http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/25/world/middleeast/arms-airlift-to-syrian-rebels-expands-with-cia-aid.html?pagewanted=all

Arms Airlift to Syria Rebels Expands, With Aid From C.I.A.
 
Reuters
Free Syrian Army fighters inside a house in Aleppo last week. The United States 
has been helping Arab governments and Turkey send arms to the rebels. 

By C. J. CHIVERS and ERIC SCHMITT
Published: March 24, 2013 228 Comments
With help from the C.I.A., Arab governments and Turkey have sharply increased 
their military aid to Syria’s opposition fighters in recent months, expanding a 
secret airlift of arms and equipment for the uprising against President Bashar 
al-Assad, according to air traffic data, interviews with officials in several 
countries and the accounts of rebel commanders. 

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Even with the weapons from abroad, rebels say they are hard pressed to fight 
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The airlift, which began on a small scale in early 2012 and continued 
intermittently through last fall, expanded into a steady and much heavier flow 
late last year, the data shows. It has grown to include more than 160 military 
cargo flights by Jordanian, Saudi and Qatari military-style cargo planes 
landing at Esenboga Airport near Ankara, and, to a lesser degree, at other 
Turkish and Jordanian airports. 

As it evolved, the airlift correlated with shifts in the war within Syria, as 
rebels drove Syria’s army from territory by the middle of last year. And even 
as the Obama administration has publicly refused to give more than “nonlethal” 
aid to the rebels, the involvement of the C.I.A. in the arms shipments — albeit 
mostly in a consultative role, American officials say — has shown that the 
United States is more willing to help its Arab allies support the lethal side 
of the civil war. 

>From offices at secret locations, American intelligence officers have helped 
>the Arab governments shop for weapons, including a large procurement from 
>Croatia, and have vetted rebel commanders and groups to determine who should 
>receive the weapons as they arrive, according to American officials speaking 
>on the condition of anonymity. The C.I.A. declined to comment on the shipments 
>or its role in them. 

The shipments also highlight the competition for Syria’s future between Sunni 
Muslim states and Iran, the Shiite theocracy that remains Mr. Assad’s main 
ally. Secretary of State John Kerry pressed Iraq on Sunday to do more to halt 
Iranian arms shipments through its airspace; he did so even as the most recent 
military cargo flight from Qatar for the rebels landed at Esenboga early Sunday 
night. 

Syrian opposition figures and some American lawmakers and officials have argued 
that Russian and Iranian arms shipments to support Mr. Assad’s government have 
made arming the rebels more necessary. 

Most of the cargo flights have occurred since November, after the presidential 
election in the United States and as the Turkish and Arab governments grew more 
frustrated by the rebels’ slow progress against Mr. Assad’s well-equipped 
military. The flights also became more frequent as the humanitarian crisis 
inside Syria deepened in the winter and cascades of refugees crossed into 
neighboring countries. 

The Turkish government has had oversight over much of the program, down to 
affixing transponders to trucks ferrying the military goods through Turkey so 
it might monitor shipments as they move by land into Syria, officials said. The 
scale of shipments was very large, according to officials familiar with the 
pipeline and to an arms-trafficking investigator who assembled data on the 
cargo planes involved. 

“A conservative estimate of the payload of these flights would be 3,500 tons of 
military equipment,” said Hugh Griffiths, of the Stockholm International Peace 
Research Institute, who monitors illicit arms transfers. 

“The intensity and frequency of these flights,” he added, are “suggestive of a 
well-planned and coordinated clandestine military logistics operation.” 

Although rebel commanders and the data indicate that Qatar and Saudi Arabia had 
been shipping military materials via Turkey to the opposition since early and 
late 2012, respectively, a major hurdle was removed late last fall after the 
Turkish government agreed to allow the pace of air shipments to accelerate, 
officials said. 

Simultaneously, arms and equipment were being purchased by Saudi Arabia in 
Croatia and flown to Jordan on Jordanian cargo planes for rebels working in 
southern Syria and for retransfer to Turkey for rebels groups operating from 
there, several officials said. 

These multiple logistics streams throughout the winter formed what one former 
American official who was briefed on the program called “a cataract of 
weaponry.” 

American officials, rebel commanders and a Turkish opposition politician have 
described the Arab roles as an open secret, but have also said the program is 
freighted with risk, including the possibility of drawing Turkey or Jordan 
actively into the war and of provoking military action by Iran. 

Still, rebel commanders have criticized the shipments as insufficient, saying 
the quantities of weapons they receive are too small and the types too light to 
fight Mr. Assad’s military effectively. They also accused those distributing 
the weapons of being parsimonious or corrupt. 

“The outside countries give us weapons and bullets little by little,” said 
Abdel Rahman Ayachi, a commander in Soquor al-Sham, an Islamist fighting group 
in northern Syria. 

He made a gesture as if switching on and off a tap. “They open and they close 
the way to the bullets like water,” he said. 

Two other commanders, Hassan Aboud of Soquor al-Sham and Abu Ayman of Ahrar 
al-Sham, another Islamist group, said that whoever was vetting which groups 
receive the weapons was doing an inadequate job. 

“There are fake Free Syrian Army brigades claiming to be revolutionaries, and 
when they get the weapons they sell them in trade,” Mr. Aboud said. 

The former American official noted that the size of the shipments and the 
degree of distributions are voluminous. 

“People hear the amounts flowing in, and it is huge,” he said. “But they burn 
through a million rounds of ammo in two weeks.” 

A Tentative Start 

The airlift to Syrian rebels began slowly. On Jan. 3, 2012, months after the 
crackdown by the Alawite-led government against antigovernment demonstrators 
had morphed into a military campaign, a pair of Qatar Emiri Air Force C-130 
transport aircraft touched down in Istanbul, according to air traffic data. 

They were a vanguard. 

Weeks later, the Syrian Army besieged Homs, Syria’s third largest city. 
Artillery and tanks pounded neighborhoods. Ground forces moved in. 

Across the country, the army and loyalist militias were trying to stamp out the 
rebellion with force — further infuriating Syria’s Sunni Arab majority, which 
was severely outgunned. The rebels called for international help, and more 
weapons. 

By late midspring the first stream of cargo flights from an Arab state began, 
according to air traffic data and information from plane spotters. 

On a string of nights from April 26 through May 4, a Qatari Air Force C-17 — a 
huge American-made cargo plane — made six landings in Turkey, at Esenboga 
Airport. By Aug. 8 the Qataris had made 14 more cargo flights. All came from Al 
Udeid Air Base in Qatar, a hub for American military logistics in the Middle 
East. 

Qatar has denied providing any arms to the rebels. A Qatari official, who 
requested anonymity, said Qatar has shipped in only what he called nonlethal 
aid. He declined to answer further questions. It is not clear whether Qatar has 
purchased and supplied the arms alone or is also providing air transportation 
service for other donors. But American and other Western officials, and rebel 
commanders, have said Qatar has been an active arms supplier — so much so that 
the United States became concerned about some of the Islamist groups that Qatar 
has armed. 

The Qatari flights aligned with the tide-turning military campaign by rebel 
forces in the northern province of Idlib, as their campaign of ambushes, 
roadside bombs and attacks on isolated outposts began driving Mr. Assad’s 
military and supporting militias from parts of the countryside. 

As flights continued into the summer, the rebels also opened an offensive in 
that city — a battle that soon bogged down. 

The former American official said David H. Petraeus, the C.I.A. director until 
November, had been instrumental in helping to get this aviation network moving 
and had prodded various countries to work together on it. Mr. Petraeus did not 
return multiple e-mails asking for comment. 

The American government became involved, the former American official said, in 
part because there was a sense that other states would arm the rebels anyhow. 
The C.I.A. role in facilitating the shipments, he said, gave the United States 
a degree of influence over the process, including trying to steer weapons away 
from Islamist groups and persuading donors to withhold portable antiaircraft 
missiles that might be used in future terrorist attacks on civilian aircraft. 

American officials have confirmed that senior White House officials were 
regularly briefed on the shipments. “These countries were going to do it one 
way or another,” the former official said. “They weren’t asking for a ‘Mother, 
may I?’ from us. But if we could help them in certain ways, they’d appreciate 
that.” 

Through the fall, the Qatari Air Force cargo fleet became even more busy, 
running flights almost every other day in October. But the rebels were 
clamoring for even more weapons, continuing to assert that they lacked the 
firepower to fight a military armed with tanks, artillery, multiple rocket 
launchers and aircraft. 

Many were also complaining, saying they were hearing from arms donors that the 
Obama administration was limiting their supplies and blocking the distribution 
of the antiaircraft and anti-armor weapons they most sought. These complaints 
continue. 

“Arming or not arming, lethal or nonlethal — it all depends on what America 
says,” said Mohammed Abu Ahmed, who leads a band of anti-Assad fighters in 
Idlib Province. 

The Breakout 

Soon, other players joined the airlift: In November, three Royal Jordanian Air 
Force C-130s landed in Esenboga, in a hint at what would become a stepped-up 
Jordanian and Saudi role. 

Within three weeks, two other Jordanian cargo planes began making a round-trip 
run between Amman, the capital of Jordan, and Zagreb, the capital of Croatia, 
where, officials from several countries said, the aircraft were picking up a 
large Saudi purchase of infantry arms from a Croatian-controlled stockpile. 

The first flight returned to Amman on Dec. 15, according to intercepts of a 
transponder from one of the aircraft recorded by a plane spotter in Cyprus and 
air traffic control data from an aviation official in the region. 

In all, records show that two Jordanian Ilyushins bearing the logo of the 
Jordanian International Air Cargo firm but flying under Jordanian military call 
signs made a combined 36 round-trip flights between Amman and Croatia from 
December through February. The same two planes made five flights between Amman 
and Turkey this January. 

As the Jordanian flights were under way, the Qatari flights continued and the 
Royal Saudi Air Force began a busy schedule, too — making at least 30 C-130 
flights into Esenboga from mid-February to early March this year, according to 
flight data provided by a regional air traffic control official. 

Several of the Saudi flights were spotted coming and going at Ankara by 
civilians, who alerted opposition politicians in Turkey. 

“The use of Turkish airspace at such a critical time, with the conflict in 
Syria across our borders, and by foreign planes from countries that are known 
to be central to the conflict, defines Turkey as a party in the conflict,” said 
Attilla Kart, a member of the Turkish Parliament from the C.H.P. opposition 
party, who confirmed details about several Saudi shipments. “The government has 
the responsibility to respond to these claims.” 

Turkish and Saudi Arabian officials declined to discuss the flights or any arms 
transfers. The Turkish government has not officially approved military aid to 
Syrian rebels. 

Croatia and Jordan both denied any role in moving arms to the Syrian rebels. 
Jordanian aviation officials went so far as to insist that no cargo flights 
occurred. 

The director of cargo for Jordanian International Air Cargo, Muhammad Jubour, 
insisted on March 7 that his firm had no knowledge of any flights to or from 
Croatia. 

“This is all lies,” he said. “We never did any such thing.” 

A regional air traffic official who has been researching the flights confirmed 
the flight data, and offered an explanation. “Jordanian International Air 
Cargo,” the official said, “is a front company for Jordan’s air force.” 

After being informed of the air-traffic control and transponder data that 
showed the plane’s routes, Mr. Jubour, from the cargo company, claimed that his 
firm did not own any Ilyushin cargo planes. 

Asked why his employer’s Web site still displayed images of two Ilyushin-76MFs 
and text claiming they were part of the company fleet, Mr. Jubour had no 
immediate reply. That night the company’s Web site was taken down. 


Reporting was contributed by Robert F. Worth from Washington and Istanbul; Dan 
Bilefsky from Paris; and Sebnem Arsu from Istanbul and Ankara, Turkey.

A version of this article appeared in print on March 25, 2013, on page A1 of 
the New York edition with the headline: Airlift To Rebels In Syria Expands With 
C.I.A.’S Help.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

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