A Libyan member of the al-Qaeda
terrorist group disclosed that France has supplied armed rebel and terrorist
groups in Syria with Russian Igla anti-air missiles and even trained them how
to use these systems.
"Qaddafi's regime had good
relations with the Russians and purchased various weapons from them, including
Igla anti-air missiles, which are similar to the US Stinger anti-air
shoulder-launched missiles," Othman Trablosi said on Wednesday.
He said that after Qaddafi's
regime collapsed and rebels came to conquer its army's weapons and ammo caches,
the French army which supported the Libyan rebels with logistical and
intelligence backups, collected 232 Igla missiles which were in the hands of
the Libyan fighters who were busy with fighting Qaddafi's supporters.
"After that the French found
some of the Libyan army officers who had been trained to use Igla missiles and
in September 2012 they used these offers for training a number of al-Qaeda
terrorists who ran operations in Syria," Trablosi explained.
"Then" he said
"the French transited these al-Qaeda members and the Igla anti-air systems
from Benghazi to the Southern provinces of Turkey on a Bulgarian cargo plane
and then ferried them across the border into Syria."
He underlined that the French
army exercises tight control and inspection over each and every step of the
program.
France is playing a growing role
in Syria unrests these days. Earlier this year, a documentary movie posted on a
Lebanese website unveiled details of a plot by the French and Turkish
intelligence services to assassinate President Bashar al-Assad and other senior
officials of Syria. A video posted by Lebanese Asianews website, which has been
produced by Khedar Awarake, a well-known Syrian media activist, includes part
of the confessions made by those involved in France-Turkey joint plot to kill
Assad.
The report said that the Syrian
security apparatus defused Turkey and France's attempted assassination plot on
the lives of Assad and Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Mualem.
The report noted that the Turkish
and French spy agencies embarked on the establishment of a joint operation room
to direct a well-concerted operation to carry out the mission after they failed
in their earlier plot to overthrow Assad's government, adding that their
mission had overlaps with security services of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the US
on many aspects.
The report further unveiled that
the new mission to kill Assad started by Turkey and France's joint effort to
recruit high-ranking officials in Syrian governmental offices, including the
office of Mualem and offices related to the presidential palace in Damascus.
The report also said that Turks
wished to bring along French in their operation since Paris has strong
relations with Kurdish parties and could help recruit the Kurdish staffs in
Assad's offices.
The report at the same time noted
that Syrian security services were able to thwart the plot due to their
intelligence supremacy and close watch on the plot.
Syria has been experiencing
unrest since March 2011 with organized attacks by well-armed gangs against
Syrian police forces and border guards being reported across the country.
Hundreds of people, including
members of the security forces, have been killed, when some protest rallies
turned into armed clashes.
The government blames outlaws,
saboteurs, and armed terrorist groups for the deaths, stressing that the unrest
is being orchestrated from abroad.
In October 2011, calm was
eventually restored in the Arab state after President Assad started a reform
initiative in the country, but Israel, the US and its Arab allies are seeking
hard to bring the country into chaos through any possible means. Tel Aviv,
Washington and some Arab capitals have been staging various plots in the hope
of increasing unrests in Syria.
Source: Tehran Fars News Agency in English
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