The Jerusalem Post

CIA-backed aid for Syrian rebels frozen after attack

Move follows Islamist offensive on Free Syrian Army

- • By TOM PERRY, SULEIMAN AL-KHALIDI and JOHN WALCOTT

BEIRUT/AMMAN/WASHINGTON – CIA-coordinate­d military aid for rebels in northwest Syria has been frozen since they came under major Islamist attack last month, rebel sources said, raising doubts about foreign support key to their war against President Bashar Assad.

Rebel officials said that no official explanatio­n had been given for the move this month following the jihadist assault, though several said they believed the main objective was to prevent arms and cash falling into Islamist militant hands. But they said they expected the aid freeze to be temporary.

The halt in assistance, which has included salaries, training, ammunition and in some cases guided antitank missiles, is a response to jihadist attacks and has nothing to do with US President Donald Trump replacing Barack Obama in January, two US officials familiar with the CIA-led program said.

The freeze reflects the troubles facing Free Syrian Army (FSA) rebels in the almost in the almost six-year-old revolt against Assad, who now appears militarily unassailab­le in his core western region largely thanks to direct interventi­on on his side by Russia and Iran.

“The reality is that you have changes in the area, and these changes inevitably have repercussi­ons,” said an official with one of the affected FSA rebel groups. He said no military assistance could “enter at present until matters are organized. There is a new arrangemen­t, but nothing has crystalliz­ed yet.”

The support funneled to vetted FSA factions has included contributi­ons from Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia – states that have opposed Assad. It is one of several foreign-aid channels to rebels. Others still function.

The CIA declined comment on the reported freeze in support. A Qatari official said his government had nothing to say on the matter. Turkish officials said only they could not discuss “operationa­l details.” There was no word from Saudi Arabia.

Reuters confirmed the freeze with officials from five of the FSA groups that have been recipients of financial and military support from the so-called “MOM operations room.” It was also confirmed by two other senior FSA figures briefed on the matter.

They spoke on condition of anonymity given the covert nature of the CIA-backed program and the sensitivit­y of the subject.

Several rebels believed the aid halt was temporary, with new arrangemen­ts expected, but there was no clarity yet. Confirming the freeze, two senior FSA sources said donor states were aiming to send the aid to one, unified fighting force – a coherence that has eluded rebels throughout Syria’s civil war.

One of the FSA officials said he did not expect the rebels to be abandoned as they represent the best hope for blocking a further expansion of Sunni jihadist influence in Syria, and to fight back against the growing role of Iran there.

Idlib and nearby areas of Aleppo, Hama and Latakia provinces are among the last footholds of the anti-Assad insurgency in western Syria – the part of the country where he has shored up his rule by holding onto the main cities and the coast.

Islamists have long been seen as the more formidable insurgent force in the northweste­rn Idlib area though a dozen or more US-vetted FSA groups have also operated there and nearby.

Last month’s militant assault on the FSA groups was launched by a group formerly known as the Nusra Front, al-Qaida’s official affiliate in the war until last year when it formally cut ties and renamed itself Jabhat Fateh al-Sham.

The jihadist onslaught led several FSA groups to merge with the powerful Islamist faction Ahrar al-Sham, widely believed to be backed by Assad’s foreign adversarie­s in the region.

That will likely give pause to foreign donors: Ahrar al-Sham is set apart from the FSA factions by a strongly Sunni Islamist ideology and it has previously fought alongside the Nusra Front.

Military aid to rebel groups has ebbed and flowed throughout the life of the program, US officials said, as Washington and its allies have kept a close eye on any leakage to more militant factions, something one official called “a constant problem.”

Before assuming office, Trump suggested he could end support for FSA groups and give priority to the fight against Islamic State (IS), whose wellarmed jihadists hold large tracts of eastern and central Syria.

But Trump’s administra­tion has yet to declare a firm policy towards Syria and Iraq, despite his repeated vows to eradicate IS, so it has been “business as usual” with covert and overt training and military support programs, one US official said.

Some FSA groups hope Trump’s animosity toward Iran could yet result in enhanced US support.

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