The United States has announced that it has stopped its $500 million program to train and equip Syrian rebels to fight Islamic State militants in Syria. Administration officials acknowledged on Friday that the program had not been effective, according to the New York Times.
Pentagon officials are expected to officially announce the end of the program on Friday.
Meanwhile, AFP reported Friday that the Pentagon-run program was not being cancelled, but instead is being overhauled, according to US officials.
Speaking at a news conference in London, Defence Secretary Ashton Carter said he had been dissatisfied with the effort, which suffered disastrous blows in its early days.
"We have devised a number of different approaches... going forward," Carter said.
A senior US defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity, later said the program was being "refocused to enhance its effectiveness".........http://www.i24news.tv/en/news/international/88445-151009-us-abandons-program-to-train-syrian-rebels-to-fight-is
9/10/15
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Related:
Pentagon officials are expected to officially announce the end of the program on Friday.
Meanwhile, AFP reported Friday that the Pentagon-run program was not being cancelled, but instead is being overhauled, according to US officials.
Speaking at a news conference in London, Defence Secretary Ashton Carter said he had been dissatisfied with the effort, which suffered disastrous blows in its early days.
"We have devised a number of different approaches... going forward," Carter said.
A senior US defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity, later said the program was being "refocused to enhance its effectiveness".........http://www.i24news.tv/en/news/international/88445-151009-us-abandons-program-to-train-syrian-rebels-to-fight-is
9/10/15
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Related:
US-trained Syrian rebels gave equipment to al Qaeda affiliate
US military denies defection of Syria rebels
US-Trained Fighters Immediately Gave Weapons to al-Qaeda Affiliate in Syria
75 US-trained rebels enter Syria from Turkey (Monitor)
US to abandon training for new groups of Syrian rebels...
ReplyDeleteThe US is to end its efforts to train new Syrian rebel forces and says it will shift to providing equipment and weapons to existing forces.
Its $500m programme was heavily criticised after it emerged that US-trained rebels had handed vehicles and ammunition over to extremists.
It emerged last month that only four or five of the fighters were in Syria.
The Pentagon says help will now be provided to "a select group of vetted leaders and their units".
The programme had aimed to train and equip 5,400 fighters this year and a further 15,000 in 2016.
Of the initial two groups sent into the country, the first was rounded up by Jabhat al-Nusrah, an offshoot of Al-Qaeda, in July. The second handed much of its equipment over to the same group in September, reportedly in exchange for safe passage.
Quoting an anonymous Defence Department source, the New York Times reported that the US would no longer recruit Syrian rebels to go through its training programmes in Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia or the United Arab Emirates.
Instead it would establish a smaller training centre in Turkey, where "enablers" - mostly leaders of opposition groups - would be taught operational manoeuvres like how to call in airstrikes, the newspaper said......BBC
Les États-Unis en passe de modifier le programme d'entraînement des rebelles en Syrie....
ReplyDeleteLe programme américain de formation et d'équipement de rebelles syriens modérés, qui connaissait une pause depuis la fin du mois de septembre en raison de son inefficacité, devrait subir des changements notoires.
Les États-Unis promettent des changements pour le programme d'entraînement des rebelles syriens [qui avait démarré début mai 2015]. Devant l’insignifiance des résultats obtenus par l’armée américaine pour former des rebelles modérés en Syrie, Washington a décidé de revoir sa copie.
"Nous avons envisagé plusieurs options pour l'avenir", a déclaré vendredi 9 octobre, Ashton Carter, le secrétaire américain à la Défense, lors d'une conférence de presse avec son homologue britannique Michael Fallon. Barack Obama "va s'exprimer bientôt sur les propositions qu'il a approuvées", a-t-il poursuivi.
Le programme, suspendu depuis fin septembre en raison de son inefficacité, devrait être "recentré pour améliorer son efficacité", a laissé dire un haut-responsable américain, sous couvert d'anonymat.
Le programme "n'a pas fonctionné comme il aurait dû"
Le Pentagone avait en effet indiqué fin septembre que les États-Unis faisaient une "pause" dans ce programme, le temps de le réviser.
Lancé au début de l'année par les États-Unis, ce programme de formation et d'équipement, doté de 500 millions de dollars, devait concerner environ 5 000 rebelles syriens par an pour combattre en Syrie le groupe de l’organisation État islamique (EI).
Mais ses débuts ont été désastreux : il n'a pour l'instant permis de former que deux groupes de 54 et 70 combattants. Et en juillet, le premier groupe a été attaqué par Al-Nosra, la branche syrienne d'Al-Qaïda.
Le président Barack Obama avait lui-même avoué la semaine dernière que le programme était à la peine. "Je suis le premier à reconnaître qu'il n'a pas fonctionné comme il aurait dû", avait-t-il déclaré.
france24.com Avec AFP
8/10/15