The US Finally Admits To Sending Heavy Weapons From Libya To #Syrian Rebels

09/12/12

The Obama administration has decided to launch a covert operation to send heavy weapons to Syrian rebels, Christina Lamb of The Sunday Times of London reports.

But that covert operation may have already taken place.

Diplomatic sources told the Sunday Times that the U.S. “bought weapons from the stockpiles of Libya’s former dictator Muammar Gaddafi.”

The heavy arms include mortars, rocket propelled grenades, anti-tank missiles and the controversial anti-aircraft heat-seeking SA-7 missiles, which are integral to countering Bashar Al-Assad’s bombing campaign.

The previously hidden CIA operation in Benghazi involved finding and repurchasing heavy weaponry looted from Libyan government arsenals, and in October we reported evidence indicating that U.S. agents — particularly murdered ambassador Chris Stevens — were at least aware of heavy weapons moving from Libya to jihadist Syrian rebels. 

From the Times report:

President Barack Obama authorized clandestine CIA support earlier this year and both the US and Britain have had special forces and intelligence officers on the ground for some time. They have helped with logistics and communications, but until now have refused to arm the Free Syrian Army.

There have been several possible SA-7 spottings in Syria dating as far back as early summer 2012, and there are indications that at least some of Gaddafi’s 20,000 portable heat-seeking missiles were shipped before now.

On Sept. 6 a Libyan ship “carrying the largest consignment of weapons” for Syrian rebels docked in southern Turkey. The ship’s captain was “a Libyan from Benghazi” who worked for the new Libyan government. The man who organized that shipment, Tripoli Military Council head Abdelhakim Belhadj, worked directly with Stevens during the Libyan revolution.

Stevens’ last meeting on Sept. 11 was with Turkish Consul General Ali Sait Akin, and a source told Fox News that Stevens was in Benghazi “to negotiate a weapons transfer in an effort to get SA-7 missiles out of the hands of Libya-based extremists.”

Last month The Wall Street Journal reported that the State Department presence in Benghazi “provided diplomatic cover” for the now-exposed CIA annex. It follows that the ”weapons transfer” that Stevens negotiated involved sending heavy weapons recovered by the CIA to the revolutionaries in Syria.

The newest report comes days before the U.S. is expected to recognize the newest Syrian coalition — and its Islamic-dominated-command — as the legitimate representative of the Syrian people. The State Department has also indicated that it will soon name the opposition’s highly effective al-Nusra brigade a “terrorist organization” for its ties to Al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI).

Both of these stipulations, recognition of a unified opposition and creation of distance from extremist groups, are required in order for the Obama administration to openly acknowledge supporting Syrian rebels with weapons and supplies.

#Syria is not Libya, Russia tells NATO leaders

04/12/12

By Indo Asian News Service

Brussels, Dec 4 (IANS) Expressing concern over NATO’s possible deployment of surface-to-air Patriot missiles to protect Turkey from potential attacks from neighbouring Syria, Russia Tuesday reminded NATO leaders that they should not view Syria as Libya.

After meeting his NATO counterparts in Brussels, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, said: “This stockpiling of armaments is always creating an additional risk that these armaments will be used … We have purely political concern that the conflict is increasingly militarized.”

“Syria is not Libya … We believe that we need to carry out political and diplomatic intervention and pursue negotiations between all the parties that are engaged in bloodshed there,” reported Xinhua citing Lavrov who also said the threats against Turkey should not be overstated.

Russia had proposed to set up a communication line in the real time between Turkey and Syria to avoid any escalation, he said.

At the meeting, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen tried to reassure Russia that the Patriots would not be used to implement a no-fly zone in Syria, but was aimed at defending Turkey from Syrian missiles.

“We have all declared that this is a defensive measure only, that we have no offensive intentions. Actually, I do believe the deployment of Patriots missiles will serve as an effective deterrence to de-escalate the situation along the Syria-Turkey border,” he said.

Rasmussen said earlier that the military alliance was expected to approve Turkey’s request for Patriot missiles, which would be provided by Germany, the Netherland and the US.

#Syria Tunisia and Libya delay recognizing Syrian opposition

Tunisia and Libya will both hold off on recognizing a new Syrian opposition body until they know more about its make-up, Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki said on Thursday.

The Syrian National Coalition for Opposition and Revolutionary Forces was set up on November 11 under Western and Gulf Arab pressure, to unite diverse opposition voices.

Britain, France, Turkey and Gulf Arab countries have all recognized the coalition as the sole legitimate representative of the Syrian people. Washington has pledged to work with the coalition, but stopped short of fully recognizing it.

“We and Libya are in agreement that we will wait before recognizing. We need to have a real idea about the representation on this body,” Marzouki told reporters at a news conference during a visit by Libyan leader Mohammed Magarief.

Separately, Marzouki said he would visit the Gaza Strip after a ceasefire between Israel and the Islamist militant group Hamas held firm on Thursday with scenes of joy among the ruins in Gaza over what Palestinians hailed as a victory.

“I congratulate Ismail Haniyeh (the Hamas prime minister) on the victory in Gaza,” Marzouki said. “And I have told him I want to visit Gaza soon and open a Tunisian school there.”

“Tunisia and Libya agree that there should be an Arab summit to support Palestine.”

Prospect of #Syria no-fly zone echoes action in Libya

15/11/12

The prospect of British involvement in a no-fly

zone to tackle the bloodshed in Syria comes a

year after the end of a similar military mission in

Libya that was estimated to have cost the UK

more than £1 billion.


An RAF Typhoon takes off for a mission over Libya

Hailed as a success following the toppling of Colonel Gaddafi, it saw the RAF fly hundreds of sorties against targets in the North African country.

The allied mission gave relief to rebels who had risen up against the dictator after they became pinned down in their stronghold of Benghazi, and eventually helped bring about their ultimate triumph.

It lasted from March to October. In June, the Ministry of Defence admitted that the war could cost taxpayers £260 million but according to later analysis the cost of the operation until the end of August was between £850 million and £1.75 billion.

The revolt had erupted in mid-February as part of the Arab spring, a wave of popular unrest across the Middle East. But by the time the allied mission began, Gaddafi’s forces were on the verge of marching on Benghazi.

Raids smashed the dictator’s air force before the conflict appeared to head towards stalemate, with ill-trained rebels struggling to fight their way west towards Tripoli.

But with Nato destroying thousands of targets, they eventually took the capital in August, sending Gaddafi into hiding.

It was an alliance air strike that hit his convoy as it fled Sirte, leading to his capture and killing on October 20.

A coalition led by the United States, France and Britain launched the first salvos in the air war on March 19, before handing over command of the mission to Nato on March 31.

The alliance, joined by Arab partners Qatar and United Arab Emirates, flew some 26,000 sorties and destroyed almost 6,000 targets during the conflict.

The Ministry of Defence disclosed that Britain hit more than 900 targets, including secret police headquarters, command bunkers, tanks, rocket launchers and armed trucks. British combat aircraft flew more than 1,600 missions over Libya.

British warships stationed off the coast, and aircraft, also delivered humanitarian aid as well as rescuing refugees.

One of the vessels, HMS Liverpool, became the first warship since the first Gulf War to come under enemy fire.

5 Nov 2012 #Syria : Libya helps bankroll Syrian opposition (FT)

The top financier of the Syrian opposition is no Arabian Peninsula oil kingdom or cloak-and-dagger western spy outfit, but struggling, war-ravaged Libya, which is itself recovering from a devastating civil conflict.

According to a budget released by the Syrian National Council and posted to its website late on Sunday, the Libyan government contributed $20.3m of the $40.4m that the opposition umbrella group has amassed since its creation in August 2011.

Qatar gave $15m while the United Arab Emirates contributed $5m, according to the document.

Unlike Qatar and the UAE, which are absolute monarchies, Libya has embarked on a rocky path towards democracy and shares an ideological vision with Syrian revolutionaries.

Oil-rich Libya has emerged as one of the Syrian uprising’s firmest and earliest backers. Perhaps dozens if not hundreds of veterans of the Nato-backed rebel insurgency against Colonel Muammer Gaddafi have travelled to Syria to fight against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad. Its interim foreign minister said earlier this year that his government could not prevent or condemn Libyans heading to Syria to fight.

The Libyan government was among the first Arab nations to sever ties with the regime in Damascus. But some Libyans question the expenditure, especially in light of questions about the violent and extreme behaviour of some armed Syrian opposition groups.

“I don’t think we have the legitimacy to pay this money and what is it for? Are we paying money to al-Qaeda or to the rebels in Syria?” said Abdel-Hamid el-Jadi, an independent analyst and fiscal monitor in Tripoli. “This is the Libyan people’s money. Yes, revolution is fine. But we have al-Qaeda in Syria. That’s not revolution.”

The SNC’s publication of its budget appeared aimed at boosting its credibility by being transparent over its financing. According to the document, the SNC still has about $10.7m in the bank.

The report breaks down expenditures by both category and geography. According to the six-page document, 11 per cent of the money collected has been spent on overheads, with the rest devoted to aiding Syrians inside the country or refugees in neighbouring states.

Roughly 7 per cent of the funds, or about $2.8m, has been allocated to the Free Syrian Army. About $290,000 has been spent on hotels for SNC representatives during travels abroad. The organisation spent about $160,000 on relief efforts for the two mostly ethnic Kurdish provinces of northwest Syria.

The release of the budget report comes as the organisation faces international pressure to join a more broad-based body of the Syrian opposition, effectively diluting its influence. Last week, US secretary of state Hillary Clinton called for a new body to better represent groups on the ground inside Syria.

In an apparent attempt to shore up its status ahead of a meeting later this week to discuss the US-backed proposals, the SNC announced on Monday that it would expand its membership to include more people from inside Syria.

Syria itself was shaken by another day of heavy violence on Monday. A suicide bomber killed at least 50 soldiers in the central province of Hama, according to the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a pro-opposition monitoring group. It said the attacker was from the al Nasra Front, an extremist Islamist group which is playing an increasingly high profile role in the fight against regime forces.

At least 20 rebels were killed during aerial bombardment of a town in Idlib, the rights group said, while five civilians were killed when a rocket fell on a Palestinian refugee camp in Damascus, amid clashes and bombardments in the nearby Hajar al Aswad neighbourhood.

Additional reporting by Abigail Fielding-Smith in Beirut

#Syrian Hajj Pilgrims Curse Assad

28/10/12

Enraged Syrian pilgrims on Sunday cursed President Bashar Assad and prayed for his death as they hurled pebbles at pillars representing Satan in the final ritual of the annual hajj pilgrimage.

Rebel flags billowed among vast crowds of Muslim pilgrims who heaved towards the stoning site in the Saudi holy city of Mina amid the chanting of anti-Assad slogans.

“Oh God, may we see Bashar Assad soon hanged or burnt, kicked out or a humiliated prisoner,” one Syrian yelled through a loudhailer as dozens walking behind him shouted: “Amen.”

“May Bashar follow (Moammar) Gadhafi,” they chanted, referring to the Libyan strongman killed last October 20 in his home town of Sirte by rebels who rose up against his regime last year.

“Please tell the whole world about us. We are under siege in Syria, in Homs. They demolished our homes so we fled to Saudi Arabia,” said one old woman, tears welling.

“Tanks were right next to our house. I was alone with my daughter, so we fled.

“I want victory for Syria. I hope to see the free Syrian flag waving in the country and all refugees and all the homeless going back,” she added.

Syrian pilgrims were few at this year’s hajj as the deadly civil war rages between the Assad regime and rebels that a rights group says has so far left more than 35,000 people dead.

Damascus has claimed that Riyadh barred Syrians from attending the hajj, but Saudi officials have repeatedly denied the allegation, claiming to have issued some 10,000 visas to Syrian refugees now in Lebanon, Turkey and Jordan.

Saudi Arabia, along with Qatar and Turkey, has supported the Syrian rebels with funds and arms in their fight against Assad’s forces.

On Friday, the Imam of the Grand Mosque, Sheikh Saleh Mohammed al-Taleb, called on the world to take “practical and urgent” steps to stop the bloodshed in Syria.

“The world should bear responsibility for this prolonged and painful disaster, and responsibility is greater for the Arabs and Muslims who should call on each other to support the oppressed against the oppressor,” he said in his Eid al-Adha sermon.

The official Syrian flag was mostly absent from this year’s hajj, with most Syrians performing the pilgrimage brandishing the rebel standard instead.

Most of the Syrian pilgrims who joined the stoning rituals were either “residents of Saudi Arabia or they had entered the kingdom on visitor visas,” said Omar Noman, a Syrian group leader.

“Every one of us in this group has somehow suffered and had a relative killed or had a house destroyed. This is why we are cursing Bashar,” he said.

“God, they have broken our hearts, destroyed our mosques, and slaughtered our children. Take revenge on them!” another group of Syrians chanted as worshipers from other countries took pictures and expressed their support.

“Most people are praying for our freedom. We hope they mean it,” said Syrian pilgrim Haitham al-Rifaie.

Mohammed al-Masri, who headed another group, said the Syrian worshippers were performing hajj “for the souls of Syria’s martyrs.”

“It’s a way of supporting our brothers in Syria,” he said. “We can’t do much from here. This is why we are performing hajj on their behalf.”

Swiss hold $1 billion Arab Spring ‘dictator’ funds

16/10/12

GENEVA (AP) — A Swiss official says the government has blocked almost 1 billion Swiss francs ($1.07 billion) linked to rulers in four Arab Spring nations.

M. Valentin Zellweger, who as head of the Swiss foreign ministry’s international law department also oversees its task force for “potentate funds,” says the assets seized since early 2011 are tied to rulers in #Syria, Libya, Tunisia and Egypt.

He told reporters Tuesday that the Swiss government is working with Tunisia and Egypt to return their nations’ money, including 700 million francs ($755 million) stashed away by former President Hosni Mubarak and his aides.

The Swiss government says it has previously returned about 1.7 billion francs ($1.83 billion) in so-called dictator assets to Peru, the Philippines, Nigeria, Angola, Kazakhstan, Mexico and other countries in recent years.

Accusations mount of Hezbollah fighting in #Syria

15/10/12

If hard evidence emerges of the Shiite militant

group’s involvement, it would increase tensions in

Lebanon where armed partisans on opposite sides

live in close proximity.

By Nicholas Blanford | Christian Science Monitor


A member of the Free Syrian Army inspects damaged houses in Bustan al Basha in Aleppo city in northern Syria October 12, 2012. REUTERS/Zain Karam (SYRIA - Tags: CIVIL UNREST POLITICS)

Beside the arrow-straight road between the northern Lebanon town of Qaa and the border with Syria stands a small, bland mosque decorated with the yellow flags of the militant Shiite group Hezbollah.

The mosque is the lone Hezbollah bastion amid a flat agricultural landscape populated mainly by Sunni Lebanese and used as a safe haven by Lebanese and Syrian members of the Free Syrian Army. But parked discreetly – and incongruously – in the shade of a tree beside the mosque is an ambulance waiting to transport wounded Hezbollah fighters returning from fighting against the FSA over the border, says Syrian fighter Hussein, a former irrigation engineer who today heads a small unit of the FSA’s Jusiyah Martyrs’ Brigade, named after the nearby Syrian border village.

Accusations of Hezbollah involvement in Syria have strengthened in recent weeks amid reports of fighters killed in combat being returned to Lebanon for quiet burial. Hezbollah, along with its patron Iran, are key allies of the Assad regime, together forming an “axis of resistance” to confront Israel and Western ambitions for the Middle East that spans the region.

RELATED – Hezbollah 101: Who is the militant group, and what does it want?

If hard confirmation arises that Hezbollah is playing a role in Syria it will increase tensions in Lebanon, which is already attempting to distance itself as much as possible from the reverberations of the bloody conflict roiling its larger neighbor. The Lebanese government – which is dominated by allies of Hezbollah – formally follows a policy of disassociation from the Syria crisis, although it has merely averted its eyes as Syrian rebel fighters turn parts of the territory along the border into a de facto safe haven from the fighting.

GROWING EVIDENCE

In response to intensifying speculation over Hezbollah’s alleged activities in Syria, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, the party’s leader, said last week that the Assad regime had not asked him for military assistance.

He acknowledged, however, that the were more than two dozen villages and farms located just inside Syria, north of the border with Lebanon, that are home to around 30,000 Lebanese, many of whom are Shiites and members of Hezbollah. Mr. Nasrallah said that they had been coming under threat from “armed groups” and had chosen to defend themselves.

“Some of them decided to flee the area, but most of them stayed in their towns and started to arm themselves,” he said. “The residents of these towns took the decision to stay and defend themselves against armed groups and did not engage in battle between the regime and the opposition,” Nasrallah said in a televised speech.

Nearly two weeks ago, Hezbollah held a prominent funeral for Ali Nassif, a senior commander who died “while performing his jihadi duties”, a standard phrase used by the group when announcing deaths of fighters in circumstances other than direct combat with Israel, such as training accidents. The Jusiyah Martyrs’ Brigade militants claim that Nassif was killed in the border village of Rableh and was deliberately targeted for assassination.

“We waited for him to emerge from a school which they use as a command post. When we saw a black Grand Cherokee with tinted windows leave the school, we guessed it was him and hit it with an RPG [rocket-propelled grenade],” says Hussein.

Sunni and Shiite Islam: Do you know the difference? Take our quiz.

He and other members of the Jusiyah Martyrs’ Brigade interviewed over a 24-hour period while resting in Masharih al-Qaa claim that their most formidable foes across the border in Syria are not Syrian Army soldiers, but battle-hardened veteran Hezbollah fighters. They say the Hezbollah men are helping the Assad regime regain control of a cluster of villages and towns in the vicinity of the Syrian town of Qusayr, five miles north of the border.

“The regime’s soldiers are cowards against us. But we fear the Hezbollah men,” says Hussein.

He added that he had encountered some Hezbollah fighters on the road beside the border in Jusiyah and had approached them with bottles of water, pretending to be a supportive civilian.

“None of them were under 35 years old. They were very professional and tough fighters. You can tell they are superior fighters from the way they move in battle and how they fight,” he says.

SELF-DEFENSE

Accusations of Hezbollah involvement in Syria have been aired by opponents of the Assad regime since protests erupted in March last year. Many of the early accounts were less than convincing. Similarly, YouTube videos purporting to show Hezbollah fighters in Syria were inconclusive and often posted by people politically opposed to the party.

But in recent months there have been persistent reports of Hezbollah assisting the Assad regime with combat advice and passing on the group’s formidable guerrilla skills to the pro-regime Shabiha militia, with the goal of turning them into an effective paramilitary force.

Hezbollah views the conflict in Syria as a confrontation with strategic consequences for the region. The collapse of the Assad regime and its replacement with a Sunni-dominated regime moderate in its foreign policy and more closely aligned with Turkey and Saudi Arabia would tear out the geo-strategic heart of the “axis of resistance.”

“Hezbollah has no choice but to be there,” says a prominent member of a Shiite clan in the Bekaa Valley who is close to Hezbollah. “The opposition has fighters from Lebanon, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia helping them, so why shouldn’t the Assad regime receive the help of Hezbollah?”

Furthermore, Hezbollah is not the only Lebanese entity accused of partisan involvement in Syria. Several hundred Lebanese Sunnis have volunteered for the Free Syrian Army, joining other Arab nationals drawn to the conflict, according to Lebanese supporters of the Syrian opposition. Others provide shelter for the FSA in north Lebanon, allowing militants to rest, regroup, and plan. There have been several media reports – the latest in yesterday’s edition of the British newspaper The Guardian – that Okab Saqr, a Lebanese parliamentarian allied to former Lebanese prime minister Saad Hariri, is in Turkey organizing the transfer of Saudi-funded arms to the Syrian opposition. A Washington-based analyst who recently visited the Turkish border area with Syria said that Saqr’s name “is all over the place.”

Nowhere is the divergence between Hezbollah support for the Assad regime and Lebanese Sunni backing for the Syrian opposition more starkly illustrated than in the northern Bekaa Valley. The western flank of the valley is a Hezbollah stronghold and allows access for fighters to the Shiite-populated villages just over the border in Syria.

The eastern flank, including Masharih al-Qaa, contains a sizeable Sunni population – some of whom are FSA volunteers and almost all of whom are sympathetic to the Syrian opposition. That has created an unusual situation: Just north of the border, Hezbollah fighters and Syrian troops battle Lebanese and Syrian FSA militants, while just south of the frontier, the two foes eye each other warily, but peacefully, from their respective corners of the northern Bekaa.

Even the lone Hezbollah mosque, despite being surrounded by hostile FSA elements, has been left untouched. Similarly, Hezbollah has made no effort to engage the FSA in Masharih al-Qaa.

“If Hezbollah decided to come after us here, it would start a civil war,” says Ismael, a Lebanese resident of Masharih al-Qaa who serves with the Jusiyah Martyrs’ Brigade. “And nobody wants that.”

First formal displaced persons camp opens inside #Syria

10/09/12

The first formal camp inside Syria for civilians driven from their homes by the nearly 19-month conflict began admitting displaced families on Tuesday, an AFP correspondent reported.

The new camp, just a stone’s throw from the Turkish border, opened its doors amid mounting pressure from Ankara for the international community to do more for the displaced inside Syria to stem any new exodus of refugees.

The first few families arrived by bus, clutching suitcases and plastic sacks, from the adjacent village of Atme where they had been camping out rough.

Each family was allocated a tent, mattresses and blankets. Electricity, drinking water, showers and meals were provided courtesy of foreign donors, notably from Libya.

Libya, which itself overthrew veteran dictator Moammar Qaddafi in a bloody uprising last year, has been a major backer of the Syrian rebels who control the hill country along this far western section of the Turkish border.

Almost 40,000 square meters of agricultural land has been bought from farmers, and olive trees have been uprooted to make way for the camp which is intended to accommodate up to 5,000 people.

The camp provides some sanctuary from the ferocious fighting ravaging some of northern Syria’s major cities.

Aleppo—the northern metropolis of some 1.7 million people—lies just 50 kilometers from the border.

The closest Syrian troops are around 30 kilometers from the camp, but the threat of artillery fire is never too far away.

On Monday, a shell fired from the Syrian side hit the Turkish township of Altinozu, a little further south along the border.

Hatay province, in which Altinozu lies, is the main reception area for the more than 100,000 Syrians who have found refugee inside Turkey.

#Syria, Putin condemns bloody regime change in Middle East

26/09/12


Associated Press/Alexander Zemlianichenko, pool - Russian President Vladimir Putin walks prior to a ceremony of receiving credentials in Moscow’s Kremlin on Wednesday in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2012. Russian President Vladimir Putin has renewed calls for a joint international solution to civil conflict in the Middle East in a veiled rejection of Western demands for an end to Syrian leader Bashar Assad’s rule. Putin said Wednesday that incitement to the continuation of violence with a view to securing regime change would only create further unrest. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, pool)

MOSCOW (AP) — Russian President Vladimir Putin issued a strong warning Wednesday against inciting violent regime change in the Middle East — an apparent rebuke to Western calls for an end to Syrian President Bashar Assad’s rule.

Putin said the international community should operate as a united front to soothe the tensions in the Mideast and claimed that a bloody regime change would only fuel further unrest.

“Violence only begets violence,” Putin said in a speech to foreign diplomats in Moscow.

The statement appeared to again pit Putin against President Barack Obama, who used his speech at the U.N. General Assembly this week to call for an end to the Assad regime over its violent crackdown on an uprising that began in March 2011.

Speaking about the rising violence in Syria, Obama said Tuesday that “the future must not belong to a dictator who massacres his people.”

“Together, we must stand with those Syrians who believe in a different vision,” Obama said.

As frustration deepens at the ongoing failure of U.N.-led measures to reach a solution on Syria, officials from a coalition including the United States, the European Union and the Arab League met in the Netherlands last week to devise new ways of isolating the Assad regime.

But Putin said Wednesday that attempts to circumvent U.N.-led diplomatic efforts would prove destructive.

“Such action is fraught with potential for destabilization and chaos,” Putin said. “Life has recently given us proof that this is correct. It is time for us to draw lessons from what is happening.”

Activists estimate that at least 30,000 people have been killed since the Syrian revolt began and hundreds of thousands have been displaced, many fleeing to neighboring countries such as Turkey and Jordan.

In his speech, Putin also called for joint international efforts to counter terrorist threats across a number of Middle East nations, including Libya, Iraq, Yemen, Syria, Egypt, and Afghanistan.

“There can be no room for double standards. Terrorists should be given a hard and unanimous rebuff,” he said.

The anti-Islam movie and the beheaded girl!

21/09/12

By Diana Moukalled

Her body was still intact… Her short blue dress was covered with some dust and the knot perfectly tied at the waist… Her socks were still white covering her skinny legs, while her tiny palms seemed a little clenched. The body of the eight-year-old girl seemed so perfect that one would think she was still alive… but decapitated.

I tried in vain to escape the terrifying image of the beheaded little Syrian girl and erase the scene from my head. I learned later that she was named “Fatima”, that she was from “Idlib” and that she was killed when the Syrian regime dropped booby-trapped barrels that decapitated her and killed many others.

I have been trying to curb my reactions and resentment from the “angry” scenes of killings and destructions taking place in the streets of Egypt, Libya and other parts of the world before getting shocked by the photo of the beheaded little girl that was spreading on Facebook.

I wonder why those fanatics in the streets were not filled with anger upon seeing the image of this little girl and who actually lost his head? Did the little girl lose her head or do we all carry useless heads?

There is no doubt that the director of the “Innocence of Muslims” despises Muslims and means to offend them, but what is new here? Do we really believe that in this era we can control all the meaningless provocations and stop them?

Aren’t we living in an open-space world? Can’t we, in few minutes, surf hundreds of websites and watch scenes and photos that offend Islam, Judaism, Christianity, Buddhism and all other beliefs? Why did a trivial film shake our world while we didn’t move a muscle upon watching actual scenes of horror and films from real life showing bloodshed and murdered people broadcasted around the clock?

An “artist” accused of bank forgery in California was able to gather a bunch of people for $75 a day in his house to film these silly scenes before having recourse to voice-overs in order to put dialogues that were not actually said by actors and then collecting all of this in a production that does not even deserve to be called a film. He placed ads for the show but no one came. Indeed, no one came.

The catastrophe took place when Egyptian activists came across some scenes on YouTube and broadcasted them on a TV program. Politicians and Religious figures were offended and acted as if they had found a treasure, aiming at covering political, religious and moral failures by inciting naïve and ignorant people.

Some immediately started with the burning and killing and escalating tensions, while others are still trying to catch up by considering the situation open and ongoing; indeed, didn’t Hassan Nasrallah threaten of dangerous consequences?

The problem does not lie in the film itself, but in those who are trying to take advantage of the film to cover for a huge moral failure. Here, we should also be thankful to the film because it made the Muslim Sunnis and Shiites equal in their miserable way of handling this unsuccessful production so-called “film”.

Those people have accepted the killing of innocents and kept mum. They even supported the murderers; however, they protest against a film.
Oh little girl of Idlib, do not forgive our silence… May you rest in peace wherever you are, and may your beautiful head float away, far from us.

#Syria, Assad apes Gaddafi

21/09/12

22 September 2012

DAMASCUS’ RESOLVE to fight back is unsurprising. But the statement that President Bashar Al Assad has made, in an interview with an Egyptian daily, has created a déjà vu impact.

His utterance that foreigners are behind the uprising and there is no dissent among the Syrians against his rule is quite perplexing. This is exactly what Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi had said even days before his exit from the scene. Gaddafi also believed that his fall was being engineered by the West, and that he would live to reign supreme. The Libyan autocrat had also challenged that his house would not collapse like that of Hosni Mubarak of Egypt. Perhaps Gaddafi and Assad are in the same league, and they just failed to realise the change in ground realities. It would have been prudent for Assad to have opened a new vista of opportunity by offering new solutions that would have paved the way for his honourable exit. His adamant attitude is likely to cost him dearly in times to come.

Assad’s invite for a grand dialogue, however, is worth considering. Talking to Al Ahram newspaper, he said that he is open for dialogue, and negotiations are apparently the only way out. He, however, missed a crucial point in categorically saying as to whom he saw as stakeholders, and what could be the format of talks. This is so because the ruling Baath Party considers the opposition as planted, and the rebels on the battleground as agents of neighbouring countries, who are allegedly busy in plotting his downfall. So in such a confused and polarised political spectrum, the offer of so-called talks is nothing less than a stunt. It is here that one has to revisit the plan of action forwarded by the United Nations and the Arab League under former envoy to Syria Kofi Annan. The peace plan had hinted at talks with the resolve and precondition to see Assad’s exit that could lead to an amicable solution. Assad, from his fortified comforts, is yet to see the light of reality.

America’s dangerous lethargy on #Syria

21/09/12

It’s up to President Obama to formulate a policy that shapes whatever happens in Syria to the advantage of the United States. (AFP photo)

 Amid signs that Barack Obama is moving closer to winning a second term, one question that comes to mind is whether his victory might mean a better future for Syrians. The president has been inept and dishonest, neither formulating a cohesive policy toward Syria nor properly guarding against the repercussions of the absence of a policy.
 
One problem is that the Free Syrian Army is not benefiting from sufficient military assistance. Some argue that Turkey, with American encouragement, is preventing certain types of weapons from entering Syria, for fear that they will fall into the wrong hands. Others suggest the problem is principally poor organization or favoritism in the delivery of arms. Whatever the truth, this situation is ensuring that the carnage in Syria drags on for longer than it needs to. Is this intentional? Perhaps not, but the Obama administration cannot imagine that the Syrian rebels will interpret it in any other way.
 
The United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, put it well earlier this week when he noted, “Unfortunately both sides, government and opposition forces, seem to be determined to see the end by military means.” Ban went on to say, “I think military means will not bring an answer.” He may be right, but Washington is neither here nor there on the matter. The Americans clearly believe that there is no political solution possible with President Bashar al-Assad, but have taken no steps to ensure that a military solution will succeed either.
 
Such dallying only makes more likely the exacerbation of violence, therefore the breakup of Syria. This cannot be desirable to the Americans. Syria’s disintegration would put considerable stress on other ethnically and religiously mixed societies in its vicinity, namely Iraq, Lebanon and Turkey. Obama’s objective in avoiding direct American involvement in sending weapons to Syria, while also regulating weapons flows by others, is to avoid allowing a worsening of the conflict. Yet everything the president has done, by thwarting a decisive outcome, has only worsened the conflict.
 
Unfortunately the Americans are unlikely to soon change their approach, in light of the attacks on American diplomatic missions last week. The prevailing wisdom in Washington is that the Arab uprisings have only reinforced forces hostile to the United States, and that the administration’s decision last year to take a stance against autocratic regimes brought America few tangible benefits, or popularity.
 
In that context, the stilted America view may well be that Islamists will, once again, gain from outside assistance in Syria, even though there is, plainly, a struggle there between secular rebel groups on the one side and Islamist groups on the other. American intelligence officers are on the ground and must be aware of what is taking place. If so, it’s up to Obama to formulate a policy that shapes whatever happens in Syria to the advantage of the United States.
 
Then there is the fact that the administration’s lack of initiative in Syria is apparently allowing chaos to prevail in the arms-distribution process. This can only further increase the risks for Washington.
 
In a fascinating article for Time magazine, Rania Abouzeid chronicles the different agendas of Saudi Arabia and Qatar in getting weapons to the rebel forces. She describes “disorder and distrust” between Riyadh and Doha, noting that “the rift surfaced in August, with the alleged Saudi and Qatari representatives in charge of funneling free weaponry to the rebels clearly backing different factions among the groups—including various shades of secular and Islamist militias—under the broad umbrella that is the Free Syrian Army.”
 
According to Abouzeid, the Saudi effort is being run by Oqab Saqr, a Lebanese parliamentarian from the Future Movement (and someone formerly in charge of the Arabic section of NOW Lebanon). Saqr, who has denied participating in efforts to equip the rebels, has been criticized for showing favoritism toward certain groups. The Qataris, in turn, reportedly prefer to send arms to the regional military councils formed by the rebels for distribution. They are also apparently reinforcing groups affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood, from whom the Saudis are staying away.  
 
If Abouzeid is correct, then this is potentially very dangerous for the Americans. After all, the fragmentation of the rebel forces, especially over weapons, can create the same kind of pandemonium that the administration now regrets in Libya. It’s in such volatile environments that militant jihadists tend to thrive. That is precisely why the Obama administration has a vested interest in imposing order on the provision of arms, while also transferring weapons that provide the rebels with fundamental tactical advantages, for instance anti-aircraft missiles, so that the war can end quickly.
 
Washington was surprised by the revolutionary events in Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya last year. That shortcoming should be alarming enough not to be compounded by the utter absence of a strategy in Syria today. What is it with the Obama team? The Middle East will not simply drop off the American plate. Syria will get very much worse before getting better. If the Americans don’t want to absorb the backlash, then it’s time they end their hypocritical game of condemning Assad then doing nothing to push him out of office. 

#Syria rebel officer offers $25 million bounty on Assad, ‘dead or alive’

18/09/12

Announcement by an unnamed officer with the FSA says money for the bounty had been set up with donations from anti-Assad business people.

A commander with the rebel Free Syrian Army (FSA) has offered a 25-million-dollar bounty for anyone who captures Syrian President Bashar Assad “alive or dead,” reported the Turkish news agency Anatolia on Tuesday.

The announcement by an unnamed commander with the FSA said the money for the bounty had been set up with donations from anti-Assad business people.

The reported bounty offer came as Western officials said Tuesday there was little doubt a growing number of foreign jihadi fighters are entering the fray in Syria, although it is far from clear whether any have direct links to Al Qaeda. But it is just one worry amongst many.

“This is not a situation where the US can do much to shape what happens,” says Ms Mona Yacoubian, a former State Department official and now fellow and Syria expert at the Stimson Centre. “There has always been a lot of caution within the Obama Administration on Syria and if anything things are getting more complicated.”

Working with Libya’s initially notoriously disorganized rebels, officials complained, was hard enough; but the opposition to Assad seems even more diffuse.

That makes policy-making much more complicated and supplying weapons, or even choosing who to talk to, more of a gamble.

“We badly need to identify some political and military leaders who can make clear that they seek a political settlement to bring all fighting to an end,” said one Western official on condition of anonymity. “Without that the bloodletting reinforces the worst aspects of sectarianism and makes a soft landing ever less likely.”

Western states have been on a concerted offensive to push opposition figures towards greater unity, facilitating meetings that range from foreign-based conferences to Internet chats and small border gatherings.

But, beyond pushing in humanitarian aid they fear there is a limited amount they can do to change the situation on the ground.

“It’s a very difficult situation, and the lack of coherence of the opposition is probably the biggest single challenge,” says Ms Melissa Dalton, a senior Pentagon adviser on Syria and the Middle East currently on sabbatical as a visiting fellow at the Centre for New American Security.

“Given everything that is at stake, the United States clearly cannot do nothing. But there are no good scenarios arising from this conflict, and so the most important strategy for the United States to pursue is mitigating the risks to its interests.”

That meant to prioritize tracking Syria’s chemical weapons, ensuring militant groups inspired by Al Qaida were unable to set up safe havens and preventing weapons from falling into the wrong hands, she said. It also meant avoiding doing anything to make matters worse.

West’s rebel worries leave #Syria strategy struggling

17/09/12


WASHINGTON | Mon Sep 17, 2012 8:54am EDT

(Reuters) - France may be considering arming Syria’s rebels but the U.S. and other Western powers have yet to find opposition figures they genuinely trust as they worry over growing jihadi and sectarian forces.

The attack on the U.S. consulate in Libya’s Benghazi that killed its ambassador and anti-American demonstrations elsewhere this week over an obscure video that ridiculed the Prophet Mohammad might have no Syria links but will make nervous governments even more cautious.

Western officials say there is little doubt a growing number of foreign jihadi fighters are entering the fray, although it is far from clear whether any have direct links to Al Qaeda. But It is just one worry amongst many.

“This is not a situation where the U.S. can do much to shape what happens,” says Mona Yacoubian, a former State Department official and now fellow and Syria expert at the Stimson Centre. “There has always been a lot of caution within the Obama Administration on Syria and if anything things are getting more complicated.”

Working with Libya’s initially notoriously disorganized rebels, officials complained, was hard enough; but the opposition to Syrian President Bashar al Assad seems even more diffuse.

That makes policy-making much more complicated and supplying weapons, or even choosing who to talk to, more of a gamble.

“We badly need to identify some political and military leaders who can make clear that they seek a political settlement to bring all fighting to an end,” said one Western official on condition of anonymity. “Without that the blood letting reinforces the worst aspects of sectarianism and makes a soft landing ever less likely.”

Western states have been on a concerted offensive to push opposition figures towards greater unity, facilitating meetings that range from foreign-based conferences to Internet chats and small border gatherings.

But, beyond pushing in humanitarian aid they fear there is a limited amount they can do to change the situation on the ground.

“It’s a very difficult situation, and the lack of coherence of the opposition is probably the biggest single challenge,” says Melissa Dalton, a senior Pentagon adviser on Syria and the Middle East currently on sabbatical as a visiting fellow at the Centre for New American Security.

“Given everything that is at stake, the United States clearly cannot do nothing. But there are no good scenarios arising from this conflict, and so the most important strategy for the United States to pursue is mitigating the risks to its interests.”

That meant to prioritize tracking Syria’s chemical weapons, ensuring militant groups inspired by Al Qaeda were unable to set up safe havens and preventing weapons from falling into the wrong hands, she said. It also meant avoiding doing anything to make matters worse.

DITCHING SNC FOR FSA

Current and former Western officials say their countries have lost confidence in the Syrian National Council (SNC), the largely foreign-based body initially courted as a government in waiting. With some of its meetings dissolving into fisticuffs, it is increasingly both too chaotic, too sectarian and simply lacking in a significant support.

The main focus of political and diplomatic effort, they say, is now the Free Syrian Army (FSA), particularly as its fighters prove increasingly successful at ousting Assad’s forces from significant portions of the country. But even the FSA, they worry, may be a unified body in little more than name.

After a sluggish start, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar have been overseeing cross border movements from a secret liaison center in Turkey. Ankara denies any direct involvement in channeling of arms across the frontier. U.N. diplomats say Saudi Arabia and Qatar have been transferring weapons to rebels.

Western states have so far restricted themselves to “nonlethal” support such as body armor, radios and medical equipment although a French diplomatic source said early this month that Paris was considering giving heavy weaponry.

Those with knowledge of events say the United States and other Western intelligence agencies are already trying to vet those receiving arms channeled across the Turkish border. Should France choose to supply arms, it could expect warnings from Washington if it dealt with those about whom the U.S. had concern.

But knowing conclusively who anyone is along the chaotic border, experts say, can be all but impossible.

In principle, the FSA remains commanded by former Syrian force colonel Rian al-Assad, an early defector who first announced the rebel group’s existence to the world more than a year ago. But in reality, there are growing suspicions that his influence and that of the rest of the group’s leadership may be collapsing on the ground.

Kept cloistered by their Turkish military hosts, some Syria experts say the FSA’s headquarters now amounts to little more than a media center. The real emerging power bases seem to be within Syria, particularly in cities such as Aleppo and Idlib where Assad’s forces have ceded some ground.

“CHAOTIC FREE FOR ALL”

“Every group is sending people (separately) to Turkey to ask for weapons,” says Joseph Holliday, a former U.S. Army intelligence officer and Syria expert now a fellow at the Institute for the Study of War in Washington DC, describing the situation as a “free for all”“. “Countries, organizations or just wealthy individuals are talking to these individual groups and giving what support they want to people that they want.”

Dealing with so many players was itself a challenge for organizations such as the U.S. State Department more used to working on a national level, he said.

Some groups are already accused of reprisal killings, a worrying sign for foreign powers who believe agreement with some of the minority Alawite regime may ultimately prove vital.

Any offer of lethal support, some argue, should bring with it signed assurances of commitment to a peaceful post-war transition. But holding the rebels to account afterwards might prove impossible.

In a potential sign of further escalation, France, which has a colonial history in Syria and showed itself in Libya to be an increasingly assertive Mediterranean power, has also voiced support for a Turkish suggestion of militarily protected “humanitarian zones”.

But as well as worries that any such action would simply further inflame the situation, the United States in particular worries that even enforcing a no-fly zone could require it to move forces currently arrayed against Iran.

Washington is also unpleasantly aware that as things stand, any such move would be in the face of angry Russian and probably also Chinese opposition - as well as one of the most militarily challenging battles of recent decades. The downing of a Turkish jet earlier this year showed Assad retained a sophisticated air defense system.

The opposition, however, says Western reticence is already costing lives. Last week in Istanbul, two senior Aleppo rebels accused the outside world of simply watching “like a movie” while thousands died.

“There’s a lot of frustration with the West,” says former U.S. Army intelligence officer Holliday “they think we encouraged them to rise up and then didn’t do anything to support them.”