Obama
Administration Expected to Directly Aid Syria’s Rebels
By Dana
Hughes | ABC OTUS News
Press/Riccardo De Luca – U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry shakes hands with Italian Foreign Minister Giulio
Terzi, right, as he arrives at Villa Madama in Rome, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013.
Kerry …more
Secretary of State John
Kerry will meet on Thursday with leaders of Syria’s opposition council and
other nations that have been supporting the opposition at the Friends of Syria
meeting in Rome. The outcome of that meeting is expected to move the United
States towards more direct involvement in the nation’s conflict.Kerry is expected to announce for the first time that the Obama administration is prepared to provide direct support to vetted members of the Free Syrian Army, the military wing of the opposition effort.
On Wednesday in Paris, Kerry acknowledged that the Syrian opposition needs more help. Kerry said the United States still believes that a political solution is the best way to end the bloodshed, but after two years of conflict it’s clear that the process needs to be sped up.
“That may require us to change President Assad’s current calculation. He needs to know that he can’t shoot his way out of this,” said Kerry. “We need to convince him of that, and I think the opposition needs more help in order to be able to do that. And we are working together to have a united position with respect to that.”
U.S. officials confirmed to ABC News that the United States is considering providing “non-lethal,” help to selective rebel fighters that will include communications equipment, medical and other supplies. Under the U.S. legal definition of non-lethal assistance, any aid that is not weaponry or ammunition qualifies. That means the U.S. could also provide body armor, military training, armored vehicles and help with intelligence.
“What you’re doing is you’re giving them the capability to manage their force without giving them the weapons,” former Gen. James Cartwright told ABC News.
The United States has been providing about $50 million of non-lethal assistance to Syria’s political opposition, including providing communications equipment like radios and computers to advocates and political opposition councils.
Republican Sen. Marco Rubio said on Wednesday at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy that he thinks the United States should go further, providing ammunition for the rebel fighters. Rubio’s comments followed his recent trip to the region, where he met with the former Prime Minister of Syria who defected to Jordan last August.
“There are plenty of weapons in Syria. What the opposition really needs is access to ammunition,” he said. “Ammunition is something we can provide that is not weaponry per se, but is essential. That’s the stuff I’m prepared to advocate for.”
But providing weapons and ammunition to Syria’s rebel army comes with risks. Extremist elements of the opposition, including groups with ties to al Qaeda in Iraq, have emerged in the conflict. A terror attack in Damascus, Syria, last week carried about by a suicide bomber killed more than 50 people, many of them women and children.
ABC News’ Terry Moran recently traveled to the Syrian capital on the invitation of the Syrian government, where he interviewed a jailed rebel fighter who admitted to transporting bombs and killing Americans in Iraq.
“They were occupying my country,” the prisoner told Moran.
Kerry acknowledged during his Paris news conference that extremist elements within the opposition have filled what Syrians perceive as a vacuum of assistance from the U.S. and its allies.
“Some folks on the ground that we don’t support and whose interests do not align with ours are delivering some of that help,” said Kerry.
He told reporters that the United States needs to address the problem by helping Syria’s opposition do a better job to meet the needs of the Syrian people in areas they control.
“We need to help them to be able to deliver basic services … where you have a vulnerable population today that needs to be able to resist the pleas to engage in extremism,” he said.
Cartwright said that the Obama administration’s caution over the United States’ level of involvement in Syria’s drawn-out and complicated conflict isn’t surprising.
“There are people there that are clearly not from inside Syria that are participating,” Cartwright said.
“They’re either in agreement with one side or the other, or they’re there to be postured when the conflict comes to an end [so] they will be able to influence the state affairs at the end,” he added. “Not knowing that makes it very difficult to stick your nose into someone else’s fight.”
http://jhaines6.wordpress.com/2013/02/28/obama-administration-expected-to-directly-aid-syrias-rebels/