Graphics by Alex.
What did Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the Obama Administration’s Assistant Secretary of State, Jeffrey Feltman, NATO, Israel, Turkey and UNIFIL know about the alleged arms shipment to “rebels” which some of them helped implant in Syria, and when did they know it?
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Richard Nixon on TV announcing he will resign the presidency,
August 8, 1974 (CBS/Landov) |
Forty years ago next month, the American Watergate Scandal destroyed the Presidency of Richard Milhous Nixon and resulted in 69 government officials being charged with various felonies, 48 found guilty and 43 sent to prison.
Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward, who along with Carl Bernstein, was assigned by their editor and Nixonphobe, Ben Bradley, once told this observer that when they initially got the assignment “to investigate a potentially interesting burglary at the Watergate Offices of the Democratic National Committee” they were not all that enthused about the assignment. As it turned out, the breaking and entering felony was discovered to be a project of 1972 Committee to Re-elect the President (CREEP) operatives and some involved, like Howard Hunt, Charles Colsen, G. Gordan Liddy, John Dean, James McCord, Jeb Magruder, and John Mitchell, to name a few, became notorious household names for many in America and around the World.
The Watergate scandal shook the country and many of its institutions. But it also forced some changes for the better, and resulted in more accountability in US government, at least for a period. Moreover, it sparked historic examinations of the CIA, the FBI and other federal agencies and exposed many seamy aspects of what we had become as a nation. And many, like Idaho Senator Frank Church, Oregon Senator Wayne Morse and South Dakota Senator James Aborezek, among others, worked toward putting their country right.
It would be an incautious stretch to suggest any sort of parity between Watergate and the unfolding Lutfallah II arms shipment to Syria drama, that each day brings more revelations. But some of what we are daily learning about the who, what and why of Lutfallah II reminds some of us of a Watergate, type atmosphere including “bit by bit, drip by drip” revelations, denials, setting up fall guys and remarkable examples of incompetence.
The still unfolding Lutfallah II weapons running misadventure, in which a claimed Syrian owned vessel registered in Sierra Leone but apparently flying the Egyptian flag, was detained off the Lebanese port of Batoun, by the Lebanese Army Marines because it was sailing too high in the water, and appeared “suspicious, and was then found to contain 300,000 pounds of weapons may erupt unpredictably with serious political consequences for the region.
“Deepthroat”, the FBI mole who met secretly with Woodward & Bernstein and leaked confidential US government information to the duo, as revenge against President Nixon for rejecting him as successor to the deceased FBI Director, J.Edgar Hoover, outed himself in 2005. “Deepthroat”, after a quarter century of hundreds of sleuths trying to divine, if he/she even existed, turned out to be none other than Deputy Director of the FBI, Willaim Mark Felt, Sr. “Deepthroats” repeated advice to the Washington Post reporters was to “Follow the Money!”
They did. The rest is history.
If a ‘deep throat’ appears in Libya, Qatar of elsewhere, and offering advice to reporters who appear in Benghazi and Misrata in order to dig into what really happened, it might be that he will counsel: “Follow the weapons”.
Eyewitness, Hassan Diab, is a Libyan researcher who has been working with a group of American and International lawyers preparing a case against NATO to be filed with the International Criminal Court. Hassan and three of his friends actually saw the ship Lutfallah II being loaded in Benghazi, Libya.
Hassan claims that it is well known at the docks that Qatar and Saudi Arabia control a total of five warehouses in the area of Benghazi & Misrata and supplied the weapons and money to hire the Lutfallah II container vessel.
Libyans in the area are reporting that the intercepted arms are from both Gadaffi stockpiles left over from NATO’s Libya campaign and some from the Qatar-Saudi six month weapons pipelines into Libya. When NATO declared a cessation of its bombing on Halloween night, October 31, 2011 the scramble for weapons began and Qatar stored and purchased whatever weapons came to its notice and from various militias who were willing to do business.
Libyans and foreign dock workers at Benghazi Port, who observed the Lutfallah II being loaded, saw three containers filled with 150 tons of weapons put onboard, although the initial plan, according to the owner of the boat was to ship as many as 15 containers. It is estimated that they would have carried more than 2000 tons of weapons.
A Lebanes judicial source, who is a sitting judge based at Beirut’s La Maison des Avocates and advises the Lebanese government on procedural rules that ought to be followed in this case, confirmed to this observer and also to the Beirut Daily, As-Safir, that the Lutfallah II shipment was funded by two Syrian businessmen living in Saudi Arabia. In addition, the ship’s captain is Syrian as is the gentleman who claimed ownership of the shipment. All are affiliated with the Syrian opposition and all are seeking regime change in Syria.
According to a late breaking report, all have been arrested and remain in custody despite claims that they thought the cargo was general merchandise (ed: Libya does not export anything much but its light crude oil and the Lutfallah II is clearly no oil tanker). Crew members of the container are facing trial on charges of illegal gun-running
The owner reportedly told his interrogators, including Military Prosecutor Judge Saqr Saqr, that
“It would be against Lebanese law and international maritime law for me to demand to examine the content of the containers.”
Some international lawyers, including this one, would argue that the law is exactly the opposite in both, and that international law establishes not just the owner’s right to inspect cargo being carried on his ships--for hazardous or contraband cargo etc-- but that Maritime law clearly mandates his responsibility to do so. Likewise, his insurance company.
Denials
The US-Saudi backed Future Movement was not involved in the arms shipment according to party official Mustafa Allouch. However, he later told Lebanon’s OTV that
“The Syrian people have the right to find the appropriate means to defend themselves.”
The Free Syrian Army has denied any links to the weapons-carrying vessel.
Hezbollah official Ammar Musawi praised the Lebanese army for its seizure of a Syria-bound illegal arms shipment and urged the authorities “to prevent Lebanon from turning into a conduit of destruction toward its neighbor”. “For the sake of Lebanon’s stability, I urge our authorities to exert greater effort to prevent Lebanon from turning into an arena through which the tools of crime cross into Syria, as the involvement of some Lebanese in fueling the situation in Syrian will have negative repercussions on Lebanon,” Hezbolah’s Inernational Relations Directorsaid.
On 5/2/12, Syria’s ambassador to Lebanon, Ali Abdel-Karim, following a meeting with Lebanese Foreign Minister Adnan Mansour, accused Gulf countries, including Qatar and Saudi Arabia, of being behind the Syria-bound arms shipments. “The ship was bound for the Syrian opposition; this is sure given that the political and security leaderships in Qatar, Saudi Arabia and other countries are behind these acts, which undermine the security of Syria, Lebanon and the region.”
Many questions remain in need of answers. Any serious first year law student would ask the questions that presumably Lebanese investigating judges and the media will ask. A few of the more obvious ones would include:
Who funded the shipment discovered in the cargo bay of the Lutfallah II?
Who had custody over the original 12 containers of what was planned, according to the jailed owner, as a shipment of over two million tons of “general merchandise”.
Who supplied the weapons and from which warehouse locations in Libya were they taken? Who controls the warehouses?
Who made the decision to hold back 12 of the original contract and why? Where are the 12 containers?
Who prepared the ships manifest?
What was the involvement, if any, of the Syrian owner of the Lutfallah II.?
Why was the Lutfallah II not searched at the port of Alexandria as well as Turkey? It docked at both.
Why was it given ‘green light passage’ by Israel and UNIFIL?
Eyewitnesses claim some activity on the Lutfallah II was evident while it was docked in Turkey? What was the activity?
Which, if any, Lebanese politicians and political parties were involved.
Who was to meet and take custody of the shipment once it arrived at the Tripoli, Lebanon dock?
Which land routes into Syria were to be used following the offloading of the cargo at Tripoli Port?
It is not for this observer to offer advice to investigative journalists, whether free-lance or corporate, but as a fairly long-term US Congressional aid in the post-Watergate era who actually read the transcripts of US Senator Howard Baker’s Watergate Hearings, I would have thought that one or more might want to book a flight to Benghazi, Libya, toute de suite, with an inclination to:
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian
The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of this Blog!
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