http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/1749/19/Under-the-table.aspx

 



06-03-2013 02:51PM ET
Under the table

The West may have refused to arm the Syrian opposition, but in reality weapons 
have been flowing to the revolutionaries, writes Bassel Oudat in Damascus


A Free Syrian Army fighter points his weapon at a police academy during 
fighting between Free Syrian Army fighters and forces loyal to Al-Assad (photo: 
Reuters)
  a.. 
The recent Rome conference of the Friends of Syria group was disappointing for 
many Syrians, with the West reiterating its refusal to arm the opposition even 
if the gathering indicated a slight shift in the position of the US regarding 
the Syrian crisis as for the first time Washington pledged direct non-combat 
assistance to the armed opposition.

At the end of the conference, the US announced it would send $60 million to 
Syria’s political opposition in order to assist in providing basic services in 
areas liberated by the opposition. It also declared that it would send 
“non-combat” assistance to opposition military councils, while the EU declared 
it would amend the ban on weapons sales to Syria in order to send military 
equipment “with the aim of saving people’s lives.”

The opposition, which had intended to boycott the conference until Europe and 
the US promised the gathering would result in important decisions and tangible 
support, was unconvinced by the US’s financial pledge and promise of non-combat 
assistance.

It was not convinced either by the firm tone of US Secretary of State John 
Kerry, who once again told Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad that he must step 
down because his “time has run out”. Meanwhile, the Syrian regime said that the 
conference “encourages terrorism.”

The Syrian opposition had wanted the West to send advanced weapons rather than 
money in order to alter the balance of power with the regime, or at least to 
allow the opposition to buy weapons despite the international ban. At a 
minimum, it wanted the West’s help to create safe corridors in Syria for 
delivering aid under chapter VII of the UN charter, but none of this took place.

The armed opposition is running low on weapons, while regime forces are using 
tanks, rockets and warplanes to attack it. The West has refused to send 
effective anti-aircraft rockets to stop lethal air raids by regime jets, and 
for months the armed opposition has suffered from low ammunition, anti-armour 
and anti-tank defenses, with the result that it has resorted to the black 
market, weapons sent by non-government Arab organisations, and anything it 
seizes from the regular army in Syria.

However, since earlier this year video footage has shown the revolutionaries 
using advanced weapons, including shoulder-mounted anti-aircraft Stinger 
rockets, powerful anti-tank M-79 rockets, American-made M-4 rifles and Austrian 
Stier rifles. As a result, the revolutionaries are now downing a regime 
warplane or helicopter nearly every day.

The Washington Post has reported that another shipment of advanced and heavy 
weapons reached revolutionaries in recent weeks across the border from Jordan 
to Deraa in southern Syria. It added that these weapons could tip the scales in 
favour of the revolutionaries, and that although the US Obama administrations 
still refuses to directly arm the revolutionaries, it has provided intelligence 
support to countries that arm them.

The New York Times meanwhile quoted US officials as confirming that Washington 
was training Syrian opposition fighters at an unnamed base, meaning that the US 
is becoming involved in the Syrian conflict.

There are many theories about the source of the new weapons used by the Syrian 
revolutionaries since they are not readily available on the black market and 
the Syrian army does not possess them. Some observers have suggested that the 
weapons come from Croatia, while others believe they are from the Gulf states 
that are allied with the opposition, like Saudi Arabia and Qatar, while others 
argue they are part of the arsenal of the former Libyan revolutionaries.

The US has said that it will not arm the opposition with advanced weapons, but 
this does not mean it will not ignore the passage of weapons into Syria. 
Meanwhile, Arab and regional states neighbouring Syria are not bound by the US 
and European ban on sending weapons to Syria, whether to the regime or the 
armed opposition, though anyone who is supplying weapons to Syria will not 
admit it, at least not for now.

“The announcement by the Friends of Syria that it does not publicly support 
arming the opposition extends the duration of the crisis,” Mohieddin 
Al-Lazkani, a member of the opposition Syrian National Council (SNC), told 
Al-Ahram Weekly.

“It also gives the Russians more opportunities to tamper with the fate of the 
Syrian people.”

Nonetheless, Al-Lazkani praised Washington’s position for “being more 
progressive. The Americans of course will not intervene militarily, but they 
will also not stop others from intervening,” he said, adding that “the 
Americans might seek to create a political opposition close to combat brigades 
inside Syria because they realise there is no value to any policy without 
support from the combat groups.”

A leading member of the opposition told the Weekly that the US was 
“implementing a strategy that could lead to arming the revolutionaries soon,” 
adding that the US had promised other countries that it would “work together to 
organise all the armed Syrian groups according to an entirely new strategy, 
with the aim of regulating them and finding a joint leadership to ensure that 
the weapons issue doesn’t lead to chaos.”

“The US has succeeded in unifying the two main groups of the armed units, and 
it is working on three other groups to accomplish the same end quickly and 
efficiently.”

“The US is cooperating with Saudi Arabia in implementing this strategy because 
Riyadh can influence Salafist and jihadist combat groups and help contain them. 
Weapons are likely to flow generously to the bloc the US is preparing, which 
includes 80 per cent of the armed opposition, without waiting for any 
international resolutions.”

Western diplomats also revealed the existence of “operations rooms” including 
European (Germany, the UK and France) and Arab countries (Saudi Arabia and 
Qatar), along with Turkey and the US. One operations room was in Turkey and the 
other was in Jordan, they said, meaning that experts from these countries can 
consult regularly and provide the revolutionaries in Syria with critical 
logistical and intelligence data.

Over the past year, defections from the Syrian army have increased after the 
regime began using its entire military machine to suppress the revolution. Some 
sources estimate the number of armed groups across the spectrum to include 
200,000-300,000 fighters, about 70 per cent of them civilians affected by the 
regime’s war against them.

A few months ago, thousands of defectors from the army formed five military 
councils to regulate armed operations and prevent chaos spreading. The aim was 
to link up the revolutionary forces with the political representation in order 
to stabilise ties between political and military actors.

Sources from the rebel Free Syrian Army (FSA) assert that advanced weapons have 
reached revolutionaries through Turkey in the north and Jordan in the south, 
but that these weapons have been insufficient to end the conflict with the 
regime.

SNC member Mohamed Sarmini said Turkey and the US had given some advanced 
weapons to the armed opposition inside Syria but not enough. Arab officials and 
opposition leaders revealed that heavy weaponry had reached “moderate” armed 
opposition brigades.

Syrian revolutionaries say that they have been receiving weapons and money from 
abroad, but at a price. The cost of arms has been promised reconstruction 
contracts in Syria, they say, which they have been asked to grant to friendly 
countries in advance of the fall of the Syrian regime.

It is critical that advanced weapons arriving from Turkey and Jordan are not 
handled as they have been in the past, when a shipment of 14 Stinger rockets 
was found in Turkey in July. When the Turkish authorities were informed, they 
blocked the shipment from reaching the Syrian revolutionaries under the pretext 
that the weapons should not be allowed to reach extremists or jihadists.

It is clear that the US has thus far allowed only defensive weapons to pass 
through and not offensive ones in order to help defend sites controlled by the 
revolutionaries. But these weapons have not prevented the regime from attacking 
or given the FSA the ability to change the balance of power.

There are many reasons why Washington may have changed its position on arming 
the Syrian opposition. There has been pressure from Europe on the US 
administration to transition from humanitarian aid to weapons, as well as 
domestic US pressure that argues the crisis cannot be resolved without arming 
the opposition.

This position was previously supported by former US secretary of defense Leon 
Panetta, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin Dempsey, and former 
US secretary of state Hillary Clinton, but the White House has rejected their 
arguments.

Observers believe that the US administration is at the point of changing its 
position on arming the Syrian opposition, but that it will take time to 
convince it to take further steps that will change the balance of power.

The US wants a cohesive leadership structure for the armed opposition that will 
have central control of the weapons and will rein in Islamist radicals, though 
this may be a difficult mission to achieve in the immediate future


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