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But most of the border is empty and marked only by a dirt berm with no signs or fences separating the two nations. Al-Lehaibi has been smuggling for more than 10 years. He began sneaking food rations into the autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq in the 1990s while Saddam Hussein was in power. Later, he smuggled satellite receivers, cigarettes and kerosene between Syria and the Kurdish region. Sometimes al-Lehaibi trades his guns for sheep -- which gives him a convenient cover as a sheep dealer in the rare times border police have accosted him. "We do fear being caught, but a fundamental principle of our work is to put fear behind us," he said. "There are tighter security measures in Mosul, but there are dozens of smugglers who do this job after years of relations and help from bordering villages who have these needs." Al-Qaida and Syria's homegrown opposition appear to have very different agendas. Syrian rebels have for the last 11 months demanded a more democratic system for the country, and even liken the Assad regime to al-Qaida. The Assad regime's "acts in torturing and killing its opponents are very similar to those used by al-Qaida members in annihilating anybody who disapprove with their dark believes and ideologies," the Local Coordination Committees, one of the main Syrian activist groups, said in a statement this week. "This also comes clear in the teeming history of the Syrian regime support to the extremists and death militias in Lebanon and Iraq."
At the height of Iraq's insurgency, from 2005 to 2007, U.S. and Iraqi officials alike believed hundreds of al-Qaida militants used Syria as a breeding ground and byway into the fight. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki for years accused Syria of failing to stop insurgents who traveled to Iraq to carry out horrific attacks, although he has shied away from joining the chorus of Arab nations that demand Assad's ouster. There's no sign yet that the violence in Syria will spill across the border. But fears abound that the uprising could galvanize al-Qaida anew and spur more attacks and instability in Iraq. The situation in Syria has "serious repercussions and dangerous consequences on the region," parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi, a Sunni from Mosul, said in a statement Tuesday. "Particularly on Iraq."
[Associated
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