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How The Free Syrian Army Became A Largely Criminal Enterprise

Arzamas 16

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The Free Syrian Army commander leant against the door of his four-wheel drive BMW X5 with tinted windows and watched as his men waded through the river on the Syrian border moving the barrels of smuggled petroleum to Turkey.

Feeling the smooth wedge of American bank notes he had just been given in exchange, he was suddenly proud of everything he had become.

In three short years he had risen from peasant to war lord: from a seller of cigarettes on the street of a provincial village to the ruler of a province, with a rebel group to man his checkpoints and control these lucrative smuggling routes.

The FSA, a collection of tenuously coordinated, moderately Islamic, rebel groups was long the focus of the West’s hopes for ousting President Bashar al-Assad.

But in northern Syria, the FSA has now become a largely criminal enterprise, with commanders more concerned about profits from corruption, kidnapping and theft than fighting the regime, according to a series of interviews with The Sunday Telegraph.

“There are many leaders in the revolution that don’t want to make the regime fall because they are loving the conflict,” said Ahmad al-Knaitry, commander of the moderate Omar Mokhtar brigade in the Jebel az-Zawiya area, south-west of Idlib city. “They have become princes of war; they spend millions of dollars, live in castles and have fancy cars.”

At the beginning of the Syrian war, cafés in Antakya, the dusty Turkish town on the border with Syria, was alive with talk of revolution.

Rebel commanders were often seen poring over maps discussing the next government target. Almost three years later the fight against Bashar al-Assad is long forgotten. Discussion now surrounds fears of the growing power of al-Qaeda’s Syrian outfit, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, and the criminality and corruption that grips rebel-held areas.

Syria’s north has been divided into a series of fiefdoms run by rival warlords.

With no overarching rule of law, every city, town and village comes under the control of a different commander. A myriad of checkpoints are dotted across the provinces: there are approximately 34 on the short road from the Turkish border to Aleppo alone. It is a dog-eat-dog existence, where men vie for control of territory, money, weapons and smuggling routes; it is, disgruntled civilians say, a competition for the spoils of war.

“I used to feel safe travelling around Aleppo and in [the neighbouring] Idlib province,” said one Aleppo resident who works with a local charity to distribute food to civilians in the area. “Now I am afraid to leave the street outside my home. Every time you move you risk being robbed, kidnapped, or beaten. It all depends on how the men on the checkpoints you are crossing feel that day.”

Fuel smuggling has burgeoned into a massive business, where smugglers and fighters take oil from the country’s rebel-held fields in the north, crudely refine it and pass it through illegal routes along the porous border with Turkey. Some rebel brigades have given up the fight against the regime entirely to run the operations that line their own pockets; others are using it to fund their military actions, locals explained.

Some fighting groups manage the transfer of crude oil from the field to the refinery and then to the border, others have simply set up checkpoints that impose levies on smuggler gangs.

“Three years ago the rebels really wanted to fight the regime,” said Ahmed, an opposition activist living in Raqqa, close to the country’s oil repositories.

“But then the FSA started to control the borders and the fuel. After that it changed from a revolution to a battle for oil. I know rebel groups from Aleppo and Deir Ezzor, and even from Homs in the south of the country, that come here to get a share of the spoils.”

The West has long viewed the FSA as its best ally in the melee of fighting groups in Syria. Western diplomats have worked hard to promote the idea of a command and control structure in which a “Supreme Military Council” provides supplies and orders to outfits on the ground.

The CIA was part of an “operations room” designed to ensure the weapons supplied by Gulf sponsors and channelled through Turkey went to Western-friendly, FSA-affiliated fighters. The United States has even offered limited non-lethal military support in the form of thousands of food packs.

But competition between the main proxy backers of the FSA, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, the lack of a real military commitment from Western powers and chronic infighting from the outset sent the FSA into decline before it had been even been properly formed. Lacking financial and military support, or a clear strategy, groups in the north began to fragment. Men and weapons seeped away to the better organised, better funded Islamist groups, allowing al-Qaeda to strengthen its foothold in Syria.

Mahmoud, a rebel fighter from Jisr al-Shugour in Idlib, detailed the painful decline of his fighting unit. It is a story oft repeated across northern Syria. “We joined the revolution when men only had hunting shotguns to defend their villages. In the first months we liberated our town, took terrain and we were happy, we had a case to fight the regime. We were bringing freedom to our people,” he said.

He recalled how his comrades had planted home-made roadside bombs at the entrances to their town to block the regime’s tanks. “Back then we were a group of brothers, not officers with soldiers, leaders with their men. We were friends,” he said.

In April this year, the mood started to turn. “People arrived who were not with the revolution, they were only interested in selling guns,” he said. “They called themselves FSA, but they had no interest in fighting Assad. They seized areas that were already free of the regime and set up checkpoints on roads there and started charging people for access.

“Some of the men in my brigade started working with them.”

One officer, Ahmed Hamis, had been a representative in the Supreme Military Council for the Jisr al-Shugour area in Idlib province and had fought honestly against the regime, Mahmoud said. “Then a foreign sponsor started supporting him with money and weapons. He broke away to form a small gang.

“He has a lot of weapons but he hasn’t run one battle against the regime. He has no time for that because he has his own business, smuggling diesel and setting up checkpoints to levy taxes,” he said. “He also deals in kidnappings. If they catch a government soldier they’ll sell him back to his family.”

With little practical support coming from the Supreme Military Council, Mahmoud’s group started to falter. “Because we were not thieving, we had no money to operate. Many of our men had to leave to find jobs. We were weak and eventually we had to disband,” he said.

“My commander had been one of the first people to defect from the Syrian army. But now we don’t have any mission, and we don’t have any soldiers for fighting. My commander keeps asking his fighters to come back. He is desperate.”

At least 85 per cent of the fighting groups he used to know have started smuggling oil and cars, he said. Many had also turned to exploiting the finances of sponsors funding the war against Assad. Rebel groups film their military operations and post the videos on YouTube for foreign donors to peruse. Each outfit has a unit of “journalists”, men who follow them into battle armed with a video camera.

Back in the office they edit the footage, often putting it to music and stamping it with the group’s logo, before posting it online or sending it to their sponsor as evidence that the military operation they paid for had been carried out.

“Often our sponsors will give us money for a specific operation, so when we do it, we film it as proof that we have used their money well,” said a media officer with the Farouk brigade, one of the best-known rebel outfits in Syria, in their office in Reyhanli.

But FSA commanders are increasingly using this to line their own pockets, focusing more on getting the sponsor’s funds than on the military operations, civilians and rebel commanders have said.

Rebels across the region expressed anger at the battle of Wadi Deif, a six-month siege of a huge military base which ended with the government retaining control of it.

That siege was led by Jamal Maarouf, a former handyman and one of the most powerful rebel commanders in Idlib province, but many other rebel outfits participated. Men who were in the battle told The Sunday Telegraph that their commanders had not wanted to end the battle because it was too profitable.

“Funds poured in from the Gulf states and Saudi Arabia,” said one fighter who asked not to be named. “And the siege itself made money: commanders were taking bribes from the Syrian regime to allow the regime to send food supplies to its men inside.”

For several months, foreign backers sent money and weapons to help finish the battle at Wadi Deif. It became, as one rebel put it, “like a like a chicken producing golden eggs”.

Mr Knaitry said: “We try not to talk about it about it because we don’t want our people to lose hope. :rofl:But they became merchants with the martyr’s blood.”

Suddenly many of the fighters bought new homes, and started flashing more money. One man said of Jamaal Marouf: “He had nothing before the revolution, now he drives around in his personal bullet proof car.”


How The Free Syrian Army Became A Largely Criminal Enterprise - Business Insider


Looks like Donkey's are starting to grow some brains, I mean why die for Allah when you could drive an X5:argh:


Jihad is for losers:rofl:
 
Says a Ruskie who are an entity known worldwide for their fondness for killing. It seems like yesterday that 30 million of you got killed during WW2 and millions of others by your own people.

Now you are aiding a dictator and child-murderer in Syria. Truth to your nature. And if it not world wars, crazy dictators and mass executions then it is genocide of various minorities in Russia.

Ethnic cleansing of Circassians - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

And if that is not the case then bothering the small entity called Chechnya who kicked your *** in the First Chechen War.

And if all that is not happening then you are dying of alcoholism, drugs or car accidents. When not dying out due to low birth rates of course.

The conflict in Syria is just like one single drop of water in the Arabian Sea in comparison.

Still think that you are a match for NATO I see.:rofl:

But well, we have Ruskie toilette cleaners in the Arab world and your tourists are known as the loudest, rudest and most primitive/cheap kind. From Morocco in the west to Oman in the east.

I guess that happens when you suddenly get more than a penny to use and you can't get satisfied with the daily 1 liter of vodka that you consume and the 10 story communistic block you life in, in some miserable industrial city somewhere in Siberia.

No disrespect to any sane Russians around but that clown living somewhere in Murmansk is annoying me. I normally don't show manners to supporters of child-murderers.
 
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Now you are aiding a dictator and child-murderer in Syria. Truth to your nature. And if it not world wars, crazy dictators and mass executions then it is genocide of various minorities in Russia.

You funded Chechen groups through out 90s, and your still funding them now.

Payback is b i t c h

And if that is not the case then bothering the small entity called Chechnya who kicked your *** in the First Chechen War.

in the end we brought them to their knees and that's all that matters.

And if all that is not happening then you are dying of alcoholism, drugs or car accidents. When not dying out due to low birth rates of course.

Really Al-Hasani, I thought we been through this before

Still think that you are a match for NATO I see.:rofl:

Now? No, but another ten years of rearmament we'll be much more than match.
 
You funded Chechen groups through out 90s, and your still funding them now.

Payback is b i t c h



in the end we brought them to their knees and that's all that matters.



Really Al-Hasani, I thought we been through this before



Now? No, but another ten years of rearmament we'll be much more than match.

Payback? Dude, I did not know that Syria was Saudi Arabia. Nice story.

Bought them to their knees, is that why they have autonomy now, their own government, president etc?:omghaha:

When your commies were ruling all minority languages were forbidden and the Chechens were deported to Kazakhstan and elsewhere. Now they teach Chechen in school again and the language and culture is more alive than ever.

Is this your definition of brought to the knees?

Yes, and I just stated some common and well-known facts to get you back to reality.

Yes, sure. Meanwhile all the most influential and richest Russians, when not ruling as corrupt oligarchs are living abroad either in Paris, London or on the French Rivera.

Yes, just when your commie "empire" collapsed. You also thought you had any chance against NATO. Now you are even weaker and still think you can challenge NATO despite NATO being stronger than ever and bigger and ever expanding.

People want the West and not Russia. You don't see Westerners immigrating to Russia. But you see the opposite.

I am studying with two Russians here in Denmark. One from Volgograd and the other from Vladikavkaz. Nice dudes. Nothing wrong there. But they sure as hell don't' want to return if a LOT is not going to change.

Nor are they supporting a child-murderer like you because they see it as some kind of battle against NATO (LOL).
Grow up DUDE and take a shot of vodka and eat some good caviar. Worry about your own country.

You don't care about any side in Syria anyway, LOL. You already called both of them donkeys and made @Syrian Lion cry.:omghaha:
 
Payback? Dude, I did not know that Syria was Saudi Arabia. Nice story.

Bought them to their knees, is that why they have autonomy now, their own government, president etc?:omghaha:

This is my definition

The number of people seeking political asylum in Germany has soared, and the biggest group by far was from Russia. In the first half of this year, just over 43,000 refugees applied to stay - that is 86% more than in the same period in 2012.

BBC News - Germany asylum surge as more Chechens flee Russia

Soon there will no more chechens left in chechenya.:partay:


When your commies were ruling all minority languages were forbidden and the Chechens were deported to Kazakhstan and elsewhere. Now they teach Chechen in school again and the language and culture is more alive than ever.

Minority languages in Russia under threat of extinction : Russian Geographical Society

Old habits are hard to break:D


Yes, just when your commie "empire" collapsed. You also thought you had any chance against NATO. Now you are even weaker and still think you can challenge NATO despite NATO being stronger than ever and bigger and ever expanding.


A militarily resurgent and swiftly rearming Russia is alarming NATO states that lie close to its territory, chiefly the Baltic States.

NATO stages exercise as rearming Russia worries some allies| Reuters


You don't care about any side in Syria anyway, LOL. You already called both of them donkeys and made @Syrian Lion cry.:omghaha:

Your gonna cry a heck of a lot more when Assad wins:lol:
 
This is my definition



BBC News - Germany asylum surge as more Chechens flee Russia

Soon there will no more chechens left in chechenya.:partay:




Minority languages in Russia under threat of extinction : Russian Geographical Society

Old habits are hard to break:D







NATO stages exercise as rearming Russia worries some allies| Reuters




Your gonna cry a heck of a lot more when Assad wins:lol:

LOL, so you actually take pride in all what I wrote in post 2? Ok, nice to know that certain stereotypes are in fact real. No wonder that you Ruskies are hated in all of Europe and Central Asia and the Caucasus.

You are by no means from a commie household are you? Not much class about such opinions. At least I can conclude that there is a very little chance of your family belonging to the intelligentsia.

So when will you deport the last well over 1 million Chechens from their homeland?

Trust me on this when I say this to you. Al-Asshead aka the Child-Murderer will be gone and if not we will make life so miserable for him that he in the end commits suicide and we will target his interests, proxies until he is gone and we will wage a global jihad.

Baghdad will look like a picnic in comparison.

One call from one of the Imams of Masjid al-Haram that declares Al-Asshead a kafir or his regime as illegitimate and an enemy of the Muslims would be the end for him. But somehow that fatwa has not been issued to my great displeasure and millions of Muslims. Unfortunately for that reason and many others you have thousands of Syrians dying and your resources are going down a black hole.
 
You funded Chechen groups through out 90s, and your still funding them now.

Payback is b i t c h



in the end we brought them to their knees and that's all that matters.



Really Al-Hasani, I thought we been through this before



Now? No, but another ten years of rearmament we'll be much more than match.

There is no payback , the Chechen/Russian struggle has been around for more than 300 years , even before Saudi Arabia existed .

The Chechen hatred of Russians is related mostly to the 1940s events when Russians carried out a holocaust killing half of the chechens and deporting the other half to Siberia and central asia .

The current terrorism you have in Russia is Just the ongoing conflict that has been around since 300 years ago and most those who Join insurgent groups are ones seeking revenge for their relatives who have been captured or assassinated by Russian troops.

once you recognise the rights of these in a decent life without intimidation only then terrorism will stop other than that this cycle will never end .

Same goes for Syria to , had Bachar and his government better managed the economy and found innovative ways to employ people then this current civil war would have never occurred.

To achieve security and stability you can only do this through providing people with at-least a standard of living where they can afford essential products to survive.

Lack of Jobs , corruption and poverty pushes young youth either to organized crimes or terrorism.
 
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It has always been the screaming salafists beheaders criminals
 
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