Khaleej Times

Trump’s far-right backers rebel over ‘hoax’ airstrike

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WASHINGTON — Far-right backers of US President Donald Trump rebelled on Friday after he ordered a missile strike to punish Syria for a suspected chemical weapons attack that killed 86 people.

Bandying the hashtag #Syriahoax, leaders of the “Alt-Right” white nationalis­t fringe lashed out at the president for abandoning his election campaign stances.

Some denied the suspected chemical attack took place. Others rejected the broadly accepted view that it was the hand of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Instead, they blamed antiAssad fighters like the Al Sham Front, formerly Al Nusra, for a so-called false-flag attack meant to be pinned on Damascus.

Still others said Trump had fallen victim to the United States “deep state,” an ostensibly entrenched military-national security bureaucrac­y at odds with the new president’s anti-Washington views.

“Anyone who claimed Trump had blind loyalty had a wakeup call today,” said Mike Cernovich, one of the movement’s most prominent leaders and a popularize­r of often unfounded conspiracy theories. “We all know that Assad would not poison his own people,” he said in an online video.

“We do know that the Deep State does want war with Russia, and they are using the Syria gas attack, which is a hoax, to start World War Three with Russia.”

Alex Jones, whose “Infowars” website is a hub for the far-right movement, but others allege is a wellspring of the “fake news” phenomenon, alleged that Tuesday’s attack was launched by Syrian opposition.

“Why would Assad do that when he is winning?” he asked in a webcast.

Jones argued it was a ruse to force Trump into line with Washington’s more traditiona­l conservati­ves.

“If he gives in to this anti-Syria thing to prove he’s not a Russian puppet, they’re not going to stop. They are already saying Syria is his fault,” Jones said.

Most mainstream conservati­ves endorsed Trump’s order to fire 59 Tomahawk missiles at a Syrian military air base to punish and warn the Assad regime.

But the far right was angered over what it sees is an abandonmen­t of President Trump’s nationalis­t and isolationi­st campaign positions. Ann Coulter, a favorite pundit of conservati­ves, pointed to Trump’s 2013 tweets opposing any increase in US military involvemen­t in the Middle East.

“We should stay the hell out of Syria,” said Trump, then a property tycoon mulling a White House bid.—

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