“FSA”, princes of war

The “Free Syrian Army” began as a simple group of fighters battling Syrian government. But Ruth Sherlock, in Antakya, finds their mission is now making millions from bribery and extortion

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 “militant” group to man his checkpoints and control these lucrative smuggling routes.

The “FSA”, a collection of tenuously coordinated, moderately Islamic, opposition groups was long the focus of the West’s “hopes” for ousting Syrian government.

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 Syrian forces, according to a series of interviews with The Sunday Telegraph.

 “There are many leaders in the “revolution” that don’t want to make the government fall because they are loving the conflict,” said Ahmad al-Knaitry, commander of the 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.”

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 “militants” 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 militant-held fields in the north, crudely refine it and pass it through illegal routes along the porous border with Turkey. Some “militant” brigades have given up the fight against the Syrian government 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.

An activist said: “When the “FSA” started to control the borders and the fuel, they changed from opposition groups to a battle for oil. I know “militant” 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 organized, better funded Islamist groups, allowing al-Qaeda to strengthen its foothold in Syria.

Mahmoud, a “fighte” from Jisr al-Shugour in Idlib recalled how his comrades had planted home-made roadside bombs at the entrances to their town to block the Syrian forces tanks, but in April this year, the mood started to turn. “People arrived who were not with us, they were only interested in selling guns,” he said. “They called themselves “FSA”, they seized areas that were already free of the Syrian government and set up checkpoints on roads there and started charging people for access.

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

At least 85 per cent of the fighting groups we 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 Syrian government. “Militant” 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.

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.

 “Funds poured in from the Gulf states and Saudi Arabia,” said one fighter who asked not to be named. For several months, foreign backers sent money and weapons to help finish the battle at Wadi Deif. It became, as one militant 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. 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 war, now he drives around in his personal bullet proof car.”

Source: telegraph.co.uk

B.N

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