The camp, south of the
capital between Saudi Arabia's border and Al Udeid, the largest U.S.
air base in the Middle East, is being used to train the Free Syrian Army
(FSA) and other moderate rebels, the sources said. Reuters
could not independently identify the participants in the program or
witness activity inside the base, which lies in a military zone guarded
by Qatari special forces and marked on signposts as a restricted area. But Syrian rebel sources said training in Qatar has included rebels affiliated to the “Free Syrian Army” from northern Syria. The
sources said the effort had been running for nearly a year, although it
was too small to have a significant impact on the battlefield, and some
rebels complained of not being taught advanced techniques. The
training is in line with Qatar's self-image as a champion of Arab
Spring uprisings and Doha has made no secret of its hatred of Assad. Small groups of 12 to 20 fighters are identified in Syria and screened by the Central Intelligence Agency, the sources said. Once cleared of links with "terrorist" factions, they travel to Turkey and are then flown to Doha and driven to the base. GROUND FORCE "The
U.S. wanted to help the rebels oust Assad but didn't want to be open
about their support, so to have rebels trained in Qatar is a good idea,
the problem is the scale is too small," said a Western source in Doha. The CIA declined to comment, as did Qatar's foreign ministry and an FSA spokesman in Turkey. It
is not clear whether the Qatari program is coordinated with a strategy
of Western and Gulf countries to turn disparate non-Islamist rebel
groups into a force to combat the militants. Such
efforts have been hampered by Western hesitancy about providing
significant military aid, because it could end up with extremists. Gulf
states dislike the West's emphasis on fighting Islamic State. Assad is
the bigger problem, they say. "Moderate
rebels from the FSA and other groups have been flown in to get trained
in things like ambush techniques," said a source close to the Qatari
government who asked not to be named due to the sensitivity of the
topic. "The training
would last a few months, maybe two or three, and then a new group would
be flown in, but no lethal weapons were supplied to them," one of the
sources said. SCREENING PROCESS As
the war against Assad has dragged on, frustrated rebels asked their
trainers for more advanced techniques, such as building improvised
explosive devices (IEDs), requests which were always denied. "They
complain a lot and say that going back they need more weapons or more
training in IEDs but that's not something that's given to them," said a
Qatar-based defense source. The
Qatar project was conceived before the declaration of the hardline
Islamic State, when militants belonging to its predecessor organization
were not regarded as an international security threat. The group's rise in Syria and Iraq
has hampered the rebellion: Moderate groups cannot fight Assad when the
better-armed Islamic State seeks their destruction as it strives to
build its "caliphate". In
recent weeks, the Qataris, disappointed by lack of progress in the fight
against Assad, have started to consider training members of the Islamic
Front, a coalition of Islamist rebels less militant than Islamic State
or the al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front, but stronger than the FSA. None have been trained as yet, but Qatar has sought to identify candidates, the sources say. Some
analysts say screening Islamic Front fighters would be harder than FSA
rebels, since some Islamists have switched between various groups. ISLAMIST NETWORK Training
fighters from Islamic groups could displease fellow Gulf state the
United Arab Emirates, which dislikes Qatar's support for the Muslim
Brotherhood's international Islamist network. But Saudi Arabia,
which shares the UAE's mistrust of the Brotherhood, is more indulgent
of moderate Islamist forces when it comes to fighting Assad, diplomats
say. Asked about the
Qatari training, a Saudi defense source said: "We are not aware of this
training camp, but there's one thing we agree on: Assad needs to go and
we would not oppose any action taken towards that goal." To
Qatar, ousting Assad remains a priority and youthful Emir Sheikh Tamim
has said that military efforts to tackle Islamic State will not work
while the Syrian president remains in power. A
source who works with rebel groups said Qatar had delivered weapons,
mostly mortar bombs, to the Islamic Front and some FSA brigades about
two months ago and had paid some salaries for Islamic Front groups.
(Reuters) - At a
desert base, Gulf state Qatar is covertly training moderate Syrian
rebels with U.S. help to fight both President Bashar al-Assad and
Islamic State and may include more overtly Islamist insurgent groups,
sources close to the matter say.
Qatar runs covert desert training camp for Syrian rebels
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