(Reuters) - Turkey has agreed to support the training and equipping of moderate opposition groups in Syria,
the U.S. State Department said on Friday, saying a U.S. military
planning team would visit Ankara next week to further talks on the
matter. "Turkey
has agreed to support train-and-equip efforts for the moderate Syrian
opposition," spokeswoman Marie Harf told reporters in describing talks
on Thursday between U.S. and Turkish officials in Ankara. "There
will be a (U.S. Defense Department) planning team traveling to Ankara
next week to continue planning that through military channels," she
added. Retired U.S.
General John Allen and deputy envoy Brett McGurk, who are responsible
for building a coalition to fight Islamic State militants in Syria and Iraq, traveled to Turkey to press officials to play a bigger role in the fight. The
issue boiled to a head this week after Islamic State fighters closed in
on the Syrian border town of Kobani. By Friday more than a third of
Kobani had been occupied and the U.N. warned that thousands of people
"will most likely be massacred" if Kobani falls. Harf
said the indications were that the number of civilians in and around
Kobani "remains low" with most having fled into Turkey over the last
three weeks. "We know there’s a very dire situation there, but we think the number remains low," Harf said. "It’s difficult to ascertain." Ankara
resents suggestions from Washington that it is not pulling its weight
and wants broader joint actions that also target the forces of Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad. Harf
said Turkey could be helpful "in a number of ways not just direct
military action." While declining to give details, she said discussions
have included whether Turkey could commit ground troops to the fight.
Turkey to support training, equipping Syrian opposition: U.S.

Reuters
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