The US commanders planning for the withdrawal of the
American troops from Syria are recommending that the Kurdish fighters battling
the Islamic State be allowed to keep the US-supplied weapons, a move that would
likely anger NATO-ally Turkey, according to an exclusive
report [1] by Reuters.
The report adds: “The proposal to leave the US-supplied weapons
with the Kurdish YPG militia, which could include anti-tank missiles, armored
vehicles and mortars, would reassure Kurdish allies that they were not being
abandoned.”
During the initial years of the Syrian conflict, although
the US openly provided the American-made antitank (TOW) weapons to the Syrian
militant groups, it strictly forbade its clients from providing anti-aircraft
weapons (MANPADS) to the militants, because Israel frequently flies
surveillance aircrafts and drones and occasionally carries out airstrikes in
Syria, and had such weapons fallen into the wrong hands, they could have become
a long term security threat to the Israeli Air Force.
In the final years of the Syrian proxy war, some
anti-aircraft weapons from Gaddafi’s looted arsenal in Libya made their way
into the hands of the Syrian militants, but for the initial years of the
conflict, there was an absolute prohibition on providing such weapons to the
insurgents.
Last year, a report by the Conflict Armament Research (CAR)
on the Islamic State’s weapons found in Iraq and Syria was prominently featured
in the mainstream media. Before the story was picked up by the media, it was first
published [2] in the Wired News in December 2017, which has a history of
spreading dubious stories and working in close collaboration with the Pentagon
and DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency).
The Britain-based Conflict Armament Research (CAR) is a
relatively unknown company of less than 20 employees. Its one-man Iraq and
Syria division was headed by a 31-year-old Belgian researcher Damien Spleeters.
The main theme of Spleeters’ investigation was to discover
the Islamic State’s homegrown armaments industry and how the jihadist group’s
technicians had adapted the East European munitions to be used in the weapons
available to the Islamic State. Spleeters had listed 1,832 weapons and 40,984
pieces of ammunition recovered in Iraq and Syria in the CAR’s database.
But Spleeters had only tangentially touched upon the subject
of the Islamic State’s weapons supply chain, documenting only a single PG-9
rocket found at Tal Afar in Iraq bearing a lot number of 9,252 rocket-propelled
grenades which were supplied by Romania to the US military, and mentioning only
a single shipment of 12 tons of munitions which was diverted from Saudi Arabia
to Jordan in his supposedly ‘comprehensive report.’
In fact, the CAR’s report was so misleading that of
thousands of pieces of munitions investigated by Spleeters, less than 10% were
found to be compatible with NATO’s weapons and more than 90% were found to have
originated from Russia, China and the East European countries, Romania and
Bulgaria in particular.
By comparison, a joint investigation by the Balkan
Investigative Reporting Network (BIRN) and the Organized Crime and Corruption
Reporting Project (OCCRP) uncovered
[3] the Pentagon’s $2.2 billion arms pipeline to the Syrian militants.
It bears mentioning that $2.2 billion were earmarked only by
Washington for training and arming the Syrian militants, and tens
of billions of dollars [4] that Saudi Arabia and the oil-rich Gulf states
had pumped into Syria’s proxy war have not been documented by anybody so far.
More significantly, a Bulgarian investigative reporter,
Dilyana Gaytandzhieva, authored a
report [5] for Bulgaria’s national newspaper, Trud News, which found that
an Azerbaijan state airline company, Silk Way Airlines, was regularly
transporting weapons to Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates (UAE), and Turkey
under diplomatic cover as part of the CIA covert program to supply militant
groups in Syria.
Gaytandzhieva documented 350 such ‘diplomatic flights’ and
was subsequently fired from her job for uncovering the story. Not surprisingly,
both these well-researched and groundbreaking reports didn’t even merit a
passing mention in any mainstream news outlet.
It’s worth noting, moreover, that the Syrian militant groups,
including the Islamic State, were no ordinary bands of ragtag jihadist outfits.
They were trained and armed to the teeth by their patrons in the security
agencies of Washington, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Jordan in the training camps
located in Syria’s border regions with Turkey and Jordan.
Along with Saddam’s and Egypt’s armies, the Syrian Baathist
armed forces are one of the most capable fighting forces in the Arab world. But
the onslaught of militant groups during the first three years of the proxy war
was such that had it not been for the Russian intervention in September 2015,
the Syrian defenses would have collapsed.
The only feature that distinguished the Syrian militants
from the rest of regional jihadist groups was not their ideology but their
weapons arsenals that were bankrolled by the Gulf’s petro-dollars and provided
by the CIA in collaboration with regional security agencies of Washington’s
traditional allies in the Middle East.
Fact of the matter is that the distinction between Islamic
jihadists and purported ‘moderate rebels’ in Syria was more illusory than real.
Before it turned rogue and overran Mosul in Iraq in June 2014, Islamic State
used to be an integral part of the Syrian opposition and enjoyed close
ideological and operational ties with other militant groups in Syria.
It bears mentioning that although turf wars were common not
just between the Islamic State and other militant groups operating in Syria but
also among rebel groups themselves, the ultimate objective of the Islamic State
and the rest of militant outfits operating in Syria was the same: to overthrow
the government of Bashar al-Assad.
Regarding the Syrian opposition, a small fraction of it was
comprised of defected Syrian soldiers who go by the name of Free Syria Army,
but the vast majority was comprised of Islamic jihadists and armed tribesmen who
were generously funded, trained, armed and internationally legitimized by their
regional and global patrons.
Islamic State was nothing more than one of numerous Syrian
militant outfits, others being: al-Nusra Front, Ahrar al-Sham, Jaysh al Islam
etc. All the militant groups that were operating in Syria were just as
fanatical and brutal as the Islamic State. The only feature that differentiated
the Islamic State from the rest was that it was more ideological and
independent-minded.
The reason why the US turned against the Islamic State was
that all other Syrian militant outfits only had local ambitions that were
limited to fighting the Syrian government, while the Islamic State established
a global network of transnational terrorists that included hundreds of Western
citizens who became a national security risk to the Western countries.
Notwithstanding, Damien Spleeters of the Conflict Armament
Research (CAR) has authored another
report [6] last month in which he has stated that South Sudan’s neighbors, Uganda
in particular, have breached an arms embargo by funneling East European weapons
to the South Sudan conflict.
South Sudan is the world’s youngest nation which gained
independence from Sudan in 2011. The United States is often said to have midwifed
South Sudan by leading the negotiations for its independence from Sudan,
because it is an oil-rich country producing about half a million barrels crude
oil per day.
But a civil war began in 2013 between Dinka tribal group of
South Sudanese President Salva Kiir and Nuer rebels led by warlord Riek Machar,
and has triggered one of the world’s largest humanitarian emergencies. Millions
of South Sudanese have sought refuge in displacement camps in the country or in
neighboring countries.
The Conflict Armament Research’s report on the weapons found
in South Sudan notes: “One of the most astonishing findings is that 99 percent
of the ammunition tracked by CAR is of Chinese origin. Some of it was legally
transferred to South Sudan, but much of it was delivered secretly to the
opposition via Sudan in 2015 and is still being used.”
Unsurprisingly, the Britain-based monitoring group has implicated
China, East Europeans and South Sudan’s neighbors for defying the embargo and
providing weapons to the belligerents, and has once again given a free pass to
the Western powers in its supposedly ‘comprehensive and credible’ report.
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