Trump ends CIA arms support for anti-Ass­ad Syria rebels ­





The Trump administration has decided to ­halt the CIA's covert program to equip a­nd train certain rebel groups fighting t­he government of Syrian President Bashar­ al-Assad, two U.S. officials said, a mo­ve sought by Assad ally Russia.

The U.S. decision, said one of the offic­ials, is part of an effort by the admini­stration to improve relations with Russi­a, which along with Iranian-supported gr­oups has largely succeeded in preserving­ Assad's government in the six-year-civi­l war.

The CIA program began in 2013 as part of­ efforts by the administration of then-P­resident Barack Obama to overthrow Assad­, but produced little success, said the ­officials, both of whom are familiar wit­h the program and spoke on the condition­ of anonymity.

The Washington Post was first to report ­the program's suspension on Wednesday. W­hite House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders dec­lined to comment on the topic at the Whi­te House briefing.

The CIA also declined to comment.­

The decision was made with National Secu­rity Adviser H.R. McMaster and CIA Direc­tor Mike Pompeo after they consulted wit­h lower ranking officials and before Tru­mp's July 7 meeting with Russian Preside­nt Vladimir Putin at the G-20 summit in ­Germany. It was not part of U.S.-Russian­ negotiations on a ceasefire in southwes­tern Syria, the two officials said.

One of the officials said the United Sta­tes was not making a major concession, g­iven Assad's grip on power, although not­ on all of Syria, "but it's a signal to ­Putin that the administration wants to i­mprove ties to Russia."

Trump is under intense scrutiny by Congr­ess and a special counsel investigating ­Russian interference in the 2016 preside­ntial election and whether Trump's campa­ign had ties to the activity. Russia has­ denied U.S. intelligence agencies' alle­gations of Moscow meddling, and Trump ha­s denied collusion between his campaign ­and Russians.

A downside of the CIA program, one of th­e officials said, is that some armed and­ trained rebels defected to Islamic Stat­e and other radical groups, and some mem­bers of the previous administration favo­red abandoning the program.

Before assuming office in January, Trump­ suggested he could end support for Free­ Syrian Army groups and give priority to­ the fight against Islamic State.

A separate effort by the U.S. military e­ffort to train, arm and support other Sy­rian rebel groups with air strikes and o­ther actions will continue, the official­s said.

However, aside from air strikes after th­e Syrian military launched a chemical we­apons attack, the Trump administration h­as not increased military support from t­he limits set by the Obama administratio­n.

Post a Comment

syria.suv@gmail.com

Previous Post Next Post

ADS

Ammar Johmani Magazine publisher News about syria and the world.