You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Syria-Lebanon
Syria was Iraq’s top weapons source before war
2003-12-30
A Syrian firm, headed by a cousin of that country’s leader, Bashar Assad, signed contracts to supply millions of dollars in arms and equipment to Iraq before the United States invaded in March, The Los Angeles Times reported Tuesday. In the first of a two-part series written from Damascus, The Times reported that "1,000 heavy machine guns and up to 20 million bullets for assault rifles," supplied by SES International Corp., "helped Baghdad’s ill-equipped army grow stronger before the war began in March. Some supplies may now be aiding the insurgency against the U.S.-led occupation." Files cited by the Times were taken from the abandoned office of Al Bashair Trading Co., by a reporter for the German magazine Stern shortly after U.S. troops entered Baghdad. The newspaper said it had the 800 signed contracts translated from Arabic and sought confirmation internationally during a three-month investigation.
Since neither Stern or the LA Times can be considered part of the Vast Right Wing Conspiracy(tm), this will be hard for the left to deny.
Among the findings The Times reported:
-- A Polish company shipped up to 380 surface-to-air missile engines to Baghdad through Syria.
Bad, Poland, Bad.
-- A South Korean firm shipped $8 million in telecommunications equipment for "air defense."
Naughty, naughty.
-- A Slovenian firm shipped 20 battle tank barrels to the Syrian firm early in 2002.
Tap, tap..nope
-- Two North Korean officials went to Damascus to discuss an Iraqi payment of $10 million for components for ballistic missiles.
If I remember correctly, Sammy paid and NK didn’t deliver.
According to the newspaper, a confidential U.N. report identifies Al Bashair as the biggest of 13 companies used to evade the U.N. arms embargo and other sanctions. Al Bashair made deals for as much as $1 billion a year in the 90s.
Really? Funny I haven’t heard anything from the UN on this.
Following Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990, the United Nations imposed a full arms embargo, a trade ban and a freeze on Iraq’s assets and international deal-making. All were violated, including the freeze on assets, when Iraq used false sugar purchases to launder money and divert it to foreign banks.
The LA Times is saying they have proof Iraq violated United Nations sanctions? Damm, that pegged the surprise meter!
War's over. If the war hadn't happened yet, there would be all sorts of reasons for the info to be suspect.
The Syrian Foreign Ministry did not respond to Times requests for explanations of SES activities. SES sent the newspaper an e-mail saying it was not involved in illicit trade but refusing to address specific cases.
"No comment, infidel."
Posted by:Steve

#3  War's over.

Iraq War, sure. Guess the Times doesn't realize they just added another reason to make Syria the winner of the 2004 Iron Fist Award.
Posted by: Steve   2003-12-30 8:32:22 PM  

#2  That's enough to justify invading Syria right there. Remember: Dead people can't supply weapons for our enemies to use to kill our soldiers.
Posted by: SPQR 2755   2003-12-30 2:45:32 PM  

#1  Sammy should have invested in coffins for the insurgency.
Posted by: Charles   2003-12-30 12:12:56 PM  

00:00