During his more
than four decades in power, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi of Libya was North Africa’s
outrageously self-styled arms benefactor, a donor of weapons to guerrillas and
terrorists around the world fighting governments he did not like.
Even after his death, the colonel’s gunrunning vision
lives on, although in ways he probably would have loathed.
Many of the same people who chased the colonel to his
grave are busy shuttling his former arms stockpiles to rebels in Syria. The
flow is an important source of weapons for the uprising and a case of bloody
turnabout, as the inheritors of one strongman’s arsenal use them in the fight
against another.
Evidence gathered in Syria, along with flight-control
data and interviews with militia members, smugglers, rebels, analysts and
officials in several countries, offers a profile of a complex and active
multinational effort, financed largely by Qatar, to transport arms from Libya
to Syria’s opposition fighters. Libya’s own former fighters, who sympathize
with Syria’s rebels, have been eager collaborators.
“It is just the
enthusiasm of the Libyan people helping the Syrians,” said Fawzi Bukatef, the
former leader of an alliance of Libyan brigades who was recently named
ambassador to Uganda, in an interview in Tripoli.
As the United States and its Western allies move toward
providing lethal aid to Syrian rebels, these secretive transfers give insight
into an unregistered arms pipeline that is difficult to monitor or control. And
while the system appears to succeed in moving arms across multiple borders and
to select rebel groups, once inside Syria the flow branches out. Extremist
fighters, some of them aligned with Al Qaeda, have the money to buy the newly
arrived stock, and many rebels are willing to sell.
For Russia — which has steadfastly supplied weapons and
diplomatic cover to President Bashar al-Assad of Syria — this black-market flow
is a case of bitter blowback. Many of the weapons Moscow proudly sold to Libya
beginning in the Soviet era are now being shipped into the hands of rebels
seeking to unseat another Kremlin ally.
Those weapons, which slipped from state custody as
Colonel Qaddafi’s people rose against him in 2011, are sent on ships or Qatar
Emiri Air Force flights to a network of intelligence agencies and Syrian
opposition leaders in Turkey. From there, Syrians distribute the arms according
to their own formulas and preferences to particular fighting groups, which in
turn issue them to their fighters on the ground, rebels and activists said.
Qatari C-17 cargo aircraft have made at least three stops
in Libya this year — including flights from Mitiga airport in Tripoli on Jan.
15 and Feb. 1, and another that departed Benghazi on April 16, according to
flight data provided by an aviation official in the region. The planes returned
to Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. The cargo was then flown to Ankara, Turkey,
along with other weapons and equipment that the Qataris had been gathering for
the rebels, officials and rebels said.
Last week the Obama administration announced that it had
evidence that Mr. Assad’s military had used sarin nerve agent in multiple
attacks, and that the United States would begin providing military aid to the
rebels, including shipments of small arms.
In doing so, the United States could soon be openly
feeding the same distribution network, just as it has received weapons from
other sources.
The movements from Libya complement the airlift that has
variously used Saudi, Jordanian and Qatari military cargo planes to funnel
military equipment and weapons, including from Croatia, to the outgunned
rebels. On Friday, Syrian opposition officials said the rebels had received a
new shipment of anti-tank weapons and other arms, although they give varying
accounts of the sources of the recently received arms. The Central Intelligence
Agency has already played at least a supporting role, the officials say.
The Libyan shipments principally appear to be the work of
armed groups there, and not of the weak central state, officials said.
Mr. Bukatef, the Libyan diplomat, said Libyan militias
had been shipping weapons to Syrian rebels for more than a year.
“They collect
the weapons, and when they have enough they send it,” he said. “The Libyan
government is not involved, but it does not really matter.”
One former senior Obama administration familiar with the
transfers said the Qatari government built relationships with Libyan militias
in 2011, when, according to the report of a United Nations Panel of Experts, it
shipped in weapons to rebel forces there in violation of United Nations
Security Council Resolution 1973.
As a result, the Qataris can draw on their influence with
Libya’s militias to support their current beneficiaries in Syria. “It’s not
that complicated,” the former official said. “We’re watching it. The Libyans
have an amazing amount of stuff.”
Syrian activists and Western officials say that like the
unregistered arms transfers organized by other Arab states, the shipments from
Libya have been very large but have not kept up with the enormous rebel
ammunition expenditures each day.
And most of the weapons have been relatively light,
including rifles, machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades, small arms
ammunition and mortar rounds.
But the Libyan influx appears to account for at least a
portion of the antitank weapons seen in the conflict this spring, including
Belgian-made projectiles for M40 recoilless rifles and some of the Russian-made
Konkurs-M guided missiles that have been destroying Syrian tanks in recent
months.
Syrian rebels, working with Qatari backers and the
Turkish government, have developed a system for acquiring and distributing
Libya’s excess stock, Syrian activists and rebels said.
Orders are placed and shipments arranged through the
staff of the Supreme Military Council of the Free Syrian Army, a Western-backed
opposition committee that was formed in Turkey late last year.
Safi Asafi, a coordinator commander active on Syria’s
northern borders, one of the unofficial gates for weapons shipment to the
opposition, said that rebel groups seeking Libyan arms approach the council to
arrange the deals.
“Any fighting
group in Syria that wants weapons from Libya will go to the staff asking for
the approval from the Turkish authorities involved in the transfer, then gets
it, the weapons arrive in Syria, and everyone gets his due share,” he said.
By one common formula, Mr. Asafi said, the staff will
take 20 percent of the weapons designated for individual groups and distribute
them to others. But the ratio can fluctuate, he said, depending on the group’s
stature and influence, and less powerful groups sometimes yield a larger cut.
The Supreme Military Council generally does not
distribute weapons to blacklisted or extremist groups, Syrian activists said,
but these groups have little trouble acquiring the weapons once the arms enter
Syria, often buying them directly from groups that receive the council’s
support.
Signs of munitions from the former Qaddafi stockpile are
readily visible.
Late last month The New York Times found crates, storage
sleeves and spent cartridge cases for antitank rounds from Libya in the
possession of Ahfad al-Rasul, a prominent group fighting the government and
aligned with the Supreme Military Council.
The crates were immediately identifiable because they
were painted with a distinctive symbol — 412 inside a triangle — that has been
used by many manufacturers, including in China, the Soviet Union, Russia, North
Korea and Belgium, to mark ordnance shipments designated for Colonel Qaddafi.
Stenciling on the crates’ sides declared their original
destination in 1980: the “Socialist Peoples Libyan Arab Jamahirya.”
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