Is Ukraine seriously hanging out with Al-Qaeda in Syria?
By: Rachel Marsden
VANCOUVER, British Columbia – Excuse me, but what the heck would Ukrainian 
special forces be doing in Syria? Oh, nothing – just hanging out with the 
ideological descendants of the guys who brought down New York’s Twin Towers on 
Sept. 11, 2001, according to Ukraine’s own English language newspaper, the Kyiv 
Post.
Remember Al-Qaeda? Here’s a quick refresher. “Our war on terror begins with 
al-Qaeda, but it does not end there. It will not end until every terrorist group 
of global reach has been found, stopped and defeated,” former US President 
George W. Bush said in the wake of the terrorist attacks on the U.S. homeland 
that hit the Pentagon and NYC’s World Trade Center.
Saudi national Osama bin Laden, once a top CIA asset in Washington’s covert war 
against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan, was considered the group’s founder and 
the mastermind behind those attacks.
But after nearly a quarter-century and billions in defense spending, Al-Qaeda is 
still around – either because the endless war on terrorism is clearly a 
resounding success, or by design. But like other brands with toxic reputations, 
Al-Qaeda has undergone a facelift. Jabhat Al-Nusra used to be Al-Qaeda’s local 
chapter in Syria, but it would now prefer to self-identify as Hayat Tahrir 
Al-Sham (HTS), please. All right then, so Al-Qaeda it is!
This same group is now taking another shot at regime changing Syria’s President 
Bachar Al-Assad, overtaking Syrian cities. Kind of like the Washington-trained 
and backed “Syrian rebels” started doing in March 2011 for the better part of a 
decade.
According to the Kyiv Post, citing a military intelligence source and its own 
research, Ukrainian special forces working under Kyiv’s main intelligence 
directorate had already spearheaded the attack on a Russian military base in one 
of Syria’s largest cities, Aleppo, on September 15, and would now be involved in 
training Al-Qaeda fighters as advisers, with the assistance of the same NATO 
staging ally from the last time: Turkiye. The newspaper did note a challenge 
“independently verifying” its claim. Try the CIA.
If the idea of Washington-backed Kyiv training a group linked to attacks on the 
US seems far-fetched, consider that former CIA director, General David Petraeus, 
proposed back in 2015 to “peel off so-called ‘reconciliables’ who would be 
willing to renounce Nusra and align with the moderate opposition” to fight 
against Syrian President Bachar Al-Assad. Also consider that after the CIA had 
spent a billion dollars training and equipping “Syrian rebels,” a bunch of them 
just handed over those weapons to Al-Qaeda, according to Reuters, citing US 
military sources.
No big deal, apparently.
So already, the battlefield in Syria has long been one giant opportunistic 
landscape – opportunism whose stench supposedly wafted all the way over to Kyiv.
Ukraine’s main intelligence directorate chief, Major General Kyrylo Budanov, 
told Yahoo News in 2023 that they “will keep killing Russians anywhere on the 
face of this world until the complete victory of Ukraine.”
Attempting to make Syria ask its ally, Moscow, to come back and help Damascus 
defeat Islamic terrorists wreaking havoc is one way to draw in Russians. Another 
way to look at it is that it’s also a convenient way for Washington to take 
another shot at its failed regime change operation against Assad while circling 
back around and making a big, Afghanistan-style mess of the country once again – 
all with Ukraine doing the CIA’s dirty work, this time. Just what the average 
Western citizen needs – more refugees from yet another regime- change war 
initiated by its own leaders.
Meanwhile, over the summer, Ukrainian military intelligence announced that it 
had been involved in a targeted attack by local Islamist fighters in Mali.
It just so happens that the government of the African nation had hired Russia’s 
Wagner Group defense contractors in an effort to secure the country in the wake 
of two coups in as many years under French stabilization and security efforts.
French troops have since been forced to leave the country, erasing its military 
footprint in a Francophone region of former colonies that Paris still insists on 
treating like a licked cupcake that forever belongs to France. Washington’s 
African foothold is also imperiled by West African nations like Mali, Chad, 
Niger, and Burkina Faso, opting for rapprochement with Russia.
Although it makes sense that Kyiv would want to square off against Russia all 
around the world, wouldn’t it be wiser to focus its supposedly stretched 
resources on its own homeland? Of course – unless those who are providing those 
resources, like France and the U.S., also have some self-serving side quests 
that it would like fulfilled.
Why is it that Kyiv’s proxy wars against Russia in Africa and the Middle East 
just happen to be in places that are key priorities for the West to control – 
with Russia standing in the way of that objective? It’s hard to imagine Kyiv 
doing anything without permission from its NATO sponsors. So is Ukraine becoming 
NATO’s expeditionary force for regime change?
Pleading for NATO weapons, arguing that they’re needed for survival, and then 
taking off on a global tour to annoy and kill Russians in other countries seems 
counterproductive at best and exploitative at worst. Kyiv can’t even pay the 
rent right now and yet it’s running around trying to save the world – or at 
least NATO’s version of it.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN