2013/09/13

Source: McclatchyDC: Intercepts caught Assad rejecting requests to use chemical weapons, German paper says!

Berlin - Syrian President Bashar Assad has repeatedly rejected requests from his field commanders for approval to use chemical weapons, according to a report this weekend in a German newspaper. The report in Bild am Sonntag, which is a widely read and influential national Sunday newspaper, reported that the head of the German Foreign Intelligence agency, Gerhard Shindler, last week told a select group of German lawmakers that intercepted communications had convinced German Foreign Intelligence agency, Gerhard Schindler, last week told a select group of German lawmakers that intercepted communications had convinced German intelligence officials that Assad did not order or approve what is believed to be a sarin gas attack on Aug. 21 that killed hundreds of people in Damascus's eastern suburbs. The Obama administration has blamed the attack on Assad. The evidence against Assad was described over the weekend as common sense by White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough on CNN's "State of the Union." "The material was used in the eastern suburbs of Damascus that have been controlled by the opposition for some time," he said. "It was delivered by rockets, rockets that we know the Assad regime has, and we have no indication that the opposition has." Russia has questioned that logic, announcing last week that in July it filed a 100-page long "technical and scientific" report on an alleged March 19 chemical weapons attack on a suburb of Aleppo that it says implicates rebel fighters. A U.N. team dispatched to Syria to investigate the March 19 attack was sent to the scene of the Aug. 21 incident. The samples it collected are currently being analyzed in Europe at labs certified by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, the international agency that monitors compliance with chemical weapons bans. The German intelligence briefing to lawmakers described by Bild am Sonntag fits neither narrative precisely. The newspaper's article said that on numerous occasions in recent months, the German intelligence ship named Oker, which off the Syrian coast, has intercepted communications indicating that field officers have contacted the Syrian presidential palace seeking permission to use chemical weapons and have been turned down. The article added that German intelligence does not believe Assad sanctioned the alleged attack on August 21. Last week, the German news-magazine Der Spiegel, also citing a briefing for German legislators, said that the Oker had intercepted a phone call between a commander from the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah and an official at an unidentified Iranian embassy saying that Assad had ordered the Aug. 21 chemical attack out of anger. The Hezbollah commander called the attack a "huge mistake," Der Spiegel said. It was not clear if the two news accounts were based on the same or different briefings. Assad told American journalist Charlie Rose in an interview to be broadcast in its entirety Monday night on PBS that "there has been no evidence that I used chemical weapons against my own people."

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