Syrian rebel fighters stand around an anti-aircraft machine gun mounted
on a truck in the northern city of Aleppo, 08/04/12. photo: Getty Images
CIA Begins Delivering Weapons to Syrian Rebels
12 September 13
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CIA has begun delivering weapons to rebels in Syria, ending months of
delay in lethal aid that had been promised by the Obama administration,
according to U.S. officials and Syrian figures. The shipments began
streaming into the country over the past two weeks, along with separate
deliveries by the State Department of vehicles and other gear - a flow
of material that marks a major escalation of the U.S. role in Syria's
civil war.
The arms shipments, which are limited to light weapons
and other munitions that can be tracked, began arriving in Syria at a
moment of heightened tensions over threats by President Obama to order
missile strikes to punish the regime of Bashar al-Assad for his alleged
use of chemical weapons in a deadly attack near Damascus last month.
The arms are being delivered as the United States is
also shipping new types of nonlethal gear to rebels. That aid includes
vehicles, sophisticated communications equipment and advanced combat
medical kits.
U.S. officials hope that, taken together, the weapons
and gear will boost the profile and prowess of rebel fighters in a
conflict that started about 21 / 2 years ago.
Although the Obama administration signaled months ago
that it would increase aid to Syrian rebels, the efforts have lagged
because of the logistical challenges involved in delivering equipment in
a war zone and officials' fears that any assistance could wind up in
the hands of jihadists. Secretary of State John F. Kerry had promised in April that the nonlethal aid would start flowing "in a matter of weeks."
The delays prompted several senior U.S. lawmakers to
chide the Obama administration for not moving more quickly to aid the
Syrian opposition after promising lethal assistance in June. The
criticism has grown louder amid the debate over whether Washington
should use military force against the Syrian regime, with some lawmakers
withholding support until the administration committed to providing the
rebels with more assistance.
Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), who has pressed the Obama
administration to do more to help the rebels, said he felt embarrassed
when he met with Syrians along the Turkish border three weeks ago.
"It was humiliating," he said in an interview
Wednesday night. "The president had announced that we would be providing
lethal aid, and not a drop of it had begun. They were very short on
ammunition, and the weapons had not begun to flow."
The latest effort to provide aid is aimed at
supporting rebel fighters who are under the command of Gen. Salim
Idriss, according to officials, some of whom spoke on the condition of
anonymity because part of the initiative is covert. Idriss is the
commander of the Supreme Military Council, a faction of the disjointed
armed opposition.
U.S. officials, speaking about the provision of
nonlethal aid, said they are determined to increase the cohesion and
structure of the rebel fighting units.
"This doesn't only lead to a more effective force, but
it increases its ability to hold coalition groups together," said Mark
S. Ward, the State Department's senior adviser on assistance to Syria,
who coordinates nonlethal aid to rebels from southern Turkey. "They see
their leadership is having some impact."
U.S. officials decided to expand nonlethal assistance
to Syria's armed rebels after they delivered more than 350,000
high-calorie U.S. military food packets through the Supreme Military
Council in May. The distribution gave U.S. officials confidence that it
was possible to limit aid to select rebel units in a battlefield where
thousands of fighters share al-Qaeda's ideology, U.S. officials said.
Khaled Saleh, a spokesman for the Syrian Opposition
Coalition, said Washington's revamped efforts are welcome but
insufficient to turn the tide of the civil war between rebels and forces
loyal to Assad.
"The Syrian Military Council is receiving so little
support that any support we receive is a relief," he said. "But if you
compare what we are getting compared to the assistance Assad receives
from Iran and Russia, we have a long battle ahead of us."
'It's better than nothing'
While the State Department is coordinating nonlethal
aid, the CIA is overseeing the delivery of weaponry and other lethal
equipment to the rebels. An opposition official, speaking on the
condition of anonymity to discuss covert arms transfers, said U.S.
intelligence personnel have begun delivering long-promised light weapons
and ammunition to rebel groups in the past couple of weeks.
The weaponry "doesn't solve all the needs the guys
have, but it's better than nothing," the opposition official said. He
added that Washington remains reluctant to give the rebels what they
most desire: antitank and antiaircraft weapons.
The CIA shipments are to flow through a network of
clandestine bases in Turkey and Jordan that were expanded over the past
year as the agency sought to help Middle Eastern allies, including Saudi
Arabia and Qatar, direct weapons to moderate Syrian rebel forces.
The CIA declined to comment.
The distribution of vehicles and communications
equipment is part of an effort to direct U.S. aid to Syrian rebels in a
more assertive, targeted manner. Before Ward established a team of about
two dozen diplomats and aid workers in southern Turkey, Washington was
doing little more than paying for truckloads of food and medicine for
Syrian rebels. U.S. officials concede that the shipments often went to
the most accessible, and not necessarily the neediest, places.
Boosting moderate factions
In addition to boosting support for rebels under the command of Idriss, who speaks fluent English and taught at a military academy
before defecting from the Syrian army last year, U.S. officials in
southern Turkey are using aid to promote emerging moderate leaders in
towns and villages in rebel-held areas. Across much of the north,
Syrians have begun electing local councils and attempting to rebuild
communities devastated by war.
Ward's team - working primarily out of hotel lobbies -
has spent the past few months studying the demographics and dynamics of
communities where extremists are making inroads. Targeted U.S. aid, he
said, can be used to empower emerging local leaders who are moderate and
to jump-start basic services while dimming the appeal of extremists.
"We feel we're able to get these local councils off to a good start," said Ward, a veteran U.S. Agency for International Development official
who has worked in Libya, Afghanistan and Pakistan. "We vet individuals
who are getting our assistance to make sure they are not affiliated with
terror organizations."
The assistance to local communities includes training
in municipal management as well as basic infrastructure such as garbage
trucks, ambulances and firetrucks. The areas receiving this aid are
carefully selected, U.S. officials said, noting that extremist groups,
including Jabhat al-Nusra, are delivering services to communities newly
under rebel control.
"If you see new firetrucks and ambulances in places
where al-Nusra is trying to win hearts and minds, this might not be a
coincidence," said a U.S. official, who spoke on the condition of
anonymity to explain details of a sensitive strategy.
The initiatives are part of a $250 million effort to
support moderate factions of the Syrian opposition. Of that, the United
States has earmarked $26.6 million in aid for the Supreme Military
Council. The delivery that began this week does not include items that
the rebels have long identified as priorities: night-vision goggles and body armor.
Mohammed Ghanem, director of government relations at
the Syrian American Council, which supports the opposition, said the
U.S. initiatives are steps in the right direction after years of
inaction and misguided policies.
"We've definitely seen a structural and conceptual
evolution in terms of their understanding of what's going on on the
ground," he said in an interview. "On the other hand, we're always
lagging behind. We're not leading. Developments are always like six
months ahead of us."
Ghanem said the effect of U.S. assistance is limited
by the number of proxies that Washington must use to deliver it. U.S.
officials in Turkey rely on a network of contractors and subcontractors
to deliver the aid.
Ward said he hopes the assistance efforts will position the United States to have strong relationships in a postwar Syria.
"When you finally have a free Syrian government, you
will know them and they will know us," Ward said. "We will have been
working with them week after week, month after month. These won't be
strangers."
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