War,
Syrian-Style? Has Assad Ordered Mass Rapes?
by Russ Baker
WhoWhatWhy.com
Recently
by Russ Baker: Everything
They’re Telling Us About Syria… Is False?
A growing refrain
out of Syria is that widespread rape is taking place and
sanctioned by the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.
But when WhoWhatWhy
examined the allegations, it found that well-intentioned women’s
groups trying to document and prevent such abuses may be falling
victim to a deliberate disinformation campaign intent on rallying
public support for toppling Assad.
If so, this
would not be the first time false or exaggerated allegations involving
women or children were used to generate public anger and build support
for military action. This is a particularly effective and cynical
approach in part because it appeals to the very constituencies
most resistant to war and its toll: women and human rights advocates.
While rape
is horrifically common throughout the world, and more so in conflict
zones, so, too, are “psychological operations” intended to shape
perceptions and outcomes. Many regimes, particularly authoritarian
and totalitarian ones, lie routinely to their people, but as the
purported exemplars of high standards of truthfulness and accountability,
the United States, Britain and their allies are expected to uphold
those values.
Fomenting public
outrage is hardly a new thing. Hitler
used it to rally the German people. But it is not just genocidal
maniacs abroad who manipulate public sentiment. Widespread opposition
to US entry into World War I was overcome through an extensive
range of propaganda efforts, including untrue stories of German
soldiers bayoneting babies. Ironically and tragically, when credible
indications of the Nazi death camps arrived in the United States,
the government did nothing, the
media punted, and the public, in part because of prior untruths,
remained skeptical.
During the
first Gulf War, a Kuwaiti princess appearing in the guise of an
ordinary, anonymous eyewitness, appeared before Congress and told
false stories of Iraqi soldiers killing newborn babies by taking
them out of incubators. These stories, concocted by a publicity
firm tied to the George H.W. Bush administration, were cited by
senators supporting an invasion of Iraq. In 2011, we were told that
Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi had “ordered”
mass rape.
In the Iraqi
case, more people heard the original charges than the later corrections.
In the Libyan case, the media simply reported the original allegations
but failed to report that no corroboration had ever emerged. The
allegations simply vanished.
The
Allegations
Because we
had written early
and often
about rape allegations in Libya, we wondered if similar claims might
surface in Syria as well. We did not have to wait long to find out.
In the summer of 2011, one of the first claims came from Oliver
North of Iran-Contra Scandal fame, in a syndicated
column that provided no support for the assertion that:
In
Syria, Bashar Assad’s violently repressive regime continues a vicious
campaign of rape, plunder and murder orchestrated by the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard Corps in an effort to retain control over the
Syrian people.
A
UN report on human rights violations in Syria last fall repeated
several witnesses’ claims that security officials had warned them
their female relatives would be raped if they did not cooperate.
It also cited several allegations that men were anally raped with
batons and boys raped by security officials. Given the police baton
rape of Rodney King in Los Angeles as well as the conviction of
Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky for repeated
acts of “deviant forcible sexual intercourse” with minor males,
and a related coverup by the university, as well as human rights
group reports on the frequency of prison rape in the United States
to say nothing of within
the US military Americans well know that such acts can
take place anywhere. But because the Assad regime is notably cruel
and corrupt does not in itself tell us that Assad would see a campaign
of sexual terror as useful when he is already struggling to maintain
public support.
The UN report,
interestingly, made no mention of widespread organized rape of women.
Nonetheless,
an organized, calculated, Syrian government rape operation was portrayed
recently in numerous news outlets, including The
Atlantic. Here’s how the US-based international news website
Global Post headlined it:
New
project charts rape in Syria
A
new project tracks reports of sexualized violence in Syria, where
attacks are usually carried out by regime forces.
Of particular
interest is the subheadline, saying that sexual attacks are “usually
carried out by regime forces.”
In the case
of Libya, wide coverage of similar allegations was quickly followed
by a growing Western chorus for the ouster of Muammar Qaddafi. But
once Qaddafi had been ousted by a huge international military effort,
we no longer heard a peep about those allegations nor saw
proof that they were accurate. And now, with Syria an urgent priority
and Western countries struggling to overcome Russian and Chinese
opposition to intervention, the echo is loud indeed.
Rape allegations
represent a separate and powerful appeal to emotion, distinct from
charges of massacres. The Western media also carried unverified
accounts of Qaddafi’s forces committing massacres of unarmed civilians
that were never borne out and seldom publicly corrected.
Meanwhile, more recent allegations that rebel Libyan forces
rather than Qaddafi’s had committed massacres have
not been investigated by the new Libyan authorities, who, after
all, represent the victorious rebels.
Recently, as
we noted here
and here,
early reports suggesting that Syria’s Assad and his force were solely
or principally responsible for massacres of men, women and children
have been negated by partial retractions though anecdotal
evidence suggests that many more heard and still believe the original
claims than the subsequent cautionary reports.
Recently, defectors,
a growing tool in the propaganda arsenal, have been cited warning
that Assad has and will use chemical weapons again, a story
famously and falsely
utilized to build support for intervention in Iraq. For its
part, the Syrian regime, well aware that it is losing the war of
words and of how this could be used to justify another NATO bombing
campaign as in Libya, has taken the atypical step of publicly
promising that its chemical weapons stores are secure and will
not be used against the insurgents or Syrian civilians. It has,
however, just
announced that it would consider itself entitled to use it against
foreign invaders a clear warning that it expects but hopes
to discourage NATO from doing what it did to Qaddafi.
A Story
Fit For the Tabloids
The new rape
allegations have a particular, horribly evil story line, beyond
the magnitude of “normal” awfulness.
The
GlobalPost story contained this sickening account:
A
Syrian girl remembers being kidnapped and kept in an apartment with
other young girls. Each day, people in charge of the units would
inject the girls’ thighs with an unknown substance, leaving them
paralyzed. With the girls unable to move, they were then raped by
security forces. In one instance, the girl recounted a soldier burning
her genitals with a hot iron. The horrific story is one of many
now recorded and posted
online by Women Under Siege, an initiative by the Women’s Media
Center.
Could all this
be true?
Having not
heard of Women Under Siege, we at WhoWhatWhy decided to check out
the organization, contact it, and seek more details.
At the group’s
website, we read this:
A
note uploaded to a personal Facebook page written by an engineer
describes multiple instances of rape as gathered by a Syrian expatriate
and her husband who traveled to Jordan to meet with rape survivors.
The couple said they met with the women in two apartments being
rented by Saudi individuals to serve as shelters for rape victims.
The couple said they spoke to 17-year-old girl who was raped and
kidnapped when her family’s home was searched. The girl was subsequently
“moved from one apartment to another for 15 days. Every apartment
was guarded and had a woman responsible for five to 10 girls in
the apartment. Every day, the girls were injected with a substance
in their thighs, after which they became unable to move, and the
shabiha [plainclothes militia forces] would rape them.”
During
one rape, the girl told the couple, she was tied, undressed, and
her genitals, including the inside of her vagina, were burned with
a hot iron. She said she passed out and awoke later at a Syrian
detention center in Damascus known as the Palestine Security Branch.
Upon
her release, she escaped to Jordan, where she has since undergone
“multiple reconstructive surgeries,” she said. She is reportedly
suffering lasting effects from the unidentified substance that was
injected into her thighs, including visible injection sites and
a blood disorder.
This
is the URL of the Facebook report: https://www.facebook.com/notes/hadi-al-bahra/???-??-?????-???-????????-??-??-????-??-???-???????-?-?????/10150943043755606.
Other cases from this Facebook note appear here: https://womenundersiegesyria.crowdmap.com/reports/view/58
and here: https://womenundersiegesyria.crowdmap.com/reports/view/60
.
When we went
to the facebook page cited, we found it was from a man named Hadi
Al Bahra. Al Bahra’s personal facebook page shows that he is a male,
from Damascus, Syria but is based in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
Al Bahra is the General Director of Saudia
Online, a portal for all things Saudi. Saudi Arabia, a country
with its own abominable record on treatment of women and human rights
generally, is a leading advocate for military intervention
to overthrow Assad.
More on Al
Bahra here:
He was born in Syria, and migrated to the US at 18, decades ago.
We contacted
Mr. Al Bahra by email, seeking to interview him, but he did not
respond.
Beyond that
very vague “report” from Saudi Arabia, we know nothing. We don’t
know who the “Syrian expatriate” and her husband are. We have no
way of knowing that they exist, and if they do, that they actually
told Al Bahra the story posted on the Women Under Siege website.
Even if they did, we don’t know that they are telling the truth.
Even if they are, we don’t know that whoever told them that story
was telling them the truth. And even if everyone is telling the
truth, it still doesn’t mean that Bashar Assad is behind a campaign
of deliberate sexual brutalization or that such claims should
be the basis for massive foreign military power to effect regime
change in Syria.
Just a caveat,
always needed in such articles: Assad is a brutal dictator, as exist
throughout the world and he and his family have been behaving
brutally for decades. There is no particular evidence that his regime
is demonstrably more vicious than it has ever been, excepting for
his use of his military to suppress a foreign-backed domestic uprising
at all costs. Any fair comparison would have to take into account
the amount of firepower, the fatalities and casualties incurred
by Western military campaigns in places ranging from Vietnam to
Iraq.
There also
is no history of the United States and its allies insisting that
other brutal, authoritarian (but allied) regimes such as those in
Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Yemen and the Gulf States also abdicate.
It
Gets Worse
Here is another
report from the Women Under Siege website:
Doctor
tells of 2,000 women being treated in Damascus for rape
Dr.
Malaz Alatassi, a founder and board member of the Syrian Sunrise
Foundation, a nonprofit humanitarian aid organization based in the
U.S., testified at the European Parliament on April 23, 2012, about
atrocities in Syria.
Alatassi
reports that he has spoken with a female physician in Damascus who
says she is treating some of the 2,000 girls and women raped throughout
Syria who have come to Damascus seeking support. The youngest was
a 7-year-old girl who died on the operating room table, he said.
Many women are pregnant and/or have tested HIV-positive, according
to Alatassi. There is not enough medical, psychological, or social
support to treat the women’s needs, he said, adding that many have
lost husbands or parents.
WhoWhatWhy
looked into the nonprofit humanitarian aid organization founded
by Dr. Alatassi, the Syrian
Sunrise Foundation. You can find the articles of incorporation
of the Foundation here.
It was incorporated in Delaware a low-disclosure state more
typically favored by for-profits than non-profits.
The incorporator
of the foundation was Asim Ghafoor of Sterling, Virginia. Ghafoor
has been in the news in the past. He was political director of the
now-defunct Islamic Free Market Foundation, cofounded by Grover
Norquist, the influential GOP operative. Ghafoor, an attorney, was
a partner in a consulting firm that advertised good connections
with US Homeland Security (and for a time had a Redskins
game skybox for rubbing elbows with bigwigs), though he also
represented various charitable entities that were investigated for
alleged terrorist ties.
We emailed
and later spoke with Alatassi. We asked him if he could put us in
touch with the Syrian doctor cited in his report. He said that he
would pass along our request for a Skype conversation. We did not
hear back from the doctor or Alatassi.
YouTube’s
Astonishing Policy Influence
Women
Under Siege, sponsored by The
Women’s Media Center, is a US-based nonprofit founded in 2005
by Jane Fonda, Robin Morgan and Gloria Steinem.
In an interview,
Gloria Feldt, a former president of Planned Parenthood and a member
of the Women’s Media Center’s board of directors, said it was her
understanding that the Syria project was an indirect outgrowth of
conversations between Steinem and the author of a book about sexualized
violence in the Holocaust. She said Steinem was struck by how “sexualized
violence had gotten no recognition as one of tools of repression
and genocide.” Apparently, with Syria the current top story about
war, the organization thought it would be an ideal place to document
the role of sexual violence there. (Steinem herself was on a writer’s
retreat and, according to her office, unavailable for comment.)
Seeking to
establish where Women Under Siege gets its Syria information, we
contacted Lauren Wolfe, the young journalist running it. She referred
us to Karestan Koenen, a Columbia University epidemiologist who
has taken the lead on the information collection. Koenen herself
was a victim
of a brutal rape not in Syria, but as a volunteer for
the US Peace Corps in Niger. She is one of several women who
came forward to reveal that the Corps sought to suppress the
story of how its own employees were victims while working in largely
friendly countries. (President Obama has signed
legislation to provide additional protections.)
We spoke to
Koenen while she was attending a conference in Brussels. Koenen
made clear that the group’s information is almost entirely second-
or third or fourth-hand and largely comes from unverified web postings.
“The overall goal of the project is to map in real time alleged
sexual assaults in Syria,” she said. “The reports we have thus far
are mostly identified through researchers and activists who do systematic
searches of the web Google, YouTube, etc. Most results are
from that. Some are from human rights groups, some from journalists.”
Koenen noted that a very few of the allegations have been emailed
to them from individuals claiming direct knowledge.
She readily
conceded that there is no way to know who is taking the time and
effort to create such web postings. Presumably it is not victims
themselves. And she agreed that such claims should be treated with
caution. She did, however, note that it is difficult to obtain accurate,
documented information in real time, and that waiting until the
conflict is over is also not a viable option.
As for the
trends from the inputs, Koenen says, “In the vast majority of reports
we’ve received about 70 percent, the perpetrators are government
forces. The fact we haven’t received so many reports about the [opposition]
Free Syrian army doesn’t mean they haven’t committed rapes. We have
gotten a few.”
Koenen told
us that her boss, Wolfe, was imminently due to speak about rape
in Syria on a panel at the United Nations, shortly before the Security
Council was to take yet another vote on whether to dramatically
increase sanctions against Assad.
Because of
Russian and Chinese objections, the Security Council did not approve
those sanctions. But the United States and its allies made clear
they intend
to go forward with toppling Assad, and do not need UN acquiescence.
As the New York Times noted:
“We’re
looking at the controlled demolition of the Assad regime,” said
Andrew J. Tabler, a Syria expert at the Washington Institute for
Near East Policy.
Source:
Lieberman and McCain?
One of the
early and leading claimants for mass rape in Syria is Sen. Joseph
Lieberman, a member of the Armed Services Committee and a strong
supporter of US military interventions in Iraq and Libya. He, along
with his friend John McCain, has been in the forefront of pushing
for US military participation in support of the uprising against
Assad.
By his own
account, though, he is often skeptical of the value of inquiries.
He by statement or action backed
away from inquiries into Hurricane Katrina malfeasance and refused
to investigate the murders of civilians by Blackwater in Iraq.
And as Chairman
of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee,
Lieberman
declared: “We like to do legislation,” Lieberman
said. “We don’t like investigating … just to see who
is at fault.”
Far fewer people
who are reading the headlines about Assad being behind mass rapes
are likely to read this
caveat on the Women Under Siege site:
The
thing is, rape is nearly impossible to confirm. …
[Snip]
When
documenting rape, as in anything, you have to evaluate your source:
Is this coming directly from the woman who was violated? From her
cousin? Her cousin’s friend? In the case of Syria, many stories
are coming from that cousin’s friend. Or from the cousin’s friend
who “heard about” a friend of his brother’s sister…etc. Right
now, Syria is a convoluted black hole of second- and third-hand
reporting that few conflict zones can rival in recent history.
The
sources reporting rape directly to our crowdmap or via news outlets
vary: Fathers
speak out for their daughters, doctors
for their patients, and, perhaps most surprisingly, many of
our reports are sourced from former Syrian army soldiers admitting
(forcibly? We can’t know) the crimes they have committed. It’s
a sinkhole of fact-checking. But, for the sake of our humanity,
we believe we have to mark all of this down and try.
This
is why we’ve chosen to post all our reports on WomenUnderSiegeSyria.crowdmap.com
as “unverified.”
In our interview,
Women Under Siege’s Koenen noted: “We have no evidence there are
orders [by Assad] to do this. It seems to be widespread, in over
a dozen locations, but at this point I wouldn’t be able to say.”
And, asked about whether there is something unique about what is
alleged in Syria that would make this a special case for military
intervention, including a probable bombing campaign and all that
entails, she said: “We don’t have a sense whether sexual violence
is more common in this conflict than in others.”
For more on
rape as a worldwide problem (including the fact that eighteen percent
of women in the United States have been victims of rape or attempted
rape), see this.
Finally, in
order to advance the public interest, WhoWhatWhy makes this offer:
We are a small nonprofit with limited editorial resources. But if
someone of substantial means (though no agenda) will step forward
to fund it, WhoWhatWhy will put a team in-country in Syria and try
to establish whether the headlines accurately portray what is going
on. We promise to report, fairly, whatever we find.
Reprinted
from WhoWhatWhy.com.
July
30, 2012
Russ
Baker is an award-winning investigative reporter. He has written
for The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, The Nation,
The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Village
Voice and Esquire and dozens of other major domestic and
foreign publications. He has also served as a contributing editor
to the Columbia Journalism Review. Baker received a 2005
Deadline Club award for his exclusive reporting on George W. Bush’s
military record. He is the author of Family
of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, the Powerful Forces That Put It in
the White House, and What Their Influence Means for America
(Bloomsbury Press, 2009); it was released in paperback as Family
of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, America’s Invisible Government and
the Hidden History of the Last Fifty Years. For more information
on Russ’s work, see his sites, www.familyofsecrets.com
and www.russbaker.com.
Copyright
© 2012 WhoWhatWhy.com
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