Syrian Nukes: the Phantom Menace
The Media Falls for Fake News Once Again
By JOHN W. FARLEY
25/04/08 "Counterpunch" -- -- Last September 6, Israel bombed a Syrian building at Dair el Zor. In the immediate aftermath of the bombing, little was said in public, by either Israel or Syria, but later the Israelis started claiming that the Syrians were building a nuclear reactor. On the radio today (April 25), I heard NPR's Tom Jelton repeat, as if it were undisputed fact, the US. government claim to have "proof" of a Syrian-North Korean nuclear connection. Now I see that AP writers Pamela Hess and Deb Reichmann have a story headlined "White House says Syria 'must come clean' about nuclear work," while ABC news has a video entitled "Syria's Nuclear Reactor".
Are the wonderful mainstream media, who gave us Saddam's mythical Weapons of Mass Destruction, lying to us again? The answer is yes.
Last fall,
journalist Laura
Rozen spoke with
Joseph
Cirincione,
director of
nuclear policy
at the Center
for American
Progress.
Cirincione says
"In attacking
Dair el Zor in
Syria on Sept.
6, the Israeli
air force wasn’t
targeting a
nuclear site but
rather one of
the main arms
depots in the
country. Dair el
Zor houses a
huge underground
base where the
Syrian army
stores the long
and medium-range
missiles it
mostly buys from
Iran and North
Korea. The
attack by the
Israeli air
force coincided
with the arrival
of a stock of
parts for
Syria’s 200 Scud
B and 60 Scud C
weapons."
Cirincione says that there is a small Syrian nuclear research program, which has been around for 40 years and is going nowhere. "It is a basic research program built around a tiny 30 kilowatt reactor that produced a few isotopes and neutrons. It is nowhere near a program for nuclear weapons or nuclear fuel," he said. Over a dozen countries have helped Syria develop its nuclear program, including Belgium, Germany, Russia, China and even the United States, by way of training of scientists, he said.
So what is really going on here? Cirincione told the BBC that "This appears to be the work of a small group of officials leaking cherry-picked, unvetted 'intelligence' to key reporters in order to promote a preexisting political agenda." The preexisting political agenda may be promoting a war with Syria and/or Iran, or torpedoing negotiations between the US and North Korea. Finally, Cirincione adds ominously "If this sounds like the run-up to the war with Iraq, then it should."
A big salute to the intrepid Justin Raimundo of the Libertarian website www.antiwar.com, who had this all figured out last October 15. This column is much indebted to Raimundo and Rozen. For ABC, AP, Tom Jelton and National Pentagon Radio, it's just another day of journalistic infamy.
John W. Farley writes from Henderson, Nevada.
