Syrian TV blames Barça of showing rebels a way

Syrian TV blames Barça of showing rebels a way

James M. Dorsey

Playmaker Xavi is the mastermind behind Barcelona’s fluid football. Al-Dunya claims Barça players show the way for Syrian rebels.

State-run Syrian Al-Dunya television, in one of the more bizarre parrotings of allegations of foreign intervention by embattled President Bashar al-Assad’s regime, has accused Catalan giants FC Barcelona of employing tactical formations to deliver coded messages to armed Syrian rebels.

The television broadcast the allegations as fighters of the rebel Free Syrian Army retreated from the eastern Syrian city of Deir al-Zor, following a fierce two day Syrian military assault in what activists said was an effort to spare residents further bloodshed. The retreat followed earlier rebel withdrawals from Homs and Idlib.

The withdrawals appear to signal a shift in rebel tactics from trying to hold on to territory to a campaign of bombings and assassinations, particularly in the sensitive Syrian capital of Damascus.

Al-Dunya charged that Barcelona’s tactical formations represented a map of routes from Lebanon to Syria used to smuggle weapons to the Syrian rebels. It said projecting the map on Barcelona’s Spanish King’s Cup quarterfinal match against Real Madrid that players in the club’s formation on the pitch were the equivalent of smugglers, while the ball represented weapons as they were moved along the smuggling route.

Smuggling route
Al-Dunya asserted that midfielder Andres Iniesta operated at the beginning of a smuggling route while a late game pass by player of the year Lionel Messi constituted the successful handover of an arms shipment in Deir al-Zor at the end of the route. In Al-Dunya’s apparently doctored version of the match a mysterious, unidentified player appears as Messi passes the ball. The shadowy player somehow ends up in the Real Madrid goal. Midfielder Sergio Busquets Burgos was also part of Barcelona’s international intrigue, Al-Dunya said.

The report serves as further evidence of the callousness of the al-Assad regime, and the degree to which Mr. al-Assad and his immediate family and aides appear to be cut off from reality – a portrait that also emerges from al-Assad family emails disclosed earlier this month by the Guardian. The emails detail the president’s purchases on iTunes and his wife’s acquisition of luxury goods, at the same time as his forces push on with their crackdown on anti-government protesters.

Al-Dunya’s assertions are likely to be an attempt to score public relations points against Qatar, the Arab nation that together with Saudi Arabia has taken the lead in denouncing the al-Assad regime, seeking to isolate it in the Middle East as well as internationally, and calling for support for the country’s armed resistance. Barcelona signed its first ever commercial shirt sponsorship agreement worth $200 million in December 2010 with the Qatar Foundation, a state-owned charity.

The Al-Dunya report was posted on YouTube and has been viewed by almost half a million people.

Al-Dunya charged that the Qatar-owned Al-Jazeera television network was repeatedly broadcasting clips from the Barcelona match in a bid to weaken the al-Assad regime. Al-Dunya earlier this month also charged that an Al-Jazeera sports newscaster had incited listeners against the al-Assad regime during his coverage of a match between Syria and Bahrain in London.

Syria’s invocation of football as part of the international conspiracy it alleges that it is battling underscores the important role of the sport in Middle Eastern and North African politics.

Rules set aside
The Syrian national team has flagrantly set rules aside in recent months in their line-ups to ensure success in the hope that success on the pitch will rub off on the regime to demonstrate that Mr. al-Assad’s regime is in control and can perform, despite the violence and turmoil.

World football’s governing body FIFA last September barred Syria from competing for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil after the country’s national team fielded an ineligible player in a qualifying match against Tajikistan. Lebanon has accused Syria in November of fielding six players in an Under-19 Asian Football Championship qualifier whose ages had been falsified to qualify them for the team.

By the same token, Syria refused to send athletes to last November’s Arab Games because it feared embarrassment if some of its sportsmen defected.

That fear may not have been unfounded. Abdelbasset Saroot, who was targeted by pro-al-Assad forces and is believed to have been in hiding since the Syrian military recently entered the rebel stronghold of Homs, symbolizes the regime’s problems with its youth team.

A 20-year old goalkeeper for Syria’s national Under-23 team, Mr. Saroot is a leader of the revolt in Homs. “They are targeting me. They want to kill me. But God is giving me life. The more death and destruction we face, the higher our optimism and spirit. We are not sad that our martyrs are dead, but we miss them as revolutionaries,” Mr. Saroot says in an Al-Jazeera documentary.