The Mail on Sunday

A story they don’t want you to read...

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HERE’S a curious story, that for some reason the BBC and the major internatio­nal news agencies have not covered, though they definitely know about it.

Did Britain, France and the USA have right on their side when we bombed Syria in April 2018 – supposedly in response to a poison gas attack by the Damascus regime? Or was the action rash and lawless?

In fact, we and the other countries did not actually wait for any investigat­ion by the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) – the recognised internatio­nal watchdog.

So imagine how awkward it would have been if the OPCW (which receives much support from Paris, London and Washington) had reported that claims of a poison gas attack were untrue, or at least unproven. Our bombing would then have been illegal.

And imagine the relief in those capitals when the OPCW duly reported that it was reasonable to conclude that chlorine gas had been used. It was a pretty weak conclusion (and the original, more serious claim, that sarin had been used, was dismissed).

And imagine the rage and upset in those same capitals when a whistleblo­wer at the OPCW leaked informatio­n suggesting that this conclusion may have been wrong, and that gas cylinders supposedly dropped by helicopter could in fact have been placed at the scene by hand. Since the only people in the conflict who have helicopter­s are the

Syrian state, this detail is pretty crucial. He said this rather important informatio­n had been mysterious­ly left out of the official report. Last week, a former boss of the OPCW, Jose Bustani, backed the whistleblo­wer, and publicly accused the organisati­on of ‘irregular behaviour’ during its investigat­ion.

Mr Bustani said he had long held doubts about the alleged attack in Douma, on the outskirts of Damascus, saying: ‘I could make no sense of what I was reading in the internatio­nal press. Even official reports of investigat­ions seemed incoherent at best.’

We have had quite enough wars on false pretences. It costs lives, including those of our soldiers.

This stuff is important.

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