weapons… 
		
		 
		
		As an envoy from President Reagan… he had a secret meeting with 
		(Saddam) and arranged enormous military assistance for his war with 
		Iran… a Senate committee investigating the relationship between the U.S. 
		and Iraq discovered that in the mid-1980s - following the Rumsfeld visit 
		- dozens of biological agents were shipped to Iraq under licence from 
		the Commerce Department. 
		 
		
		"They included anthrax, subsequently 
		identified by the Pentagon as a key component of the Iraqi biological 
		warfare program… 'The Commerce Department also approved the export of 
		insecticides to Iraq, despite widespread suspicions that they were being 
		used for chemical warfare'." (viii)
	
	
	Pressure on Iraq accelerating, the U.S.-U.K., 
	and "coalition" was handed another propaganda coup, when, on 15 March 1990, 
	Iraq executed Farzad Bazoft, an Iranian born freelance journalist 
	with a desk at London's Observer newspaper.
	
	After a massive explosion as al-Iskaderia military complex, south of 
	Baghdad, Bazoft had persuaded Daphne Parrish, a British nurse, 
	working in Baghdad, to take him to the perimeter of the site of the 
	explosion. 
	
	 
	
	There he took photographs and two containers of 
	soil samples. He attempted to leave Baghdad the following day, but was 
	arrested, with the samples and photographs at Baghdad airport.
	
	Iraq was again the Western media and governments' mega demon. But an Iranian 
	acting as he did, after the appalling eight year war would surely have led 
	any country, in such circumstances to act similarly. Witness U.S. paranoia 
	after the tragedy of losing three buildings. 
	
	 
	
	Daphne Parrish's book, "Prisoner 
	in Baghdad" gives the lie to any claims of Bazoft's innocence.
	
	Just two weeks later America was demanding the chemicals for weapons "by 
	June." 
	
	 
	
	On 25 July 1990, at the Presidential Palace in 
	Baghdad, America's Ambassador to Iraq, April Glaspie assured Saddam 
	Hussein:
	
		
		"We have no opinion on your Arab - Arab 
		conflicts, such as your dispute with Kuwait. Secretary (of State James) 
		Baker has directed me to emphasize the instruction, first given to Iraq 
		in the 1960′s, that the Kuwait issue is not associated with 
		America." (ix)
	
	
	On 2 August 1990, Iraq invaded Kuwait.
	
	The response was the reduction of Iraq to a "pre-industrial age", as 
	threatened by James Baker, in the forty two day blitz from January 17 
	1991. 
	
	 
	
	On February 15, in the preamble to cease-fire 
	proposal, Saddam Hussein said 
	
		
		"The years 1988 and 1989 saw sustained 
		campaigns in the press and other media and by other officials in the 
		United States and other nations to pave the way for the fulfillment of 
		vicious aims (i.e., war.)"
	
	
	Had there been one more "vicious aim" though?
	
	
		
			- 
			
			Was the urging, indeed the threatening demands 
	for chemical weapons ingredients been because the plan had been to use them 
	and blame Iraq? 
 
			- 
			
			Is it possible there was a plan to even sacrifice their own 
	troops in a ploy that would have likely had U.N., backing invasion and 
	overthrow Saddam Hussein's government had it been thought to have used such 
	appalling weapons?
 
		
	
	
	In the event, the chemical companies stood firm and: 
	
	
		
		"left without the supply of thionyl chloride 
		necessary to meet the production deadline, five weeks later the Bush 
		administration 'offered' to halt binary production during chemical 
		disarmament negotiations with the Soviet Union." (x)
	
	
	The,
	
		
		"conclusion is that the US chemical 
		industry's refusal to produce necessary precursor chemicals, left the 
		Bush administration with no other option than to fully commit to 
		chemical disarmament."
	
	
	In the event, the chemical - and radiological - 
	weapons the U.S., used were in up to 750 tons of depleted uranium weaponry.
	
	We will have to wait for another trove of documents to be "liberated" from 
	the U.S., Administration to affirm whether the theory regarding the pressure 
	for the chemical weapons is correct. 
	
	 
	
	However, given the propaganda parallels in 
	media, from governments with the current situation with Syria and the near 
	certainty that chemical horrors are being used by the Western backed 
	insurgents and blamed on President Assad's policies, the all is well worth 
	bearing in mind.
	
	As Brian Becker concluded regarding Saddam's accusations:
	
		
		"The Washington Post's story on the 
		cease-fire proposal of February 15, 1991 was titled simply: 'Baghdad's 
		Conspiracy Theory of Recent History.' Some conspiracies theories just 
		happen to be true."
	
	 
	 
	 
	 
	
	References
	
		
			- 
			
			
			
			
			http://fpif.org/the_us_and_chemical_weapons_no_leg_to_stand_on/
 
			- 
			
			
			
			
			http://www.opcw.org/news/article/syria-completes-destruction-activities-to-render-inoperable-chemical-weapons-production-facilities-a/
 
			- 
			
			
			
			
			http://www.infowars.com/israel-attacks-syria-again/
 
			- 
			
			
			
			
			http://articles.latimes.com/1988-12-07/news/mn-1054_1_world-leaders
 
			- 
			
			
			
			
			http://www.nytimes.com/1990/09/03/world/confrontation-in-the-gulf-the-oilfield-lying-below-the-iraq-kuwait-dispute.html?src=pm
 
			- 
			
			
			
			
			http://www.infowars.com/ron-paul-enters-evidence-of-bush-war-crimes-in-congressional-record/
 
			- 
			
			
			
			http://deoxy.org/wc/wc-consp.htm
 
			- 
			
			
			
			
			http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-153210/Rumsfeld-helped-Iraq-chemical-weapons.html#ixzz2kRCo4p5S
 
			- 
			
			
			
			
			http://whatreallyhappened.com/WRHARTICLES/ARTICLE5/april.html
 
			- 
			
			
			
			
			http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/dr-raj-persaud/chemical-weapons-us_b_3945933.html