Daily Telegraph 20 Jan
2014
Western intelligence suggests Bashar al-Assad collaborating
with jihadists to persuade West the uprising is terrorist-led.
The Syrian regime of President Bashar al-Assad has funded
and co-operated with al-Qaeda in a complex double game even as the terrorists
fight Damascus ,
according to new allegations by Western intelligence agencies, rebels and
al-Qaeda defectors.
Jabhat al-Nusra, and the even more extreme Islamic State of
Iraq and al-Shams (ISIS), the two al-Qaeda affiliates operating in Syria , have
both been financed by selling oil and gas from wells under their control to and
through the regime, intelligence sources have told The Daily Telegraph.
Rebels and defectors say the regime also deliberately
released militant prisoners to strengthen jihadist ranks at the expense of
moderate rebel forces. The aim was to persuade the West that the uprising was
sponsored by Islamist militants including al-Qaeda as a way of stopping Western
support for it.
The allegations by Western intelligence sources, who spoke
on condition of anonymity, are in part a public response to demands by Assad
that the focus of peace talks due to begin in Switzerland tomorrow be switched
from replacing his government to co-operating against al-Qaeda in the “war on
terrorism”.
“Assad’s vow to strike terrorism with an iron fist is
nothing more than bare-faced hypocrisy,” an intelligence source said. “At the
same time as peddling a triumphant narrative about the fight against terrorism,
his regime has made deals to serve its own interests and ensure its survival.”
Intelligence gathered by Western secret services suggested
the regime began collaborating actively with these groups again in the spring
of 2013. When Jabhat al-Nusra seized control of Syria ’s
most lucrative oil fields in the eastern province
of Deir al-Zour, it began funding its
operations in Syria
by selling crude oil, with sums raised in the millions of dollars.
“The regime is paying al-Nusra to protect oil and gas
pipelines under al-Nusra’s control in the north and east of the country, and is
also allowing the transport of oil to regime-held areas,” the source said. “We
are also now starting to see evidence of oil and gas facilities under ISIS control.”
The source accepted that the regime and the al-Qaeda
affiliates were still hostile to each other and the relationship was
opportunistic, but added that the deals confirmed that “despite Assad’s
finger-pointing” his regime was to blame for the rise of al-Qaeda in Syria .
Western diplomats were furious at recent claims that
delegations of officials led by a retired MI6 officer had visited Damascus to re-open
contact with the Assad regime. There is no doubt that the West is alarmed at
the rise of al-Qaeda within the rebel ranks, which played a major role in
decisions by Washington and London to back off from sending arms to the
opposition.
But the fury is also an indication that they suspect they
have been outmanoeuvred by Assad, who has during his rule alternated between
waging war on Islamist militants and working with them.
After September 11, he co-operated with the United States’
rendition programme for militant suspects; after the invasion of Iraq, he
helped al-Qaeda to establish itself in Western Iraq as part of an axis of
resistance to the West; then when the group turned violently against the Iraqi
Shias who were backed by Assad’s key ally, Iran, he began to arrest them again.
As the uprising against his rule began, Assad switched
again, releasing al-Qaeda prisoners. It happened as part of an amnesty, said
one Syrian activist who was released from Sednaya prison near Damascus at the same time.
“There was no explanation for the release of the jihadis,”
the activist, called Mazen, said. “I saw some of them being paraded on Syrian
state television, accused of being Jabhat al-Nusra and planting car bombs. This
was impossible, as they had been in prison with me at the time the regime said
the bombs were planted. He was using them to promote his argument that the
revolution was made of extremists.”
Other activists and former Sednaya inmates corroborated his
account, and analysts have identified a number of former prisoners now at the
head of militant groups, including Jabhat al-Nusra, ISIS and a third group,
Ahrar al-Sham, which fought alongside Jabhat al-Nusra but has now turned
against ISIS .
One former inmate said he had been in prison with “Abu Ali”
who is now the head of the ISIS Sharia court in the north-eastern al-Qaeda-run
city of Raqqa .
Another said he knew leaders in Raqqa and Aleppo
who were prisoners in Sednaya until early 2012.
These men then spearheaded the gradual takeover of the
revolution from secular activists, defected army officers and more moderate
Islamist rebels.
Syrian intelligence has historically had close connections
with extremist groups. In an interview with The Daily Telegraph after he
defected, Nawaf al-Fares, a Syrian security chief, told how he was part of an
operation to smuggle jihadist volunteers into Iraq
from Syria
after the 2003 invasion.
Aron Lund, editor of a website, Syria in Crisis, used by the
Carnegie Endowment to monitor the war, said: “The regime has done a good job in
trying to turn the revolution Islamist. The releases from Sednaya prison are a
good example of this. The regime claims that it released the prisoners because
Assad had shortened their sentences as part of a general amnesty. But it seems
to have gone beyond that. There are no random acts of kindness from this
regime.”
Rebels both inside and outside ISIS also say they believe
the regime targeted its attacks on non-militant groups, leaving ISIS alone. “We were confident that the regime would not
bomb us,” an ISIS defector, who called himself
Murad, said. “We always slept soundly in our bases.”
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