There is no doubt that the so-called rebel forces that have taken over in Syria are essentially creations of the US and Israel. So says former UK ambassador Craig Murray.
Murray was the UK’s ambassador to Uzbekistan between 2002 and 2004, but was removed from the post after he exposed human rights abuses in the country. Well versed in Middle Eastern affairs, he points to public testimony in Congress about how the United States, through the CIA and others, spent more than a billion dollars on Syrian jihadist groups. Other open information, Murray notes, also shows that Israel has provided support, including medical support, to these groups, while also bombing Syrian government forces.
– There is no doubt that the so-called rebel forces attacking the government in Syria are creatures of the US and Israel, says Murray.
Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), formerly known as Jabhat al-Nusra and later Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, has been the largest jihadist group in Syria, a splinter group of the Islamic State and previously pledged allegiance to al-Qaeda. Their rise to power in Syria has been widely seen by the West as a positive development.
One of several reasons for this, Murray argues, has been to block support that might come through Syria to Lebanon and the paramilitary Parliamentary Party, as well as the Shia militia Hezbollah, which is one of Israel’s main adversaries in the region. Other observers also point to the additional motive of weakening Russia’s position in the Middle East, which has largely been based on good relations with Syria and Iran.
– This is an attempt by the Americans and Israelis, aided by the Turks, to overthrow the regime in Damascus, Murray says.
Turkey’s involvement is also suspected to be due to its interest in enabling a pipeline to transport petroleum from Qatar and Israel to Turkey through Syria, something that the Assad regime has been uninterested in as it has instead had a close relationship with Iran.
Sweden has also supported so-called rebels in the Syrian war over the years. The center-right government, under Reinfeldt in 2011, donated more than SEK 100 million from the treasury for the purpose.