National Post

Pentagon reworks syrian strategy

- By Craig Whitlock, Missy Ryan and Karen DeYoung

LONDON • The Obama administra­tion backed away Friday from a failed effort to stand up a rebel force in Syria, as the Pentagon announced plans to instead aid existing rebel units that officials believe have better odds of weakening the Islamic State.

The decision to significan­tly scale back the Pentagon’s flagship effort against the militant group in Syria is a recognitio­n of its repeated failures. After a long-delayed launch this spring, the effort quickly became mired in problems, including attacks by rival rebel forces and a decision by one U.S.-trained unit to hand over equipment to the local alQaida affiliate.

The overhaul of U.S. strategy comes as the Obama administra­tion scrambles to adjust to Moscow’s entry into the already crowded Syrian battle space. Russian planes and forces are now backing an offensive by troops loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad against opposition units, complicati­ng the United States’ own air operations over Syria.

The Pentagon will now provide equipment and weapons to vetted Syrian units “so that over time they can make a

It’s being refocused in a new direction

concerted push into territory still controlled by ISIL,” Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook said. ISIL is another name for the Islamic State, which now controls a wide swath of Syria and Iraq.

“We will monitor the progress these groups make and provide them with air support as they take the fight to ISIL,” Cook said in a statement to reporters travelling with Defence Secretary Ashton Carter in Britain.

U.S. officials are hoping the move will help friendly Arab forces replicate the success that Syrian Kurdish fighters have had against ISIL in northern Syria, and eventually isolate the group in Raqqa, its de facto Syrian capital.

U.S. officials are also hoping the new effort will help allied forces secure parts of Syria’s border with Turkey and choke off ISIL’s supplies of fighters and weapons from the north.

A senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the Pentagon, said the troubled Syria training program was not being abandoned or ended completely.

“It’s being refocused to enhance its effectiven­ess,” the official said. “It’s being refocused in a new direction.”

The plans will require the United States to alter the stringent vetting procedures used for the previous training program, which subjected trainees to multiple rounds of screening before they could be brought to Turkey or Jordan for training by U.S. service members.

The new approach was proposed by the U.S. Central Command last month and was approved by President Obama in meetings with his top national security staff late last week.

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