CNN reports yesterday afternoon that the Pentagon has finalized plans to attack Syria
and forcefully depose its leader, Bashar al-Assad, under the cover of
securing weapons of mass destruction and preventing “sectarian violence”
it has fomented by supporting and training the Free Syrian Army.
“The
U.S. military has completed its own planning for how American troops
would conduct a variety of operations against Syria, or to assist
neighboring countries in the event action was ordered, officials tell
CNN.”
CNN says the Pentagon has “finalized its assessment of what types of
units would be needed, how many troops, and even the cost of certain
potential operations.”
“There is a sense that if the sectarian violence in Syria grows, it
could be worse than what we saw in Iraq,” an unnamed Obama
administration official told CNN.
The attack plan is similar to the one used against Libya:
The military planning includes a scenario for a no-fly zone as well as protecting chemical and biological sites. Officials say all the scenarios would be difficult to enact and involve large numbers of U.S. troops and extended operations.
CNN reveals that the United States, Britain and France have discussed
the attack, which they describe as “contingency scenarios,” and have
trained specifically for a military intervention. They are also “sharing
of intelligence about what is happening in Syria with neighboring
countries including Jordan, Turkey and Israel.”
In December, Sibel Edmonds
reported that “foreign military groups, estimated at hundreds of
individuals,” had taken up positions in the city of al-Mafraq in
northern Jordan on the Syrian border. The troops had arrived from the
Ain al-Assad Air base in Iraq and a U.S. aircraft carrying military
personnel landed in the Prince Hassan Air base located about 100 km to
the east of the city of al-Mafraq.
CNN quotes three Defense Department officials as stating that “U.S.
special forces are training and advising Jordanian troops on a range of
specific military tasks they might need to undertake if unrest in Syria
spills over into Jordan or poses a threat to that country.”
The officials said “Jordan’s major security concern is that if the
Syrian regime were to suddenly collapse, then it would face unrest on
its northern border, as well as the possibility of large refugee flows,
weapons smuggling into Jordan, and potential disarray in Syria’s
chemical and biological weapons complex. Jordan also is considering how
and where to potentially set up humanitarian assistance bases inside its
borders, another matter the U.S. is advising it on.”
The pretext for the attack on Syria is eerily reminiscent of the
elaborate and transparently bogus pretext used prior to the invasion of
Iraq:
U.S. satellites are monitoring the chemical and biological weapons sites around the clock, and so far “there is no reason to believe they are not secure,” one of the U.S. officials said.
The U.S. believes the facilities are guarded by some of the most elite Alawite troops loyal to al-Assad. But the official noted that the opposition forces appear to be gaining strength in some areas, and that the United States, Jordan and the allies are concerned that as the amount of al-Assad controlled territory shrinks, some of those critical facilities could be open to attacks, pilfering or efforts by terrorist groups to buy material….
The overall assessment by the U.S. is that in the event some action had to be taken to secure Syrian chemical, biological or weapons facilities, troops from some country would have to enter Syria in a matter of hours.
On June 11, Tony Cartalucci
cited an RT report stating that a false flag involving “Syrian rebels
deploying chemical weapons obtained in Libya against Syrian civilians,
then blaming the Syrian government for the mass casualty event” would be
used as a casus belli to intervene.
The Pentagon did not reveal a timeline on the planned intervention,
but considering the amount of detailed information released to its trusted media asset CNN it is likely the attack will come in a matter of days or weeks instead of months.
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