U.S., Kurdish Allies Reportedly Smuggle Out Syrian Oil, Wheat
DAMASCUS (Dispatches) – U.S. occupation forces and their Kurdish militant allies have smuggled another 38 trucks and tankers’ worth of wheat and oil out of Syria via the al-Walid border crossing, the Syrian Arab News Agency reports, citing local sources.
The agency’s sources said the supplies were taken from the U.S. and Kurdish-occupied Jazira region of al-Hasakah governorate. The so-called Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) militants are alleged to have accompanied the convoy on its way toward the al-Walid crossing, which the Syrian government considers illegal because it’s outside Damascus’s control.
The smuggling activity follows a separate report on Saturday that U.S. troops had brought 10 tractor trailers carrying Hummers from Iraq into Syria, driving them toward the town of Rmelan in al-Hasakah.
Syria has previously reported on the back-and-forth flow of “thousands” of military vehicles, trucks carrying military supplies and equipment, refrigerator trucks, and vehicles containing building materials into Syria via Iraq, while smuggling hundreds of trucks and tankers’ worth of stolen Syrian oil and, more recently – wheat, out.
Last week, SANA reported that two massive convoys containing a total of 88 vehicles filled with oil and wheat left Syria for Iraq from two separate directions, one of them containing wheat from the strategic Tal Alou silos, and the other convoy oil tankers, covered trucks and refrigerator vehicles from the al-Yarubiya countryside.
The Biden administration has left in place its predecessor’s policy of robbing Syria of its natural resources and wheat stocks. The U.S. and its Kurdish allies enjoy control over as much as 90 percent of Syria’s oil wealth, and their refusal to turn these areas over to Damascus has ensured that the once energy self-sufficient nation has been forced to turn to Iran for fuel imports. On top of that, Iranian tanker ships carrying Syria-bound oil have reportedly faced “dozens” of attacks by the Zionist regime costing “billions of dollars.”
The wheat smuggling has also led Syria’s other ally – Russia – to step up wheat supplies to the Arab Republic. Last year, Moscow donated 100,000 tons of wheat to Syria in the form of humanitarian aid. Before the 2011 war began, Syria enjoyed self-sufficiency in wheat production.
Syrian, Iranian, and Russian diplomats at the United Nations have repeatedly blasted Washington over its weaponization of food and medical supplies in Syria, and suggested that the humanitarian situation is even worse in areas of the country outside the Syrian government’s control. On top of the food and oil smuggling, Syria faces crippling U.S. and European Union sanctions, with these factors together hindering reconstruction.
In March, Syrian oil minister Bassam Touma accused the U.S. and its allies of “targeting the Syrian oil wealth…just like pirates,” and suggested that the situation faced by Damascus has not been seen by any other nation, “in terms of preventing us from tapping our wealth and at the same time stopping basic commodities from reaching our country.”