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Syria Rearms Iraq
Middle East Intelligence Bulletin ^ | September 2002 | by Gary C. Gambill

Posted on 09/08/2002 3:09:21 PM PDT by knighthawk

As the United States stockpiles vital military equipment for an upcoming invasion of Iraq, Syria is reportedly supplying it with arms and spare parts, allowing Baghdad to strengthen its dilapidated armed forces. Although Iraq's military buildup is unlikely to affect the outcome of a confrontation with American forces, it has enhanced its ability to deliver weapons of mass destruction.

Unlike his father, who brought Syria into the American-led coalition against Baghdad in 1991 and reaped enormous financial and diplomatic rewards, Syrian President Bashar Assad may pay a heavy diplomatic price for backing a losing horse.

Ominous Signals

Last spring, American airborne radar aircraft monitoring the no-fly zones in Iraq detected a steady rise in the number of flights by Iraqi combat aircraft in the unrestricted central zone of the country. This raised many eyebrows at the Pentagon. UN restrictions on imports of military equipment during the last decade had, until recently, severely depleted the combat readiness of the Iraqi air force. The number of training flights over the skies of Baghdad had been on the decline, as Iraqi technicians were increasingly forced to dismantle healthy aircraft just to obtain the spare parts to keep others flying.

Had Iran returned the scores of Iraqi aircraft that took refuge on its soil during the 1991 Gulf War? American intelligence found no evidence of this. After intense surveillance of Iraqi air force installations, it was concluded that previously grounded Soviet-build aircraft were taking to the skies. For this, there could be but one explanation - Baghdad was acquiring spare parts from an outside source. At the same time, Iraq was undertaking the largest deployment of anti-aircraft missile batteries into the no-fly zones in over two years. But who was supplying Baghdad? The most pressing question was not where the equipment originated -Soviet bloc weaponry is plentiful throughout the Middle East and eastern Europe - but how the shipments got into Iraq.

Syria was a prime suspect from the very beginning. Trade between the two former enemies had skyrocketed since border controls were greatly reduced in 2000, from virtually nothing to around $1 billion last year, and increasing levels of strategic military cooperation were evident. Moreover, Syria began importing an estimated 150,000-200,000 barrels of oil per day from Iraq, in violation of UN sanctions, allowing it to significantly boost its own oil exports. Given the large volume of overland trucking and railway traffic between the two countries, the temptation to smuggle military equipment to Iraq in lieu of payment for some or all of this oil would have been enormous for Syria's cash-strapped government.

Indeed, three Iraqi defectors who left the country in late 2001 and early 2002 were making this precise allegation. By their accounts, a shipment of military equipment, including anti-aircraft missiles, rockets and Scud missile guidance systems, arrived from the Czech Republic under Syrian and Yemeni export licenses at the Syrian port of Latakia on February 23. An Iraqi intelligence officer was present to supervise the unloading of the shipment and its transfer overland to Iraq. The defectors said that two more shipments were planned.1

Western intelligence sources cited by the London Times in June confirmed the allegations. According to this report, the Czech arms shipments, as well as tanks imported by Syria from Bulgaria several years ago, were smuggled overland via the Aleppo-Mosul railway, which connects by rail to the Iraqi capital.2

On July 15, the Israeli daily Ha'aretz published new, though unattributed, information about the arms shipments. According to the the paper's defense editor, Ze'ev Schiff, Syria also transferred to Iraq refurbished T-55 tank engines and replacement parts for T-72 tanks from Bulgaria and Belarus, military trucks from Russia, 80 MiG-29 engines and radar systems from Ukraine, and spare parts of unknown origin for MiG 21s, 23s and 25s.3

Within twenty-four hours of the Ha'aretz report's publication, the Czech Ministry of Trade and Industry issued a statement insisting that no weapons exports licenses had been granted to Syria in the last two and a half years; Bulgaria's arms trade commission denied having licensed exports of T-55 and T-72 tanks or their components to Damascus, while the Hungarian Defense Ministry denied having ever approved sales of military equipment to Syria.

However, similar denials have been heard before from former Soviet bloc governments. Since the end of the Cold War, newly-privatized defense firms and arms brokers in Central and Eastern European countries have been frequently involved in illicit arms trafficking. Typically, arms dealers have worked in conjunction with corrupt government officials and shipping agents to exploit weak export controls, set up front companies and register fraudulent documents to create a false paper trail. In most cases, arms shipments are authorized on paper for export to a third, legal destination.

It was in this fashion, for example, that Sudan was able to import T-55 tanks from Russia, BMP-2 armored personnel carriers from the Ukraine, and Mi-24B attack helicopters from Belarus during the 1990s.4 According to Human Rights Watch, in 2000 the Czech Republic "delivered surplus tanks sold to Yemen despite concerns that they might be illegally diverted" to a third country. In the mid-1990s, Bulgarian weapons were supplied illegally to Angolan rebels and Ukrainian arms dealers violated the UN arms embargo on Liberia.5

In a July 18 interview, Syrian UN Ambassador Mikhail Wehbe accused Israel of manufacturing reports on Syrian arms smuggling to Iraq, but did not specifically deny that his government has provided Baghdad with weapons.6 Indeed, the Syrian regime has seemed to relish the attention that this allegation has brought it in the Arab world. On July 25, Syrian foreign minister Farouk al-Sharaa boasted that Bush administration officials "feel that the main weak point in their war [planning] is Syria's good relations with Iraq."7

According to the Lebanese daily Al-Nahar, American officials confronted the Syrians in May, producing satellite photographs showing Syrian arms shipments en route to Iraq.8 However, the Bush administration has not publicly accused the Assad regime of violating UN weapons sanctions against Baghdad.

This may reflect continuing uncertainty as to whether Syria is responsible for the smuggling or, more likely, uncertainty as to whether Assad himself has authorized the shipments. It is rumored that the principal Syrian figure behind the arms transfers is Firas Tlass, the son of Defense Minister Mustafa Tlass. Firas owns several holding companies in Syria and has long been involved in smuggling consumer goods into the country and selling them for a handsome profit on the black market. He has also been involved in regular commercial trade with the Iraqis.

It is also possible that the Bush administration has ascertained with a reasonable degree certainty that Assad is responsible for the sanctions violations, but is unwilling to openly rebuke the Syrian leader for fear that this would strain its already tense relations with other Arab governments. It is apparently for this reason that US officials no longer express indignation at Assad's failure to abide by his promise to end illegal oil imports from Iraq. Once Saddam Huseein is removed, however, it not likely that Syria's violation of the sanctions will be forgotten.

US officials are probably not overly concerned with the potential impact of Syrian arms smuggling on the military outcome of an all-out war against Iraq. The Iraqi military does not suffer from quantitative deficiencies vis-a-vis American forces, but from qualitative shortcomings. A greater concern, for example, is Iraq's acquisition of Chinese-manufactured fiber optic cables, which have enabled it to improve its air defense system (there is no evidence that Syria played a role in this).

Extensive repairs to Iraqi aircraft and armor could, however, have a marginal impact on Saddam Hussein's ability to suppress internal challenges to his authority. Moreover, while having more serviceable aircraft would not enable the Iraqis to mount a serious threat to American pilots, it could measurably improve the outcome of a "hail Mary" surprise air strike on Israel with chemical weapons - one or two aircraft might succeed in delivering their payloads if a sufficiently large number of aircraft attack simultaneously and overwhelm the Jewish state's air defenses.

Notes

1 The Guardian (London) 29 April 2002. 2 The Times (London), 10 June 2002. 3 Ha'aretz, 15 July 2002. 4 Human Rights Watch, Global Trade, Local Impact: Arms Transfers to all Sides in the Civil War in Sudan, August 1998. 5 Human Rights Watch, Security Concerns Raised by Arms Transfers from Candidate Countries, 19 October 2001; No Questions Asked: The Eastern Europe Arms Pipeline to Liberia, 15 November 2001. 6 The Daily Star (Beirut), 18 July 2002. 7 The Financial Times, 26 July 2002. 7 Al-Nahar (Beirut), 21 June 2002.


TOPICS: Extended News
KEYWORDS: iraq; rearms; syria

1 posted on 09/08/2002 3:09:21 PM PDT by knighthawk
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To: dennisw; TopQuark; Alouette; OKCSubmariner; veronica; weikel; EU=4th Reich; BrooklynGOP; ...
As the United States stockpiles vital military equipment for an upcoming invasion of Iraq, Syria is reportedly supplying it with arms and spare parts, allowing Baghdad to strengthen its dilapidated armed forces. Although Iraq's military buildup is unlikely to affect the outcome of a confrontation with American forces, it has enhanced its ability to deliver weapons of mass destruction.

Middle East list

If people want on or off this list, please let me know.

2 posted on 09/08/2002 3:14:03 PM PDT by knighthawk
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To: knighthawk
Thanks for your articles on Syria. Damascus is HQ to just about every terror group in the region. The Israeli's will take care of Syria/Lebanon while we take care of Iran/Iraq. This war is going to be huge. Let's just hope the Russians/Chinese don't get any bright ideas. Either way what's about to occur will rock the world.
3 posted on 09/08/2002 3:30:53 PM PDT by Davea
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To: knighthawk
Links of Interest:

SEPTEMBER 11, 2001: ATTACK ON AMERICA! (click here)

ISLAM ONLINE.net - News: "AFGHANS: WE ARE READY FOR JIHAD AGAINST U.S." by Husbanullah Mutawakel, IOL Correspondent (090702)

Opinion.TELEGRAPH.co.uk - TELEGRAPH NEWS: "LONDON TO HOST ISLAMIC 'CELEBRATION' OF SEPTEMBER 11" by Thair Shaikh (090802)

News.TELEGRAPH.co.uk: "MUSLIM RADICALS IN BRITAIN ISSUE 'HOLY WAR' WARNING" by Anton La Guardia (ARTICLE SNIPPET: "Radical Islamic leaders in London issued a thinly-veiled threat yesterday that the United States and Britain could face a terrorist onslaught akin to the September 11 attacks if they go to war on Iraq.") (081402)


MENA REPORT.com - MIDDLE EAST & NORTH AFRICA BUSINESS REPORT: "IRAQ TO LAUNCH TELECOMMUNICATIONS SATELLITE" (090802)

CBN.com: "STRIKING SADDAM: ENDING A TYRANT'S NUCLEAR QUEST" by George Thomas (090802)

NY POST.com: "IRAQ NUKE SITES UP & ATOM AGAIN" (090702)

GLOBAL SECURITY.org: "PUBLIC EYE PICTURE OF THE WEEK - 2002"

IRAQ WATCH.org: "BULLETIN"

FOX NEWS.com: "NEW INTELLIGENCE EXPOSES IRAQ'S NUKE PUSH" by Carl Cameron (090602)

BBC News: "IRAQI AIR DEFENSE SITE ATTACKED" (090602)

THE LIVE WIRE: "RESOLVING OUR INDIFFERENCE OVER IRAQ" -Commentary by Gregory J. Rummo

DAILY STAR.com.lb - LEBANESE NEWS: IRAQI MINISTER TO VISIT FOR TALKS ON TRANSPORT COOPERATION" (090702)

DAILY STAR.com.lb - LEBANESE NEWS: "LEBANESE DESK WILL BE BIGGEST AT BGHDAD TRADE FAIR" (ARTICLE SNIPPET: "Earlier this year, Lebanon signed a long-awaited trade agreement with Iraq that will allow Lebanon to increase its exports to its former No. 1 trading partner. According to the agreement, all Lebanese-made goods will enter the Iraqi market duty-free. Syria, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Turkey have already signed similar trade deals with Iraq.") (090502)

MEMRI.org - MIDDLE EAST MEDIA RESEARCH INSTITUTE: "IRAQ NEWS WIRE No. 8" (090102)

WORLD TRIBUNE.com: "BOLTON: IRAQ, CUBA SEEK MATERIALS BANNED BY BIO WEAPONS PACT" (090202)

WASHINGTON POST.com: "FUGITIVES SOUGHT BY U.S. FIND A PROTECTOR IN CUBA" (090202)

WHITE HOUSE.gov: "REMARKS BY THE VICE PRESIDENT TO THE VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS 103rd NATIONAL CONVENTION" (082602)

Travel.State.gov - U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE, WASHINGTON, D.C. Fact Sheet: "GUIDANCE FOR RESPONDING TO RADIOLOGICAL AND NUCLEAR INCIDENTS" (August, 2002)

FOX NEWS.com: "TRANSCRIPT: SADDAM HUSSEIN'S SPEECH" (080802)

GLOBAL SECURITY.org: "FALLUJAH/HABBANIYAH"

MEMRI.org - MIDDLE EAST MEDIA RESEARCH INSTITUTE - Special Dispatch Series No. 415: "PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY AND IRAQI MEDIA ON IRAQI SUPPORT OF THE INTIFADA" (082702)

WASHINGTON TIMES.com: "IRAQ DEFENDS AID TO BOMBERS" by Joyce Howard Price (ARTICLE SNIPPET: "Iraq's ambassador to the United Nations yesterday defended his country's aid to families of Palestinian suicide-bombers, saying the payments are an expression of Arab solidarity." (082502)

JERUSALEM POST.com: "SADDAM GIVES $120,000 TO FAMILIES OF HEBRON 'MARTYRS'" (081302)

ALBAWABA.com: "SADDAM SAYS AMERICAN TARGETS ALL ARABS; HAILS PALESTINIAN BOMBERS" [ARTICLE SNIPPET: "...Saddam also praised suicide attacks against Israel saying they will be "recorded in our history with shining letters."
"Whenever a (suicide) attack occurs against the enemy, I feel as if I carried it out myself and every Arab should look at these acts this way," Saddam said (Albawaba.com)"](071602)

FOX NEWS.com: "TRANSCRIPT: SADDAM HUSSEIN'S SPEECH" (080802)

AFTENPOSTEN.no: "MORE REFUGEES UNDER TERROR INVESTIGATION At least three more men who arrived in Norway in the 1990s as refugees are under investigation, suspected of having ties to the al-Qaida terror network. All are involved to some degree in Islamic groups." (082602)

AFTENPOSTEN.no: "TERROR SUSPECT SPREADS FEAR IN IRAQI VILLAGES A suspected terrorist who still has permanent resident permission in Norway, and whose family is in Oslo, is accused of imposing Taliban-like rule on villages he now allegedly controls in northern Iraq. Mullah Krekar is reportedly both feared and despised." (082602)

YAHOO! News (AP): "LEADER OF ISLAMIC EXTREMIST GROUP LINKED TO AL-QAIDA LIVED IN NORWAY AS A REFUGEE" (ARTICLE SNIPPET: "Najmuddin Faraj Ahmad, who goes by the name of Mullah Kreekar") (082202)

BBC News: "'AL-QAEDA' INFLUENCE GROWS IN IRAQ PUK Fighters Have Clashed with the Ansar Militants" (SNIPPET: "MULLAH KREKAR: 'Democracy is rejected by Islam.'" (072402)

GOOGLE Search Term: "MULLAH KREKAR"

FOX NEWS.com (AP): Washington. "U.S. MONITORING KURDISH EXTREMISTS - U.S. intelligence agencies have stepped up monitoring of an Islamic extremist group operating in northern Iraq that may have ties both to the Al Qaeda terrorist network and to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, officials said Tuesday." (ARTICLE NOTE: The Islamic extremist group is identified as Ansar al-Islam.)(082102)


4 posted on 09/08/2002 3:38:46 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: Davea
Syria is a well respected member of the UN Security Council. That is the major problem. But the world needs to know about the role Syria is playing in the world of terrorism.
5 posted on 09/08/2002 3:40:39 PM PDT by knighthawk
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To: knighthawk
thanks. Good article.

, uncertainty as to whether Assad himself has authorized the shipments. It is rumored that the principal Syrian figure behind the arms transfers is Firas Tlass, the son of Defense Minister Mustafa Tlass. Firas owns several holding companies in Syria and has long been involved in smuggling consumer goods into the country

I believe this is the heart of the problem. Young Mr. Assad may be on less than solid ground with deeply entrenched "administrative class." The Bush administration may be refraining from leaning on him publically in hopes of keeping him in place rather than having a seriously unfriendly ruler replace him.

I'm reading an interesting book, The Road from Damascus, by Scott C. Davis, an American fellow who travelled alone to Syria in late '80s. He noted that highly educated businessmen he met in Damascus were struggling to make a living while bureaucrats had the big money.

He writes: "I had driven with Saad (a businessman) through the Malke District where a one bedroom apartment sold for a quarter of a million dollars. These apartments housed the nouveau riche, high level bureaucrats and officials, who grew wealthy from their association with the president. (1987) A dozen years later, when commentators spoke of the final difficulties in gaining a peace treaty between Syria and Israel, they noted that a peace treaty would mean opening the economy--a move that would undercut the administrative class that lived in the Malke District and would shift power back to the private sector. The opposition of this administrative class, or fear of retribution that they would face once they began to lose power, was the real obstacle to peace."

Many in Syria want an open market economy, and the senior Assad took significant steps in that direction. I'm not sure whether other Arabic countries are similar in this respect, but it seems that many citizens of Syria, well educated and intelligent, might side with us if we don't knock down too much of Iraq when we liberate it from Saddam's cruel reign of terror. Saddam is not loved in Syria. I think that that plenty of people in the Mideast are ready and willing to put aside religious differences for the opportunity to participate in free market economy. Also, Syria has a signficant Christian population, Greek Orthodox, etc., and is mostly Sunni Muslim, not extremist Shia. Complex little country. I'd like to see them join the free world.

6 posted on 09/08/2002 3:47:34 PM PDT by PoisedWoman
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To: knighthawk
Please add me to your Mideast list. I'm especailly interested in Syria. Thanks.
7 posted on 09/08/2002 3:50:50 PM PDT by PoisedWoman
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To: knighthawk
Would it be too much to ask our boys that, while they're over in Iraq, they head a little north and west and clean up Syria for a twofer?
8 posted on 09/08/2002 4:11:57 PM PDT by Own Drummer
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To: knighthawk
Please add me to your Mideast list. Thanks.
9 posted on 09/08/2002 4:40:27 PM PDT by irish_lad
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To: knighthawk
When the shooting starts I suspect Israel will take care of business with Syria. They are attacking Israel from Lebanon and that must stop.
10 posted on 09/08/2002 4:52:15 PM PDT by OldFriend
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To: knighthawk
I have had a recent revelation (not from allah ,god, the deity, the One, the singularity) that Osama Bin Laden is dead. Of late I have noticed a great improvement in GW's confidence, which has in turn may have penetrated others in key positions. His reinvigorated campaign into Iraq complimented by the entire administration(I believe Powell is on board) and strength of Will tell me this.

GW is the Christian soldier defeating a very old enemy.9-11-02 was an authenticating moment for the Prsident. It was a moment when real and existential Evil appeared and completely reaffirmed his belief in God.
11 posted on 09/08/2002 5:04:34 PM PDT by Helms
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To: Helms
Of late I have noticed a great improvement in GW's confidence, which has in turn may have penetrated others in key positions. His reinvigorated campaign into Iraq complimented by the entire administration(I believe Powell is on board) and strength of Will tell me this.

Yes, I've noticed how confident that Bush has become, especially at the news conference with PM Blair yesterday afternoon!!

Today, Powell, Rumsfeld and Cheney were all singing from the same hymnal, so to speak.

I feel that action is imminent.

Saddam is up for "reelection" on October 15.

The Iraqi electorate may have a choice of candidates in their next election.

12 posted on 09/08/2002 9:03:27 PM PDT by CROSSHIGHWAYMAN
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To: Davea
Tell Syria to hold on, we'll get to them after Iraq!!
13 posted on 09/08/2002 9:43:13 PM PDT by blondee123
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To: blondee123
We'll let the Israeli's take care of Syria/Lebanon.
14 posted on 09/08/2002 10:36:47 PM PDT by Davea
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