USA TODAY US Edition

U.S.-TRAINED REBELS STUMBLE IN SYRIA CONFLICT

- Jim Michaels USA TODAY WASHINGTON

The recent capture of a handful of U.S.-trained Syrian fighters shortly after they entered Syria may make it even harder to recruit reluctant volunteers for a new ground force to combat the Islamic State.

The Pentagon defended the training program Thursday, saying there were “challenges” but remaining committed to it.

“The idea that we were caught totally flat-footed ... sending people into a very dynamic and rapidly changing war zone is not accurate,” said Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman.

About five American-trained fighters remained in custody after being taken over the weekend by the al- Qaeda-linked Nusra Front in Syria. “It’s a huge embarrassm­ent,” said Jeff White of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and a former Defense Intelligen­ce Agency official.

The men captured were part of a force of about 60 troops that were in the first class of Pentagon-trained recruits and had entered Syria to fight the Islamic State. “It was foolish to send them in in small numbers,” White said. The troops came under attack Friday. Backed by five U.S. airstrikes, the fighters repelled the Nusra forces, but a handful were captured.

The Pentagon initially planned to train 5,400 recruits a year, building a force of about 15,000 to counter the Islamic State in Syria.

The Pentagon is struggling to meet those goals because it is looking for recruits who have no ties to radical Islamic groups and are willing to pledge to fight the Islamic State and not the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad, who is fighting for survival in a four-year-long civil war. Finding moderate rebels focused on the Islamic State has proved difficult. “Their priority is to fight Assad,” said Chris Kozak, an analyst at the Institute for the Study of War.

The Pentagon acknowledg­es that screening the recruits is challengin­g. “To do this right takes time and due diligence in vetting personnel, so we get the right people doing the right things with the training and equipping they are being offered,” said Navy Cmdr. Elissa Smith, a Pentagon spokeswoma­n.

The Pentagon would not detail how many recruits are in training but said the recent attack hasn’t hurt the program. “We still have hundreds that are in the final stages of vetting, and we have thousands that have raised their hand, expressing interest in joining,” Davis said.

“The idea that we were caught totally flat-footed ... sending people into a very dynamic and rapidly changing war zone is not accurate.” Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman.

 ?? EMRAH GUREL, AP ?? A U.S. Air Force plane takes off from Turkey.
EMRAH GUREL, AP A U.S. Air Force plane takes off from Turkey.
 ?? EPA ?? Bashar Assad
EPA Bashar Assad

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