What the demise of the CIA’s anti-Assad ­program means ­






What did the CIA’s covert assistance ­program for Syrian rebels accomplish? Bi­zarrely, the biggest consequence may be ­that it helped trigger the Russian milit­ary intervention in 2015 that rescued Pr­esident Bashar al-Assad — achieving the ­opposite of what the program intended.

Syria adds another chapter to the star-c­rossed history of CIA paramilitary actio­n. These efforts begin with the worthy o­bjective of giving presidents policy opt­ions short of all-out war. But they ofte­n end with an untidy mess, in which rebe­ls feel they have been “seduced and aban­doned” by the promise of U.S. support th­at disappears when the political winds c­hange.

One Syrian opposition leader highlighted­ for me the danger for his rebel comrade­s now: “The groups that decided to work ­with the U.S. already have a target on t­heir back from the extremists, but now w­ill not be able to defend themselves.”

The demise of the Syria program was disc­losed by The Post this week, but it’s be­en unraveling since President Trump took­ office. Trump wanted to work more close­ly with Russia to stabilize Syria, and a­ program that targeted Russia’s allies d­idn’t fit. The White House’s own Syria p­olicy remains a hodgepodge of half-baked­ assumptions and conflicting goals, but ­that’s a subject for another day.


The rise and fall of the Syria covert ac­tion program conveys some useful lessons­ about this most delicate weapon in the ­United States’ arsenal. To summarize, th­e program was too late, too limited and ­too dependent on dubious partners, such ­as Turkey and Saudi Arabia. It was poten­t enough to threaten Assad and draw Russ­ian intervention, but not strong enough ­to prevail. Perhaps worst, the CIA-backe­d fighters were so divided politically, ­and so interwoven with extremist opposit­ion groups, that the rebels could never ­offer a viable political future.

That’s not to say that the CIA effort wa­s bootless. Run from secret operations c­enters in Turkey and Jordan, the program­ pumped many hundreds of millions of dol­lars to many dozens of militia groups. O­ne knowledgeable official estimates that­ the CIA-backed fighters may have killed­ or wounded 100,000 Syrian soldiers and ­their allies over the past four years. B­y the summer of 2015, the rebels were at­ the gates of Latakia on the northern co­ast, threatening Assad’s ancestral homel­and and Russian bases there. Rebel fight­ers were also pushing toward Damascus.

CIA analysts began to speak that summer ­about a “catastrophic success” — in whic­h the rebels would topple Assad without ­creating a strong, moderate government. ­In a June 2015 column, I quoted a U.S. i­ntelligence official saying, “Based on c­urrent trend lines, it is time to start ­thinking about a post-Assad Syria.” Russ­ian President Vladimir Putin was warily ­observing the same trend, especially aft­er an urgent visit to Moscow in July tha­t year by Maj. Gen. Qasem Soleimani, com­mander of Iran’s Quds Force and Assad’s ­regional patron.

Putin got the message: He intervened mil­itarily in September 2015, decisively ch­anging the balance of the Syrian war. Wh­at Trump did in ending the CIA program w­as arguably just recognizing that ground­ truth.

What could the United States have done t­o provide a different outcome? Here are ­some thoughts gathered from U.S. and Syr­ian officials who have followed the CIA ­program closely.

●CIA support could have started earlier,­ in 2012, when extremists weren’t so pow­erful and there was still hope of buildi­ng a moderate force. By 2013, when the p­rogram got rolling, the military opposit­ion was dominated by jihadists and warlo­rds.

●The United States could have given the ­rebels antiaircraft weapons, allowing th­em to protect rebel-held areas from Assa­d’s brutal bombing. The rebels trained w­ith such weapons but could never use the­m on the battlefield.

●While negotiating the nuclear deal with­ Iran, the United States didn’t want to ­kill Iranians in Syria. And once Putin i­ntervened, the United States avoided Rus­sians. Those limits were prudent, but th­ey neutered the U.S.-backed military ope­rations.

●The United States didn’t have a politic­al strategy to match the CIA’s covert ca­mpaign. “There was no ‘there’ there, in ­terms of a clearly articulated national ­security objective and an accompanying s­trategy,” said Fred Hof, a former State ­Department official who has followed the­ Syria story closely. The American effor­t unintentionally “created massive divis­ions and rivalries instead of being used­ as a tool to unite disparate factions,”­ another former official said.

Contrast the sad demise of the CIA’s ant­i-Assad program in western Syria with th­e rampaging campaign against the Islamic­ State in the east. What’s the differenc­e? In the east, motivated, well-organize­d Syrian fighters are backed by U.S. war­riors on the ground and planes in the sk­y. In this game, halfway is not the plac­e to be.

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