The Commercial Appeal

U.S. working along Syrian border

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WASHINGTON — The U.S. is ramping up its presence at Syria’s Turkish border, sending more spies and diplomats to help advise the rebel forces in their mismatched fight against the better armed Syrian regime, and to watch for possible al-Qaida infiltrati­on of rebel ranks.

U.S. officials briefed on the plan said the modest surge in U. S. personnel in the past few weeks — estimated at fewer than a dozen people — has helped improve rebels’ political organizing skills as well as their military organizati­on.

It’s part of a twopronged effort by the Obama administra­tion to bolster the rebels militarily without actually contributi­ng weapons to the fight, and politicall­y, to help them stave off internal power challenges by the well-organized and often better-funded hardline Islamic militants who have flowed into the country from Iraq and elsewhere in the Persian Gulf region.

The increased intelligen­ce gathered is intended to help the White House decide whether its current policy of providing only nonlethal aid is enough to keep momentum building in the nearly 18-month revolt against the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Spokesmen for the Pentagon and White House declined to comment Thursday.

The diplomats and intelligen­ce operatives from the CIA and other agencies stay outside war-torn Syria and meet with rebel leaders to help them organize their ranks, while also studying who makes up those ranks, how they are armed and whom they answer to, the officials say.

Informatio­n is also gathered from Syrian defectors and refugees as well as rebel troops, officials say.

“The model is to keep case officers away from conflict, and you collect through local forces,” said former CIA officer Reuel Gerecht, now a fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s, a Washington-based policy group that focuses on terrorism.

The effort is concentrat­ed on the Turkish border instead of the border with Jordan where many Syrian refugees are fleeing, a U.S. official said, because the traffic between Syria and Turkey is still far greater.

The White House has resisted calls to provide lethal aid or engage mili- tarily, instead limiting aid to nonlethal support.

That approach is playing out against a surge in violence that’s seen 1,600 people killed in recent weeks.

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