By US Standards, America Should’ve Been Bombed for What Happened in Waco, Texas 25 Yrs Ago

in #news6 years ago


By Rachel Blevins

 When reports claimed that a chemical attack killed 70 civilians in  Syria earlier this month, the Trump administration was quick to place  the blame on the Syrian government—despite having no evidence—and they claimed that the horror of such an atrocity deserved retaliation in the form of targeted airstrikes. 

While the United States military maintained that the 120 missiles  launched in the attack destroyed a facility that was used to produce  chemical weapons, witnesses on the ground in Douma, Syria, claimed that  the airstrikes actually destroyed a cancer research facility. U.S. intelligence officials have since admitted  that the attack was carried out despite the fact that the United States  had no proof that the Syrian government had carried out a sarin gas  attack. Instead, the U.S. acted before an investigation could be  conducted, and as is usually the case with reported gas attacks in  Syria, proof has yet to be found to show that President Bashar al-Assad  was responsible. 

If the idea that a government would use chemicals to kill  dozens of its own citizens is so abhorrent that the U.S. would risk  World War 3 to take a stand against it, then it must mean that the U.S.  would never do the same thing to its own citizens, for fear that it  could be subjected to a similar response from another country—right?

However, on April 19, 1993, there was a government that used chemical weapons on its own people, and nearly 80 men, women, and children died  as a result. But the attack was not carried out by the Syrian  government and it did not happen in the Middle East. It took place in  Waco, Texas, and it was perpetrated by the United States government. 

It all started as the government began looking for ways to obtain a  warrant to search the 77-acre plot occupied by a group called the Branch  Davidians when they heard rumors that the mysterious cult was  stockpiling weapons and modifying them with illegal parts in preparation  for the end of the world. Branch Davidian leader David Koresh was accused of having multiple  underage wives, sexually abusing the young daughters of his members, and  ultimately holding cult members against their will. 

But an  investigation conducted by Child Protective Services in 1992 concluded  that no one was being held against their will and there were no signs of  child abuse. The case against the Branch Davidians continued to grow, and as the  Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) looked for  more evidence against them, Koresh was also accused  of running a meth lab on the property. 

Although no evidence of this was  ever found, it served as a legal pretext for ATF agents to receive  military training, in order to initiate a raid on the property. ATF agents attempted to serve a search warrant at the property on  Feb. 28, 1993, and they were met with gunfire from the Branch Davidians.  They returned fire, and four ATF agents and six Davidians were killed  as a result. After the shootout, the FBI joined in and the agencies  launched a standoff for the next 51 days. 

During the siege, federal agents cut off water and electricity to the  compound, and in their attempt to get Koresh to surrender, the Houston  Chronicle reported that the agents tortured the remaining members by “using  tanks to crush vehicles in front of the compound, playing loud music  and flooding the area with bright lights at night to increase pressure  on the Davidians.”  Despite weeks of efforts to get the Davidians to surrender, the  government learned that the group was, indeed, prepared for the  apocalypse. 

The Clinton Administration decided that the siege was taking  too long, and Attorney General Janet Reno authorized the use of  CS gas, even though it was known that the Davidians did not have gas  masks for the two dozen children who were still inside the compound. Early on the morning of April 19, federal agents brought in heavy  equipment to break down the walls of the building and they spent hours  filling it with a dangerous mix of CS gas and methyl chloride that has  been shown to be potentially flammable. 

When the compound engulfed in flames, killing 76 men, women and  children, who were trapped inside, the government insisted that the fire  was set by the Branch Davidians as a way to commit suicide. However, in  1999, the FBI admitted its agents had fired pyrotechnic tear gas grenades at the Davidian compound, which could have sparked a fire. 

As The Free Thought Project has reported, researchers investigating the incident “concluded federal agents were observed shooting  from the compound’s grounds into the building already set ablaze by  fire. While the official government narrative is those individuals  committed suicide, the researchers were able to demonstrate they were  likely killed by automatic weapons fired by federal agents, possibly killed as they were attempting to flee their burning compound.” 

Following the massacre, there are also a number of glaring problems  associated with attempts to investigate the events surrounding it.  According to reports,  the corpses of the victims liquefied weeks after they were autopsied,  and the door to Mount Carmel, which Davidians believed would show that  the ATF fired first, went missing. 

The Waco Siege is just one example of the overwhelming hypocrisy  exerted by the U.S. government regarding the use of chemical weapons on  civilians. As The Hill noted,  the horrific massacre occurred three months after the U.S. signed a  treaty promising not to use chemical weapons on enemy soldiers, which  just happened to leave a loophole that would let the U.S. torture its  own citizens: 

“Shortly before the Waco showdown, U.S.  government officials signed an international Chemical Weapons Convention  treaty pledging never to use nerve agents, mustard gas, and other  compounds, including tear gas against enemy soldiers. But the treaty  contained a loophole permitting governments to gas their own people. On  April 19, 1993, the FBI pumped CS gas and methyl chloride, a potentially  lethal, flammable combination, into the Davidians’ residence for six  hours, disregarding explicit warnings that CS gas should not be used  indoors.”

 We are the Free Thought Project — a hub for Free Thinking conversations about the promotion of liberty and the daunting task of government accountability. All of our content was created by our team of artists and writers. Learn more about us on our website thefreethoughtproject.com.

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In response to a question, one of the officer in charge of this chemical attack said, "I guess they didn't love their children enough."

A government who is not forthright enough to admit its failures is not worth following.

Dozens of children died of cyanide gas poisoning, as indicated by their twisted bodies that were dug up from under the rubble . Hiding in a basement that was safe from the bullets, it was not safe from the cyanide gas caused by igniting the dried remains of the nerve gas.

The Branch Davidians were never convicted of any crimes. All the people who lived through the experience were all found not guilty. Even the sheriff in the county knew and talked to the Davidians. He could show up at any time and talk to them. But the ATF had to try for a stealth attack to serve a search warrent.

This is what The US govern-cement does. Never admits fault. And will escalate to any level of violence. We need to impose strict gun control on these insane people.

WacoTxChild.png

very well said!

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