US Congress secretly approves sending small arms to ‘moderate’ Syrian rebels
by alethoRT | January 28, 2014
Congressional
lawmakers have quietly authorized sending small arms, an assorted
variety of rockets, and financial backing to so-called “moderate” rebels
fighting in Syria’s civil war, according to a new report.
American and European security officials told Reuters
that the US will provide anti-tank rockets, but nothing as deadly as
shoulder-launched surface-to-air missiles (known as MANPADs), which can
be used to bring down military or civilian aircraft.
Legislators voted in closed-door meetings to fund the opposition forces through September 30,
the end of the US government’s fiscal year. The decision is an
about-face from congressional debates last year, in which the same
committees were reluctant to supply arms over concerns that American
weapons would wind up in the hands of radical Islamists fighting in the
region, the Al-Qaeda-backed Al-Nusra being the most well known.
Now,
though, those concerns appear to have lessened. Exactly when Congress
approved the funding is not known, yet the sources speculated that it
was signed in a classified section of a defense appropriations bill that
was approved in December.
“The
Syrian war is a stalemate,” said Bruce Riedel, a former CIA analyst and
current foreign policy advisor to US President Obama with the Brookings
Institution. “The rebels lack the organization and weapons to defeat
Assad; the regime lacks to loyal manpower to suppress the rebellion.
Both sides’ external allies…are ready to supply enough money and arms to
fuel the stalemate for the foreseeable future.”
Despite
the uncertainty remaining around the conflict, Western officials have
asserted in recent weeks that “moderate” rebels have strengthened their
positions in the south of Syria and have begun excluding Al-Qaeda
sympathizers. Extremists are known to be in control of rebel forces in
the north and east, however.
US
and British officials temporarily suspended “non-lethal aid” (a
category that includes communications equipment and transportation
vehicles) in December, although officials now say they hope to resume
providing assistance to the Supreme Military Council (SMC), which
oversees rebel forces favored by the West.
“We hope to be able to resume assistance to the SMC shortly, pending security and logistics considerations,” one source told Reuters. “But we have no announcement at this time.”
News
of the funding comes as the Syrian government and the external
opposition in Geneva have reached an agreement that would see
humanitarian aid enter the besieged city of Homs, and would allow women
and children to leave its war-ravaged areas.
What
makes the deal dubious, however, is that it’s not yet clear how it will
be implemented on the ground. Currently, the Syrian government is
promising - voiced on Sunday
by Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad - that women and children can
leave Homs safely. Another question is how rebels inside the city
besieged by the army will react.
"If
the armed terrorists in Homs allow women and children to leave the old
city of Homs, we will allow them every access. Not only that, we will
provide them with shelter, medicines and all that is needed,” he said,
as cited by Reuters. "We are ready to allow any humanitarian aid to enter into the city through the arrangements made with the UN."
US
State Department spokesman Edgar Vasquez said that an evacuation is not
a legitimate option because of how dire the need for aid is.
“We
firmly believe that the Syrian regime must approve the convoys to
deliver badly needed humanitarian assistance into the Old City of Homs
now,” Vasquez said. “The situation is desperate and the people are
starving.”
The
results of a meeting in Geneva, Switzerland - where government
officials sat across the negotiating table from representatives of the
opposition on Monday
- is so far unclear. Each side pledged its willingness to continue
discussions, though progress so far has been nearly nonexistent.
United Nations envoy Lakhdar Brahimi told reporters after the meeting Monday that even though the talks “haven’t produced much,” another session was scheduled for Tuesday.
“Once
again, I tell you we never expected any miracle, there are no miracles
here,” he said in a news conference. “My expectation from this
conference is that the unjust war will stop. But I know this is not
going to happen today or tomorrow or next week.”
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