As Western countries display increasing alarm at the strength of
multinational Islamist extremists among rebels in Syria opposed to President
Bashar al-Assad, a Syrian official was quoted on Wednesday as saying Western
intelligence agencies had sent representatives to Damascus to discuss the
phenomenon with the government there.
If confirmed, the assertion by the
official, Faisal Mekdad, the deputy foreign minister, would mean that while
Western politicians have publicly called for Mr. Assad’s ouster, their own
intelligence subordinates were privately collaborating with Mr. Assad’s
lieutenants.
In an interview with the BBC, Mr.
Mekdad was asked whether representatives of Western intelligence agencies —
including those of Britain — had recently traveled to Damascus. “I will not
specify them but many of them have visited Damascus, yes,” he replied.
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“When these countries ask for
security cooperation, then it seems to me there is a schism between the
security and the political leadership,” he said. “Many of these countries have
contacted us to coordinate security measures.”
Coming a week before planned
international peace talks in Geneva on Syria’s future, the official’s assertion
may have been meant to create an impression that Western opposition to Mr.
Assad’s tenure is not as absolute as politicians have suggested.
The BBC quoted Khaled Saleh, a
spokesman for the opposition Syrian National Coalition, as saying that, if
confirmed, Mr. Mekdad’s assertion would show a “clear contradiction” between
the words and the actions of supposed supporters of the rebels who had previously
“clearly identified the Assad regime as a source of terrorism in the region.”
Western concern has been growing over insurgency groups in Syria linked to Al Qaeda, which have attracted hundreds of European jihadists, offering them training in military tactics that could be used when they return to their own countries.
The Wall Street Journal, which
reported that European intelligence agencies had met secretly with Mr. Assad’s
delegates to share information on European extremists operating in Syria, said
the discussions had focused on at least 1,200 militants.
Quoting unidentified Western and
Middle Eastern, the newspaper said the meetings had been the first such
contacts with the Syrian authorities since European countries, along with the
United States, withdrew their diplomats from Damascus as the country’s civil
war deepened following the first stirrings of revolt in March, 2011.
The Journal said a retired official
from MI6, Britain’s overseas intelligence agency, had been the first of the
Western spies to visit Damascus on behalf of the British government last
summer. The British Foreign Office declined to comment, saying it does not
publicly address intelligence issues.
Intelligence officers from Germany,
France and Spain had also been traveling from Beirut to Damascus since
November, The Journal said, citing diplomats and officials with knowledge of
the overtures, but the United States was not involved. NYTimes
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