القلب ينبض بحبك يأسدنا المفدى و سيدَّ الوطنِّ و سيد الرجال و عزَّ العّرُّبّ وَفَخَّرَّ الامَّةِ

Monday, 18 April 2011

ذكرت صحيفة «واشنطن بوست»، اليوم، أن ‏الولايات المتحدة مولت سراً مجموعات من ‏المعارضة السورية وقناة تلفزيونية تبث ‏برامج تنتقد نظام الرئيس بشار الأسد.‏


وأفادت الصحيفة نقلاً عن برقيات دبلوماسية سرّبها موقع ‏ويكيليكس أن «قناة بردى» التلفزيونية، التي تتخذ مقراً لها في ‏لندن، باشرت بث برامجها في نيسان 2009، غير أنها كثفت ‏تغطيتها لنقل وقائع موجة الاحتجاجات في سوريا.‏
وبحسب الصحيفة، فإن قناة بردى قريبة من حركة العدالة ‏والبناء، وهي شبكة من المعارضين السوريين في المنفى.
وأوردت الصحيفة أن وزارة الخارجية الأميركية قدمت إلى ‏هذه الحركة ستة ملايين دولار منذ 2006
وباشرت الإدارة الأميركية تمويل معارضين في عهد الرئيس ‏السابق جورج بوش، حين سُحب السفير الأميركي من دمشق ‏عام 2005، واستمر التمويل في عهد الرئيس باراك أوباما ‏بحسب «واشنطن بوست»، التي لم توضح إن كان التمويل قد ‏تواصل في الأسابيع الماضية.
ودعا دبلوماسيون أميركيون في البرقيات المسربة الى الحد ‏من سياسة تمويل المعارضة، وكتب أحدهم «قد يكون من ‏المفيد إعادة صياغة البرامج الحالية الأميركية لتمويل فصائل ‏داخل سوريا كما خارجها».‏
       Washington Post

The State Department has secretly financed Syrian ‎political opposition groups and related projects, ‎including a satellite TV channel that beams anti-‎government programming into the country, ‎according to previously undisclosed diplomatic ‎cables.‎
The London-based satellite channel, Barada TV, ‎began broadcasting in April 2009 but has ramped ‎up operations to cover the mass protests in Syria ‎as part of a long-standing campaign to overthrow ‎the country’s autocratic leader, Bashar al-Assad. ‎Human rights groups say scores of people have ‎been killed by Assad’s security forces since the ‎demonstrations began March 18; Syria has blamed ‎the violence on “armed gangs.”‎
Barada TV is closely affiliated with the Movement ‎for Justice and Development, a London-based ‎network of Syrian exiles. Classified U.S. diplomatic ‎cables show that the State Department has ‎funneled as much as $6 million to the group since ‎‎2006 to operate the satellite channel and finance ‎other activities inside Syria. The channel is named ‎after the Barada River, which courses through the ‎heart of Damascus, the Syrian capital.‎
The U.S. money for Syrian opposition figures began ‎flowing under President George W. Bush after he ‎effectively froze political ties with Damascus in ‎‎2005. The financial backing has continued under ‎President Obama, even as his administration sought ‎to rebuild relations with Assad. In January, the ‎White House posted an ambassador to Damascus ‎for the first time in six years.‎
The cables, provided by the anti-secrecy Web site ‎WikiLeaks, show that U.S. Embassy officials in ‎Damascus became worried in 2009 when they ‎learned that Syrian intelligence agents were raising ‎questions about U.S. programs. Some embassy ‎officials suggested that the State Department ‎reconsider its involvement, arguing that it could put ‎the Obama administration’s rapprochement with ‎Damascus at risk. ‎
Syrian authorities “would undoubtedly view any U.S. ‎funds going to illegal political groups as tantamount ‎to supporting regime change,” read an April 2009 ‎cable signed by the top-ranking U.S. diplomat in ‎Damascus at the time. “A reassessment of current ‎U.S.-sponsored programming that supports anti-‎‎[government] factions, both inside and outside Syria, ‎may prove productive,” the cable said. ‎
It is unclear whether the State Department is still ‎funding Syrian opposition groups, but the cables ‎indicate money was set aside at least through ‎September 2010. While some of that money has ‎also supported programs and dissidents inside ‎Syria, The Washington Post is withholding certain ‎names and program details at the request of the ‎State Department, which said disclosure could ‎endanger the recipients’ personal safety.‎
Syria, a police state, has been ruled by Assad since ‎‎2000, when he took power after his father’s death. ‎Although the White House has condemned the killing ‎of protesters in Syria, it has not explicitly called for ‎his ouster.‎
The State Department declined to comment on ‎the authenticity of the cables or answer ‎questions about its funding of Barada TV. ‎
amara Wittes, a deputy assistant secretary of ‎state who oversees the democracy and human ‎rights portfolio in the Bureau of Near Eastern ‎Affairs, said the State Department does not ‎endorse political parties or movements.‎
‎“We back a set of principles,” she said. “There are a ‎lot of organizations in Syria and other countries that ‎are seeking changes from their government. That’s ‎an agenda that we believe in and we’re going to ‎support.”‎
The State Department often funds programs around ‎the world that promote democratic ideals and ‎human rights, but it usually draws the line at giving ‎money to political opposition groups.‎
In February 2006, when relations with Damascus ‎were at a nadir, the Bush administration announced ‎that it would award $5 million in grants to ‎‎“accelerate the work of reformers in Syria.” ‎
But no dissidents inside Syria were willing to take ‎the money, for fear it would lead to their arrest or ‎execution for treason, according to a 2006 cable ‎from the U.S. Embassy, which reported that “no ‎bona fide opposition member will be courageous ‎enough to accept funding.” ‎
Around the same time, Syrian exiles in Europe ‎founded the Movement for Justice and Development. ‎The group, which is banned in Syria, openly ‎advocates for Assad’s removal. U.S. cables describe ‎its leaders as “liberal, moderate Islamists” who are ‎former members of the Muslim Brotherhood.‎
Barada TV
It is unclear when the group began to receive U.S. ‎funds, but cables show U.S. officials in 2007 raised ‎the idea of helping to start an anti-Assad satellite ‎channel. ‎
People involved with the group and with Barada TV, ‎however, would not acknowledge taking money from ‎the U.S. government.‎
‎“I’m not aware of anything like that,” Malik al-‎Abdeh, Barada TV’s news director, said in a brief ‎telephone interview from London.‎
Abdeh said the channel receives money from ‎‎“independent Syrian businessmen” whom he ‎declined to name. He also said there was no ‎connection between Barada TV and the Movement ‎for Justice and Development, although he confirmed ‎that he serves on the political group’s board. The ‎board is chaired by his brother, Anas. ‎
‎“If your purpose is to smear Barada TV, I don’t want ‎to continue this conversation,” Malik al-Abdeh said. ‎‎“That’s all I’m going to give you.”‎
Other dissidents said that Barada TV has a growing ‎audience in Syria but that its viewer share is tiny ‎compared with other independent satellite news ‎channels such as al-Jazeera and BBC Arabic. ‎Although Barada TV broadcasts 24 hours a day, ‎many of its programs are reruns. Some of the ‎mainstay shows are “Towards Change,” a panel ‎discussion about current events, and “First Step,” ‎a program produced by a Syrian dissident group ‎based in the United States.‎
Ausama Monajed, another Syrian exile in London, ‎said he used to work as a producer for Barada TV ‎and as media relations director for the Movement ‎for Justice and Development but has not been ‎‎“active” in either job for about a year. He said he ‎now devotes all his energy to the Syrian ‎revolutionary movement, distributing videos and ‎protest updates to journalists. ‎
He said he “could not confirm” any U.S. government ‎support for the satellite channel, because he was ‎not involved with its finances. “I didn’t receive a ‎penny myself,” he said.‎
Several U.S. diplomatic cables from the embassy in ‎Damascus reveal that the Syrian exiles received ‎money from a State Department program called the ‎Middle East Partnership Initiative. According to the ‎cables, the State Department funneled money to ‎the exile group via the Democracy Council, a Los ‎Angeles-based nonprofit. According to its Web site, ‎the council sponsors projects in the Middle East, ‎Asia and Latin America to promote the “fundamental ‎elements of stable societies.”‎
The council’s founder and president, James Prince, ‎is a former congressional staff member and ‎investment adviser for PricewaterhouseCoopers. ‎Reached by telephone, Prince acknowledged that the ‎council administers a grant from the Middle East ‎Partnership Initiative but said that it was not ‎‎“Syria-specific.”‎
Prince said he was “familiar with” Barada TV and the ‎Syrian exile group in London, but he declined to ‎comment further, saying he did not have approval ‎from his board of directors. “We don’t really talk ‎about anything like that,” he said.‎
The April 2009 cable from the U.S. Embassy in ‎Damascus states that the Democracy Council ‎received $6.3 million from the State Department to ‎run a Syria-related program called the “Civil Society ‎Strengthening Initiative.” That program is described ‎as “a discrete collaborative effort between the ‎Democracy Council and local partners” to produce, ‎among other things, “various broadcast concepts.” ‎Other cables make clear that one of those concepts ‎was Barada TV.‎
U.S. allocations
Edgar Vasquez, a State Department spokesman, ‎said the Middle East Partnership Initiative has ‎allocated $7.5 million for Syrian programs since ‎‎2005. A cable from the embassy in Damascus, ‎however, pegged a much higher total — about ‎‎$12 million — between 2005 and 2010. ‎
The cables report persistent fears among U.S. ‎diplomats that Syrian state security agents had ‎uncovered the money trail from Washington.‎
A September 2009 cable reported that Syrian ‎agents had interrogated a number of people about ‎‎“MEPI operations in particular,” a reference to the ‎Middle East Partnership Initiative.‎
‎“It is unclear to what extent [Syrian] intelligence ‎services understand how USG money enters Syria ‎and through which proxy organizations,” the cable ‎stated, referring to funding from the U.S. ‎government. “What is clear, however, is that ‎security agents are increasingly focused on this ‎issue.” ‎
U.S. diplomats also warned that Syrian agents may ‎have “penetrated” the Movement for Justice and ‎Development by intercepting its communications.‎
A June 2009 cable listed the concerns under the ‎heading “MJD: A Leaky Boat?” It reported that the ‎group was “seeking to expand its base in Syria” but ‎had been “initially lax in its security, often speaking ‎about highly sensitive material on open lines.” ‎
The cable cited evidence that the Syrian intelligence ‎service was aware of the connection between the ‎London exile group and the Democracy Council in Los ‎Angeles. As a result, embassy officials fretted that ‎the entire Syria assistance program had been ‎compromised.‎
‎“Reporting in other channels suggest the Syrian ‎‎[Mukhabarat] may already have penetrated the MJD ‎and is using the MJD contacts to track U.S. ‎democracy programming,” the cable stated. “If the ‎‎[Syrian government] does know, but has chosen not ‎to intervene openly, it raises the possibility that the ‎‎[government] may be mounting a campaign to entrap ‎democracy activists.”‎
Washington Post 
By Craig Whitlock, Sunday, April 17

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