(Reuters) - The
latest effort to unify the fractured Syrian military opposition has done
little to create a cohesive vehicle for foreign military aid that could
fight insurgents in Syria, after at least two major rebel groups dropped out of the initiative. The Revolutionary
Command Council (RCC), formed over the weekend, was meant to include
Islamist and more secular-minded groups while excluding hardliners Nusra
and Islamic State targeted by U.S.-led coalition air strikes since
September. Among the
RCC participants in an August statement of intent were the
Western-backed Harakat Hazm and Syrian Revolutionaries Front, which
Syrian opposition sources say have been vetted by the U.S. authorities
to receive military support. But
opposition sources said both groups found it too heavily dominated by
Islamists. The southern branch of the Syrian Revolutionaries Front
denied any link to the council. "When
we felt it was diverting from the principles of the revolution we
dropped out," a senior member of Harakat Hazm said on condition of
anonymity. The RCC, which
held its first meeting in the southern Turkish town of Gaziantep, never
made a public statement of its aims. Other opposition sources said
groups did not take the new body seriously. "I
went for the first day of the meeting in Gaziantep last week and left
right away," said one source declining to be named. "It's a waste of
time. They are not harmonized." Mainstream
rebels say the failure of the United States and its allies to support
them adequately has allowed groups such as Islamic State to dominate
after 3-1/2 years of war. The U.S.-led military coalition is looking for a credible ground force to help defeat Islamic State insurgents in Syria but wants to avoid strengthening the Syrian government and is wary of the splinters within the opposition. There
are at least two other projects underway, albeit at a nascent stage, to
create a credible, unified military opposition that could be supported
by foreign states. In
September, the United States approved a $500 million program to train
and arm vetted Syrian rebels but the Department of Defense program has
yet to start. The CIA
has also vetted opposition factions in an ostensibly covert program that
has excluded Islamist groups. The agency has declined to comment on the
program.
New Syrian opposition grouping fails to entice major rebel factions
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Reuters
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