Chicago Sun-Times

U. S. ends $ 500M plan to train Syrian rebels

Trainees undependab­le; Pentagon turns to tribal groups

- Jim Michaels

The Pentagon is overhaulin­g its faltering program to train a moderate Syrian rebel force to battle the Islamic State, shifting instead to a plan to provide arms and equipment to tribal and other forces, the Pentagon announced Friday.

The Pentagon’s $ 500 million training plan has fallen far short of its initial goal of training 5,400 rebels a year. Instead, only a handful of U. S. military trained rebels made it into Syria since the program got underway this year.

The first Pentagon- trained team to make it into Syria this summer came under attack by an al- Qaeda affiliate in Syria and dispersed. The second team handed over some U. S.- supplied arms and equipment to the same terror group.

The Pentagon suspended the movement of recruits out of Syria to the U. S. training centers in the region, noting problems with the program.

“I’m the first one to acknowledg­e it has not worked theway itwas supposed to,” President Obama said last week. Obama attributed the difficulti­es to getting the rebels to focus on fighting the Islamic State instead of the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

The new program will be aimed at training small cadres of rebels who can embed in forces already fighting the Islamic State, particular­ly in areas around Raqqa, Syria, the militants’ de facto capital, and other parts of northern Syria, an Obama administra­tion of- ficial with knowledge of the plan told USA TODAY. These cadres could help coordinate airstrikes, which would still need to be vetted through the U. S. chain of command.

The official, who asked not to be named because he was not authorized to discuss details of the program, did not know whether the Pentagon would provide arms to the rebel forces.

The Pentagon said the U. S. military would support a “select group of vetted leaders and their units.”

“This focusing on equipping and enabling will allow us to reinforce the progress already made in countering ISIL in Syria,” its announceme­nt said, using an acronym for the Islamic State.

The aim is to support Arab forces who would capitalize on progress made by Kurds in northern Syria. The Kurds have been effective in their hometowns, but using them in areas outside their control could be counterpro­ductive.

 ?? ABD DOUMANY, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Smoke billows from the Syrian rebelheld area of Douma on Sept. 14 after a reported airstrike.
ABD DOUMANY, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Smoke billows from the Syrian rebelheld area of Douma on Sept. 14 after a reported airstrike.

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