(Reuters) - The
U.S. House of Representatives votes on Wednesday on legislation to train
and arm moderate Syrian rebels, but questions remain over whether it
will give them the advanced weapons they say they need to defeat Islamic
State militants. The vote is a test of support within President Barack Obama's own party for his stepped-up campaign to "degrade and destroy" Islamic State fighters who have seized a third of both Iraq and Syria, declared war on the West and seek to establish a caliphate in the heart of the Middle East. The
spending-bill amendment is widely expected to pass, backed by both
Democrats and Republicans later on Wednesday. It is also expected to
pass the Senate later this week. Facing
resistance by war-weary lawmakers in Obama's Democratic party, the
administration has reached across the aisle to Republicans for crucial
support, a rare bipartisan moment in an otherwise polarized Congress. Ohio
Representative John Boehner, the Republican House speaker, and Kentucky
Senator Mitch McConnell, the top Republican in the Senate, both say
they will back the authorization, which lasts only until Dec. 11, the
day the spending bill also expires. The
amendment does not provide details about the training plan, prompting
lawmakers to fear that a "yes" vote could mean authorizing shipments of
military equipment that might end up in the wrong hands and possibly
even kill Americans. "I'm
not confident we know who our allies are," West Virginia Democratic
Senator Joe Manchin, said in a Senate speech on Wednesday to explain why
he opposed the training effort. The
amendment does not include $500 million the White House says it needs
to arm and train the rebels. It is intended to quickly provide the
authority Obama wants while avoiding a debate on the money. A
significant part of Obama’s plan hinges on congressional approval of
the plan to train and equip Free Syrian Army rebels to "strengthen the
opposition as the best counterweight to the extremists," as Obama put it
in a speech on Sept. 11 and to prevent U.S. troops from "being dragged
into another ground war." Fears
that U.S. troops could be dragged into the conflict were fanned on
Tuesday by General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the U.S. military's Joint
Chiefs of Staff, who raised the possibility that American troops might
need to take on a larger role in Iraq's ground war. 'NONE OF THIS IS PERFECT' If
passed, the bill would allow the Pentagon to later submit requests to
shift funds within the budget if it decides it needs funds to pay for
the program. Defense
officials have said they expect to recruit and train about 5,000 of the
moderate rebel fighters, many of whom have been waging a three-year-old
civil war against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. U.S.
military officials say there is support within the Pentagon for
supplying the rebels with weapons beyond small arms and ammunition,
including battlefield artillery, anti-tank rockets and mortars. That creates a quandary for the United States. The
administration has resisted providing powerful weapons requested by the
rebels such as surface-to-air missiles for fear they could be captured
or used against the United States or its allies. Should that happen,
lawmakers fear being portrayed as authorizing a bill that ultimately
helped to kill Americans.
But should the bill provide the rebels with just small arms and
ammunition, as originally envisioned earlier this year, lawmakers could
be open to accusations they supported legislation that made no
difference on the battlefield and was well short of what the rebels
needed. Republican
Representative Tom Cole of Oklahoma, a member of the House Defense
appropriations subcommittee, said the program could start with small
arms and then possibly graduate to heavier weapons, such as "armored
personnel carriers, artillery, real air defense capability" but declined
to say whether such plans had been discussed in classified briefings. "None
of this is perfect," said Senator Claire McCaskill, a Missouri Democrat
and senior member of the Senate Armed Services Committee. "This is all
hard, and this is a bad choice among even worse choices. All of those
people who are criticizing this choice, I have yet to hear their better
idea."
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