Mystery Ship to Syria Raises Questions (AMERICAN THINKER) By Shoshana Bryen 04/17/12)
Source: http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/04/mystery_ship_to_syria_raises_questions.html
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The weekend report of a German-owned, Ukrainian-chartered ship
carrying weapons to Syria should raise questions and alarm bells.
Der Spiegel reported that the Atlantic Cruiser, owned by the German
company Bockstiegel, had been chartered by the Ukrainian White Whale
company to pick up Iranian-origin cargo in Djibouti. White Whale
said the cargo was "mainly pumps and similar things," according to
the German shipping agent. However, the ship was refused entry for
refueling at the port of Limassol, Cyprus after the crew told the
Cypriots that the cargo was "weapons and munitions." The Cruiser
tried then to sail for Tartus, Syria, but it is currently sitting at
sea.
Three questions:
Is the regime running out of bullets? This would account for Bashar
al-Asad´s agreement to Kofi Annan´s ceasefire proposal. The proposal
worked to the government´s advantage in several ways, not least of
which was leaving the al-Asad government in place. But clearly it
has taken Assad more firepower and more time than he had planned to
put down the insurrection. A few days or a week of respite would
have permitted the regime to conserve ammunition until new supplies
arrived. The last known ammunition shipment was from the Russians in
January on a ship called The Chariot.
Who knew, who told? Somewhere between the chartering of the boat and
the attempt to dock at Limassol, the nature of the cargo became
clear -- munitions, not "pumps." Even if the crew knew what it had
loaded in Djibouti, it would be highly unusual for a ship´s captain
to decide to contradict his manifest. (A German crew loaded Patriot
missiles and propellant on a ship bound for an Asian country -- there
was no proper paperwork, and the propellant was not properly packaged
and labeled "fireworks," but the crew said nary a word until local
Finnish dock workers alerted authorities while the ship was in port
there.) Der Spiegel reports that "defectors from inside the Syrian
government had learned of the delivery" and told the German charter
company, which then pulled the plug on the illicit cargo.
That would mean that not only are Syrian soldiers and officers
defecting, but there are spies inside the Syrian government, willing
to remain inside and use their knowledge against the regime.
How many more ships are there, and where are they headed? The sea
lanes between Iran and the eastern Mediterranean Sea have been used
for the transit of weapons primarily bound for Hamas and Hezb´allah.
Over the years, Israel has -- often with U.S. assistance -- followed
and boarded merchant ships illegally carrying weapons to its
adversaries. About a year ago, the Iranian military ships Alvand and
Kharg transferred an estimated 50 tons of weapons to The Victoria,
which Israel intercepted and offloaded. The Karine A, the Santorini,
the Francop, the Hansa India, the Monchegorsk, and scores of smaller
ships have been intercepted. Investigative journalist Claudia Rosett
followed The Chariot after it unloaded its admitted military cargo
and then carried "Ukrainian generators" to Iran.
The outcome in this case is actually quite positive for those who
desire the downfall of al-Asad (read, the civilized world). The idea
that there are spies inside must further unsettle the regime, and the
fact that al-Asad is becoming desperate for munitions will cheer the
Free Syrian Army and the Syrian civilians who have been at the mercy
of aggression that clearly rises to the level of war crimes.
But the West should be alarmed by the ease with which countries
attempting to circumvent arms embargoes (Iran is forbidden both to
import and to export but seems to be in the middle of both sets of
transactions) have been able to put things in boxes, lie about the
contents, and ship said boxes around the world. The Atlantic Cruiser
was unmasked apparently by the work of inside agents, but certainly
for every Alvand or Monchegorsk, there are ships that sail their
dangerous cargoes to even more dangerous regimes.
One final thought. It used to be legitimate for countries to sell
arms to Syria -- not nice, perhaps, but legitimate. Now, in
recognition of changing conditions, it isn´t. Other countries of
the Middle East should be re-evaluated in light of changes in their
governments, including some allies of the United States.
No mention of ships and weapons could be complete without asking
about the Dutch-flagged MV Schippersgracht, which sailed from a U.S.
Military terminal apparently carrying weapons to Egypt after the
State Department waived U.S. Senate conditions on American military
aid that could be used by the government against its civilian
population.
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