2013/02/27

Tony Cartalucci: Dead French Photographer was State Department

Funded, Embedded in Syria with Al Qaeda: Further indication of the depraved nature of the West's campaign against Syria, and the depraved nature of its institutions, methods, and faux NGO's, vindicating a growing trend of ejecting Western "journalists"and NGO's from an ever increasing number of nations, it is revealed that a French photographer, recently killed in Syria, was embedded with terrorist militants in Idlib, northern Syria, and was working on behalf of the US State Department's National Endowment for Democracy (NED), funded "Reporters Without Borders." The UK Daily Mail revealed in their article, "French photographer killed by flying shrapnel in Syria, as rebels launch fresh offensive on police academy in Aleppo,"that: A French photographer has been killed by flying shrapnel in Syria, while covering operations of an armed opposition group. The French government said today, Olivier Voisin had been working for Reporters Without Bordersnear the northwestern city of Idlib. Idlib, Syria, along with much of northern Syria, is admittedly overrun with Al Qaeda. In fact, a recent Washington Post article stated that northern Syria was so overrun with Al Qaeda, that Western nations, along with its Arab partners, have decided to ship weapons in from Daraa in southern Syria. Of course, Daraa too is along time hotbed for extremist activity, including Al Qaeda, years before the so called "uprising" even began. The Post article titled, "In Syria, new influx of weapons to rebels tilts the battle against Assad," admits: A surge of rebel advances in Syria, is being fueled at least in part by an influx of heavy weaponry, in a renewed effort by outside powers to arm moderates in the Free Syrian Army, according to Arab and rebel officials. The new armaments, including anti tank weapons and recoilless rifles, have been sent across the Jordanian border into the province of Daraa in recent weeks, to counter the growing influence of Islamist extremist groups in the north of Syria, by boosting more moderate groups fighting in the south, the officials say. Despite the rampant extremism in the north, French photographer Olivier Voisin found himself among these very militants, in the midst of what we are told, are waves of "rebel gains." Apparently these "gains" are being made at high costs. 

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