http://arabnews.com/news/447738


Did Saudi Arabia send Al-Qaeda prisoners to Syria?

Abdul Rahman Al-Rashed

Thursday 11 April 2013It has become increasingly difficult to believe the news.
Documents can easily be forged and approval stamps no longer mean anything 
thanks to photoshop.
Piles of documents have spread over the conflict in Syria but we are never told 
of their sources.
The most recent of these documents was published twice in two different 
versions and stamped by the Saudi Minister of Interior, in which he orders 
Al-Qaeda prisoners to be released and sent to fight alongside Syrian 
revolutionaries.
The idea is conceptually acceptable since we then get rid of both the 
terrorists and Bashar’s regime. Yet the danger of such an idea lies in the fact 
that they cannot guarantee that those fighters won’t threaten their own country 
and its neighbors. No one does, of course. This is what we have witnessed in 
Afghanistan and this is what Bin Laden has done to us. We sent him to fight the 
Soviets only for him to turn on us and other Muslims.
The document was most likely fabricated by the Syrian regime as part of its 
false propaganda, but why would they do this? They want us to believe that the 
war is between them, the fighters and the extremists in a complex triangle of 
conflict.
Yet the real sides are that of the regime and the fighters. Extremists are 
common components of both sides. They supported Assad before the revolution and 
they antagonized whoever they could. Assad hosted and supported them during the 
war in Iraq against US forces.
He also used them in Lebanon against the Sunnis. He also alleged that they had 
assassinated Rafik Hariri, the former Lebanese prime minister. Assad tried to 
use the Fatah Al-Islam, an extremist group, to topple Fouad Siniora, the other 
former prime minister. Assad sparkled the fighting that lasted for months 
before the Lebanese Army stopped it, but only after the Palestinian refugee 
camp, Nahr Al-Bared, came toppling down on its own people.
The Assad regime has made it easier for extremists to take part in the current 
conflict so that Assad can convince Westerners that he is fighting Al-Qaeda. 
Now, these extremists are no longer under his control and hundreds, perhaps 
thousands, of “Jihadis” have entered Syria from Europe and the Arab states. 
Syrians have joined these Jihadis and hoisting the black flag instead of the 
revolution’s flag. In short, they want to establish an extreme Islamist state.
Two days ago, an alleged statement announced the unity of Al-Qaeda in Iraq and 
the Jabhat Al-Nusrah in Syria. This allegation has yet to be confirmed. It may 
well be a lie told by the Syrian regime to scare Westerners from arming the 
opposition. It also could be true, which reflects the Syrian regime’s failure 
and the sectarian disintegration of Iraq. Briefly put, this announcement serves 
only the Assad regime and the Al-Maliki government in Iraq.
Unlike the Syrian regime, Saudi Arabia would never send hundreds of Al-Qaeda 
prisoners to support the Syrian people. As we know, the original Al-Qaeda 
organization members are still based in Yemen and to date, have not gone to 
fight in Syria because they consider Saudi Arabia their main target. They are 
controlled by Iran through other Islamist groups who act as intermediaries.

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