Al-Qaeda
gaining experience in Syria, eyes 'Islamic state to fight Israel and
Iran'
An
Iraqi Al-Qaeda operative has admitted that his organization is taking
part in the Syrian uprising against President Assad. The revelation
comes amidst increasing evidence that Al-Qaeda is gaining a foothold
in Syria.
RT,
26
July, 2012
Abu
Thuha, a 56-year-old Al-Qaeda operative living near Kirkuk in
northern Iraq, described the Islamist organization’s grand plans to
an Iraqi reporter for The New York Times.
“We
have experience now fighting the Americans, and more experience now
with the Syrian revolution,” he noted. “Our big hope is to form a
Syrian-Iraqi Islamic state for all Muslims, and then announce our war
against Iran and Israel, and free Palestine.”
In
Iraq, the number of Al-Qaeda attacks has been on the rise, with over
400 people killed since the start of June. On Monday, a series of
bombings and shootings took the lives of over 110 people, an attack
that has been claimed by the self-proclaimed Islamic State of Iraq,
Al-Qaeda’s front in the country. As for Syria, Iraqi officials have
pointed to the fact that both governments face a common enemy:
Al-Qaeda.
“We
are 100-per-cent sure from security coordination with Syrian
authorities that the wanted names that we have are the same wanted
names that the Syrian authorities have, especially within the last
three months,” Izzat al-Shahbandar, a close aide to the Iraqi prime
minister, said. “The Al-Qaeda that is operating in Iraq is the same
as that which is operating in Syria.”
Iraqi
foreign minister Hoshyar Zebari also noted that while in the past
decade his country suffered from an influx of Al-Qaeda operatives
coming in from Syria, the direction of their flow has now reversed.
“We
have solid information and intelligence that members of Al-Qaeda's
terrorist network have gone to Syria,” he told reporters in Baghdad
on July 5. “Our main concern, to be honest with you, is about the
spill over – about extremist, terrorist groups taking root in
neighboring countries.”
Another
piece of evidence pointing to Al-Qaeda’s growing presence in Syria
is the increasing number of Al-Qaeda-style suicide bombings, most of
them targeting government facilities.
Last
week, at least four senior government ministers were killed in an
explosion in Damascus, as fighting between troops and rebels raged on
in the outskirts of the city. Both the Free Syrian Army and the
Islamist Liva al-Islam claimed responsibility for the bombing.
Last
month, seven people were killed and 11 were kidnapped in an attack on
the state-run Al-Ikhbariya TV station. The Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Nusra
Front for the People of the Levant claimed responsibility for the
attack.
In
May, two car bombs detonated by suicide bombers went off next to a
military intelligence complex in Damascus, killing at least 55
soldiers.
All
in all, at least 35 car bombings and 10 suicide bombings have taken
place in Syria this year, data compiled by the Institute for the
Study of War shows. Four of these attacks were claimed by the
Al-Nusra Front. Many more were alleged to have been perpetrated by
the Islamist group, as well as other militant Sunni organizations
connected to Al-Qaeda: the Abdullah Azzam Shaheed Brigades and the
al-Baraa ibn Malik Martyrdom Brigade.
Al-Qaeda
has repeatedly been voicing its support for the Syrian uprising
against President Bashar al-Assad. Last week, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi,
the pseudonymous new leader of Al-Qaeda’s branch in Iraq, issued
his first audio statement in which he devoted 30 minutes to praising
the Sunni struggle against President Assad, a member of the offshoot
Shiite Alawite sect. The statement also served as a harbinger for the
deadly Monday attacks in Iraq.
“I
bring you good news: we are starting a new phase in our struggle with
a plan we named `Breaking the walls,' and we remind you of your
priority to free the Muslim prisoners,” he said. “At the top of
your priorities regarding targets is to chase and liquidate the
judges, the investigators and the guards.”
Al-Qaeda
leader Ayman Al-Zawahari has also been voicing his support for the
Syrian uprising against President Bashar al-Assad. In February he
released an audio recording lauding the rebels and calling them “the
lions of the Levant.”
Nevertheless,
the Syrian National Council (SNC), the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and the
Syrian Revolution General Commission (SRGC) "are all united in
rejecting the message of Al-Qaeda,” a February statement of the SNC
read.
The
Syrian government has maintained that it has been fighting terrorists
since last year. This claim has repeatedly been shunned by a number
of high-ranking Western officials. US State Department spokesperson
Victoria Nuland said the recent attacks against senior government
officials in Damascus were “not surprising.”
Her
position, as well as that of Susan Rice, the US ambassador in the UN,
led Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov to condemn America’s
stance and suggest that it was directly endorsing terrorism.
The
anti-Assad rhetoric of top American officials is not being backed by
evidence presented by the country’s own military and intelligence.
In
February, US director of national intelligence James Clapper told
Congress that a series of bombings against Syrian security targets
last year bore “all the earmarks of an Al-Qaeda-like attack.”
General
Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chief of Staff, also
suggested that Islamist militant organizations such as Al-Qaeda were
trying to stir the conflict in Syria their way.
“Those
who would like to foment a Sunni-Shia standoff – and you know who
they are – are all weighing in in Syria,” he noted during a
Senate testimony in February.
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