(Reuters) - The
United States does not expect Syrian rebels it plans to train to fight
Islamic State militants to also take on President Bashar al-Assad's
forces, but sees them as a crucial part of a political solution to end
the war, a senior U.S. official said. The United States,
which is leading an international coalition bombing Islamic State in
Syria, has said it wants to train and equip "moderate" rebels to fight
the militant group which has seized tracts of land in Syria and
neighboring Iraq. Asked
whether those rebel Free Syrian Army (FSA) units would ultimately go on
to fight Syrian government forces, John Allen, the U.S. representative
to the coalition, told the Asharq al-Awsat daily: "No.
What we would like to see is for the FSA and the forces that we will
ultimately generate, train and equip to become the credible force that
the Assad government ultimately has to acknowledge and recognize." "There
is not going to be a military solution here," he added, in comments
published at the weekend on the newspaper's English language website. The
Free Syrian Army is a term used to describe dozens of armed groups
fighting to overthrow Assad but with little or no central command. They
have been widely outgunned by Islamist insurgents such as Islamic State. Rebel
fighters have voiced frustration with the U.S.-led approach to fighting
Islamic State. They say Washington and its Arab allies are too focused
on quashing the militant group at the expense of confronting Syrian
government forces, which many rebels still see as the ultimate enemy. The
Syrian air force has ramped up its own bombing campaign on
insurgent-held areas since the U.S-led air strikes began last month,
increasing rebel fears that the government is profiting from the
distraction of the coalition campaign. POLITICAL OUTCOME Allen
said there was a need to build up the credibility of the moderate
Syrian opposition at a political level, adding that it was normal for
rebel forces to clash with the Syrian military as they seek to defend
their territory and families. "But
the intent is not to create a field force to liberate Damascus — that
is not the intent," Allen, a retired U.S. general, told the newspaper. "The
intent is that in the political outcome, they must be a prominent -
perhaps the preeminent voice - at the table to ultimately contribute to
the political outcome that we seek," he said at the start of a Middle
East tour. U.S. President
Barack Obama said last month he wanted to train and equip Free Syrian
Army rebels to "strengthen the opposition as the best counterweight to
the extremists" and to prevent U.S. troops from being dragged into
another ground war. "The
outcome that we seek in Syria is akin to the (anti-Islamic State)
strategy that fits into a much larger regional strategy and that outcome
is a political outcome that does not include Assad," Allen said. The
United Nations says more than 191,000 people have been killed since the
start of the Syrian uprising against Assad's rule in 2011. Rights
groups say the actual figure is higher.
U.S. sees Syria rebels in political, not military solution
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Reuters
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