Al-Qaeda Acknowledges Syrian Rebels Are Part of Its Network, Fighting to Establish Caliphate in Syria
After
the carnage unfolded at the U.S. diplomatic outpost in Benghazi, a
potential gun running scheme to arm Libyan and perhaps even Syrian
rebels was uncovered. The troubling aspect of arming said rebels is the
fact that, according to some intelligence experts, those rebels are
actually al-Qaeda.
Now, al-Qaeda in Iraq has acknowledged for the first
time on Tuesday that al-Nusra Front, the rebel faction fighting
President Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria, is indeed part of its
network.
What’s more, the militant jihadist group said it is fighting to establish an Islamic state in the country.
The remarks, made by Iraqi al-Qaeda leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and published in Al Aribya have finally confirmed longheld suspicions that the two groups are one in the same.
“It’s
now time to declare in front of the people of the Levant and [the]
world that the al-Nusra Front is but an extension of the Islamic State
in Iraq and part of it,” the SITE Monitoring Service quoted Baghdadi as saying in a speech released on jihadist forums Monday.
The two groups will now reportedly merge and be called the “Islamic State in Iraq” and the “Levant.”
The
Syrian rebels aren’t the only ones who could receive support from al
Qaeda. Baghdadi said that al Qaeda would furnish support to other
jihadists “on the condition that the country and its citizens be
governed according to the rules dictated by Allah.”
Al-Nusra
Front was labeled a “terrorist” group by Washington back in December
over its suspected affiliation to al-Qaeda in Iraq. Back then, U.S.
State Department dubbed al-Nursa as simply a “new alias” for al-Qaeda in
Iraq, saying it was “an attempt by AQI to hijack the struggles of the
Syrian people for its own malign purposes.”
Al
Aribya also notes that jihadist forums online reveal that hundreds of
radicals have traversed from Iraq into Syria to lead the charge against
Assad’s regime.
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