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Robert Fisk Latest Article Insinuates America IS
Behind The Death Squads
Seen through a Syrian lens
Robert Fisk – The Independent April 29, 2006, via
Information Clearing House
In Syria, the world appears through a glass, darkly. As dark as the smoked
windows of the car which takes me to a building on the western side of
Damascus where a man I have known for 15 years - we shall call him a
"security source", which is the name given by American correspondents to
their own powerful intelligence officers - waits with his own ferocious
narrative of disaster in Iraq and dangers in the Middle East.

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His
is a fearful portrait of
an America trapped in the bloody sands of Iraq, desperately
trying to provoke a civil war around Baghdad in order to reduce its
own military casualties. It is a scenario in which Saddam
Hussein remains Washington's best friend, in which Syria has struck at the
Iraqi insurgents with a ruthlessness that the United States wilfully
ignores. And in which Syria's Interior Minister, found shot dead in his
office last year, committed suicide because of his own mental instability.
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The Americans, my
interlocutor suspected, are trying to provoke an Iraqi civil war so that
Sunni Muslim insurgents spend their energies killing their Shia
co-religionists rather than soldiers of the Western occupation forces.
"I swear to you that we have very good
information," my source says,
finger stabbing the air in front of him.
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Americans Supply The Bombers
"One young Iraqi man told us that he
was trained by the Americans as a policeman in Baghdad and he spent 70
per cent of his time learning to drive and 30 per cent in weapons
training. They said to him: 'Come back in a week.'
When he went back, they gave him a mobile phone and told him to drive into
a crowded area near a mosque and phone them. He waited in the car but
couldn't get the right mobile signal. So he got out of the car to where he
received a better signal. Then his car blew up."
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Impossible, I think to myself.
But then I remember how many times
Iraqis in Baghdad have told me similar stories.
These reports are believed even if they seem
unbelievable. And I know where much of the Syrian information is gleaned:
from the tens of thousands of Shia Muslim pilgrims who come to pray at the
Sayda Zeinab mosque outside Damascus. These men and women come from the
slums of Baghdad, Hillah and Iskandariyah as well as the cities of Najaf
and Basra. Sunnis from Fallujah and Ramadi also visit Damascus to see
friends and relatives and
talk freely of American tactics in Iraq.
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Americans
Send Out Bombers
"There was another man,
trained by the Americans for the police. He too was given a mobile and
told to drive to an area where there was a crowd - maybe a protest - and
to call them and tell them what was happening. Again, his new mobile was
not working. So he went to a landline phone and called the Americans and
told them: 'Here I am, in the place you sent me and I can tell you what's
happening here.' And at that moment there was a big explosion in his car."
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Just who these "Americans" might be, my source did not say. In the
anarchic and panic-stricken world of Iraq, there are many US groups -
including countless outfits supposedly working for the American military
and the new Western-backed Iraqi Interior Ministry - who operate outside
any laws or rules. No one can account for the murder of 191 university
teachers and professors since the 2003 invasion - nor the fact that more
than 50 former Iraqi fighter-bomber pilots who attacked Iran in the
1980-88 Iran-Iraq war have been assassinated in their home towns in Iraq
in the past three years.
Amid this chaos, a colleague of my source asked me, how could Syria be
expected to lessen the number of attacks on Americans inside Iraq? "It was
never safe, our border," he said. "During Saddam's time, criminals and
Saddam's terrorists crossed our borders to attack our government. I built
a wall of earth and sand along the border at that time. But three car
bombs from Saddam's agents exploded in Damascus and Tartous- I was the one
who captured the criminals responsible. But we couldn't stop them."
Now, he told me, the rampart running for hundreds of miles along Syria's
border with Iraq had been heightened. "I have had barbed wire put on top
and up to now we have caught 1,500 non-Syrian and non-Iraqi Arabs trying
to cross and we have stopped 2,700 Syrians from crossing ... Our army is
there - but the Iraqi army and the Americans are not there on the other
side."
Behind these grave suspicions in Damascus lies the memory of Saddam's long
friendship with the United States. "Our Hafez el-Assad [the former Syrian
president who died in 2000] learnt that Saddam, in his early days, met
with American officials 20 times in four weeks. This convinced Assad that,
in his words, 'Saddam is with the Americans'. Saddam was the biggest
helper of the Americans in the Middle East (when he attacked Iran in 1980)
after the fall of the Shah. And he still is! After all, he brought the
Americans to Iraq!"
So I turn to a story which is more distressing for my sources: the death
by shooting of Brigadier General Ghazi Kenaan, former head of Syrian
military intelligence in Lebanon - an awesomely powerful position - and
Syrian Minister of Interior when his suicide was announced by the Damascus
government last year.

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Syria Killed
Hariri
Widespread rumours
outside Syria suggested that Kenaan
was suspected by UN investigators of involvement in the murder of the
former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri
in a massive car bomb in Beirut last year - and that he had been "suicided"
by Syrian government agents to prevent him telling the truth.
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Not so, insisted my original interlocutor. "General Ghazi was a man who
believed he could give orders and anything he wanted would happen.
Something happened that he could not reconcile - something that made him
realise he was not all-powerful. On the day of his death, he went to his
office at the Interior Ministry and then he left and went home for half an
hour. Then he came back with a pistol. He left a message for his wife in
which he said goodbye to her and asked her to look after their children
and he said that what he was going to do was 'for the good of Syria'. Then
he shot himself in the mouth."
Of Hariri's assassination, Syrian officials like to recall his
relationship with the former Iraqi interim prime minister Iyad Alawi - a
self-confessed former agent for the CIA and MI6 - and an alleged $20bn
arms deal between the Russians and Saudi Arabia in which they claim Hariri
was involved.
Hariri's Lebanese supporters continue to dismiss the Syrian argument on
the grounds that Syria had identified Hariri as the joint author with his
friend, French President Jacques Chirac, of the UN Security Council
resolution which demanded the retreat of the Syrians from Lebanese
territory.
But if the Syrians are understandably obsessed with the American
occupation of Iraq, their long hatred for Saddam - something which they
shared with most Iraqis - is still intact. When I asked my first
"security" source what would happen to the former Iraqi dictator, he
replied, banging his fist into his hand: "He will be killed. He will be
killed. He will be killed."
www.informationclearinghouse.info/article12885.htm
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