As the United States and its allies — including Australia — move closer to intervening in the Syrian civil war, more questions are emerging over the chemical weapons attack which is the pretext for that intervention. Challenging questions are being asked about the motive behind the attack, as well as the consequences of a response to it.
The US has been reluctant to intervene in the Syrian conflict, yet drawn a “red line” which, if crossed, would trigger an intervention. The question now being asked is why Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad would unnecessarily provoke the US into a response?
Assad knew that, once publicly committed, the US could not back down from its threat to intervene. For US President Barack Obama to make such a threat and then not carry it through would weaken its international status and prompt further possible tests of its strategic resolve.
The evidence, too, is that despite the huge cost in civilian lives, the Assad regime is at least holding its own in the civil war and has made recent gains. These gains have been largely due to logistical support from Russia, China and Iran, and the intervention of Hezbollah fighters from neighbouring Lebanon.
This, then, begs the questions of why it would resort to using chemical weapons when there is no pressing need to do so, and especially knowing it would engender an external military response?
The Assad regime being evil is a morally satisfying but intellectually bereft answer to this question that does not transcend reasonable — and growing — doubt. It is certain that chemical weapons have been used in Syria, but that is the extent of the facts.
It is possible that the order for Assad regime forces to use its chemical weapons did not come from Assad himself. A rogue commander could have used the weapons, for reasons that can only be guessed at.
But looking at who has most to gain from such an attack, suspicion falls less on the Assad regime and more on the faltering anti-Assad rebellion. External intervention could, at least initially, tip the balance of power in Syria’s civil war in favour of the anti-Assad forces.
The Assad regime’s reluctance and delay in allowing in UN weapons inspectors has not helped allay suspicion that the chemical weapons attach was a deliberate act. However, had a local commander given the order, Assad would have been aware of the likely consequences and thus attempted to delay formal investigations in order to allow signs of the chemicals to dissipate.
Of the two main opposition groupings, the more secular (and Western-supported) Free Syrian Army has struggled and has the most to gain from external intervention. The Saudi and Qatar-backed and Al Qaeda-linked al Nusra Front and the Syrian Islamic Front, though, would also benefit from external intervention. If intervention helped topple the Assad regime, it would ease the way towards them establishing an Islamist state.
While there is no evidence that either of these two somewhat disparate groupings are responsible for the chemical attack, one is clearly desperate and the other has, during the civil war, demonstrated its own lack of moral compunction. The hard evidence, then, beyond the simple fact of an attack, remains ambiguous.
Apart from the formal legality of a direct external intervention, careful consideration is being given to how much evidence will be needed to launch a US-led attack. There appears little ulterior reason for the US to want to intervene in the Syrian civil war, given that it is only likely to further stir up the hornets’ nest.
The US is being drawn into the Syrian civil war in a seemingly mechanistic way. Yet there remains no hard evidence as to who was the perpetrator of the chemical attack. This level of uncertainty has echoes similar to that of Iraq’s “weapons of mass destruction”, and the continuing disaster that remains what is left of the Iraqi state.
*Professor Damien Kingsbury is director of the Centre for Citizenship, Development and Human Rights at Deakin University
Exactly!
Someone had to say it out loud. ‘False flag’ attacks are very much a part of conflict, designed for the outcomes you describe.
I’m sure you’re aware it also suggests that Assad could have considered doing this as obfuscating an outcome.
Why can’t they find proof!? This is really frightening.
Do you think that Assad might feel he has more to gain from a US attack? It would back up his rhetoric of fighting a western conspiracy. It might also prompt further support from Russia and/or Iran. It seems that any US/UK attack has already been flagged as one that would do no significant damage to his position in the civil war.
It is a lot of lives to waste to bring this about if this was the case, but then smaller potential chemical weapon attacks do not seem to have threatened to provoke a response.
Whoever is responsible, if it was just to provoke a reaction it is a horrible price they were prepared to pay.
Damien, this is by far your best piece on this.
The Assad govt has nothing to gain and everything to lose by escalating the affair with the use of chemical weapons.
He, Assad, might be many things but he’s not a fool.
So who stands to gain the most from escalating this civil war by whatever means? I think we all know the answer to that.
False Flags have been used since time immemorial but especially effective with the cover provided by the MSM with their blind and slavish subservience to US Foreign Policy. There is also a little-horn pariah state with much culpability in the mix.
This article is not far from the truth.
Back when the US was gearing up to invade Iraq, the notion he had weapons of mass destruction struck me as absurd and I wrote a letter to the Age to say so, and drew a threatening response from somewhere in California for my trouble. What use would Saddam have chemical or biological weapons such as anthrax, when his opponents would be well guarded against their use? They could only serve as a provocation to bring down an attack on Iraq, as the fiction of their presence showed.
So, yes, it is absurd that Assad would order such an attack. It is not absurd that an Al Qaida linked commander could order their use for precisely the reasons that Damien Kingsbury gives. Until there is indisputable evidence that Assad ordered their use, we should show that we have grown up since the US fictional provocation to attack Iraq.
There may, of course, be other reasons to try to apply sanctions to Syria, given the crimes committed by the Assad regime, but the case for these should be made independently.
I am sure not much in Syria is as it seems. The world needs to be very cautious on how it tries to solve this terrible problem. The saber rattling of a war monger such as Haige must be quickly stamped out. Let cool heads prevail and get that nutter in a straight jacket.