SYRIA -- Whatever we do will be wrong -- editor's note on Hizbollah's S. Am. base
NightWatch
For the night of
27 August 2013
Whatever we do in Syria is likely to be wrong with long term adverse consequences. Hizbollah has a base in the "Triple Frontier of South America. Their stated intent is to "get to America if something happens to Iran." I learned this on 9/11/2001 while stranded in Latin America. It had not been reported at that time. A DOD friend and I submitted a report to pertinent agencies. Got no response. The presence of the base was not reported publicly until May 2007. Since then there are thousands of references and Hizbollah has been reported in Mexico. I am sure by this time they are in the USA. I also learned from Latin American associates that Middle Easterners come into Mexico where groups groom them, teach them Spanish, get them Visas and assist them to cross the border unchecked. For some inexplicable reason, some Liberal-leaning people objected to my reporting this in an article I published and even called me a liar....one of their favorite words, justifiable or not. The Syrian crisis is far more serious and far-reaching than most realize, especially those who want to remain in denial of reality of what is happening in the region. The Obama administration has been utterly feckless and remains so. Google "Triple Frontier" Hizbollah, or "Triborder Region, S. Am. Hizbollah for thousands of references. First report by Pablo Gatto, Telemunco, and Richard Windrem, NBC in May 2007 is a good start.
Syria: Update.
The mainstream media headlines with slight variations predict that an attack
against Syrian targets by US missiles could occur as early as Thursday. The UK
and France are lobbying hard for action because of the alleged chemical
attack.
Special Comment:
Numerous pundits and experts have expounded on the need for the US to take
action, the consequences of inaction, and the potential for a US attack to
generate a regional conventional war. Curiously, they have not mentioned the
probability of Iranian-instigated terrorist attacks in the
US.
NightWatch has
little to add to all that "wisdom," but prefers to comment on matters not
covered.
Feedback from one of the finest analysts alive provided a
reminder that the "bugs and gas" (biological and chemical warfare) lobby in US
intelligence contains fine people who get few opportunities to shine. That's
because of the limits of intelligence on bugs and gas. Next to nukes (nuclear
weapons) they are the most protected weapons a country, such as Syria and North
Korea, has.
As a result, studies of national capabilities and stock
piles of bugs and gas are notoriously suspect, but err on the side of caution
because a little goes a long way. As a result, the record of predictive accuracy
tends to be poor. That record includes the inaccurate judgments about various
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq in 2003.
The detection of actual use of bugs and gas agents and of
the specific agents used, as during the last year of the Iran-Iraq War, is even
harder. It always requires reliable and competently educated and specially
trained investigators on the ground at the site. Actual use cannot be inferred
from radio intercepts or any other indirect or remotely collected information
source.
A second observation derives from the Russian use of a
chemical agent in 2002 when Chechen terrorists held more than 700 Russian
hostages in a Moscow theater. The Russians used a crowd suppression agent that
killed 116 people, but enabled 650 to be rescued. The agent is not banned by the
Geneva convention on chemical warfare.
If the Syrians used such an agent, which can be delivered
by mortars and artillery as well as aircraft, there would be no international
legal justification for attacking Syria based on the Geneva convention. It would
not have been violated. The possibility that a non-banned substance was used
makes it all the more urgent that competent investigators inspect the sites to
identify the agent as well as the culprit.
A third observation is that the use of lethal gas is
notoriously and inherently dangerous, often depending on the weather and the
delivery system. It can blow back, in some instances, for miles. That is why
military forces do not use it.
A fourth observation from Feedback from chemical warfare
experts is that lethal gas kills effectively. There are no large numbers of
people left alive but suffering. Victims die by the thousands. Survivors are
few, if any. That is the lesson of Iraq's use of such weapons at Hallabjah
against the Kurds and later against the Iranians. Casualty reports from Syria
are precisely opposite of the lethality pattern in a chemical weapon
attack.
A fifth observation is that US media have given Syrian
forces more than enough warning to enable them to protect themselves and their
weapons. Leaks about US attack plans represent either monumental incompetence in
operational security or a deliberate effort to tip off the Syrians for arcane
political purposes.
In either event, the leaks ensure that Syrian military
forces will suffer no significant damage from a US attack. An attack under these
conditions must be considered entertainment for the benefit of the international
press instead of a serious military operation.
As for Syrian defense capabilities, Syria has a respectable
integrated air defense system, but the Israelis have defeated it thrice in the
past year. It poses no serious impediment to a missile or air attack except to
the unwary or unlucky.
Syria has supersonic anti-ship cruise missiles that have a
range of 300 nm. Syria will use them if it can acquire the US destroyers off its
coast.
As for the value of limited punitive strikes, Syria already
has shown that it can withstand limited, genuinely surgical, punitive attacks by
the Israeli air force. The Israelis have attacked three times in the past 18
months and the Syrians have not retaliated. Apparently that is because the
Israeli attacks have had no demonstrable impact on Hizballah's operations or
Syria's prosecution of the fight against the opposition.
Syria is in an existential battle. Surgical, pin prick NATO
attacks are trivial compared to the prospect of Syrian forces destroying the
rebel concentrations east of Damascus. This means Syria might not retaliate for
a US attack, but just continue to prosecute the fight. Iran and Lebanese
Hizballah are the more dangerous sources of retaliation.
As for ripple effects, Iran is so heavily invested in the
survival of the government in Syria that US and NATO planners must plan for
retaliatory attacks in Western Europe, in the US, in the Persian Gulf states and
everywhere the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps Quds Force has a presence.
Iran's responses will depend on the damage inflicted on
Syria.
Concerning leading from behind, American audiences
apparently are not aware that in Libya and in Mali, Western European air forces
were unable to sustain combat flight and logistics operations without
comprehensive US support, from intelligence to mission planning to all types of
resupply. Some US military personnel are resentful because they received so
little recognition for so much effort to compensate for European NATO lack of
capabilities.
The notion of leading from behind is a political and media
myth. NATO is incapable of sustaining any but the most elementary level of air
combat for a minimal amount of time without comprehensive US support. That means
the feel-good notion of a coalition of the willing is actually a cover term for
US military operations with minimal NATO help for window dressing. This is not a
criticism, it is a fact of European economics.
End of NightWatch for
27 August.
NightWatch is brought to you by
Kforce Government Solutions, Inc. (KGS), a leader in government problem-solving,
Data Confidence® and intelligence. Views and opinions expressed in NightWatch
are solely those of the author, and do not necessarily represent those of KGS,
its management, or affiliates.
A Member of AFCEA
International
Comments
Post a Comment