(Reuters) - The United States and Turkey
have reached a tentative agreement to train and equip moderate Syrian
opposition fighters and expect to sign the pact soon, U.S. and Turkish
officials said on Tuesday with Ankara predicting a signing in days. The U.S. military has said it is planning to send more than 400 troops, including special operations forces, to train Syrian moderates at sites outside Syria as part of the fight against the Islamic State. Three U.S. officials, speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity, said the training could begin in mid-March. The
vetted Syrian fighters would be equipped with items including pickup
trucks with mounted machine guns, radios and global positioning system
trackers, the officials said. The
Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday that the radios and GPS
equipment would enable the fighters to call in airstrikes, but the
officials told Reuters no authority had yet been granted for them to do
so. U.S. officials have said they plan to train about 5,000 Syrian fighters a year for three years under the plan. Saudi Arabia and Qatar, as well as Turkey,
have publicly offered to host training sites. Reuters reported in
December that Jordan had also privately offered to host training. Turkey
hopes the training will also bolster the weakened and divided Syrian
opposition in their struggle against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. "Negotiations
have been concluded and an agreement text will be signed with the U.S.
regarding the training of the Free Syrian Army in the coming period,"
Turkish foreign ministry spokesman Tanju Bilgic said. "We
will share all the technical details ... when the text is signed, but
it is anticipated that this will happen in the coming days," he told
reporters in Ankara. In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki confirmed an agreement with Ankara in principle. "As we have announced before, Turkey
has agreed to be one of the regional hosts for the train-and-equip
program for moderate Syrian opposition forces. We expect to conclude and
sign the agreement with Turkey soon," Psaki told reporters. The Free Syrian Army is seen by Turkey
as a key actor in Syria's kaleidoscopic conflict, but the group has been
riven by divisions and suffered setbacks at the hands of government
forces and other rebel factions. A
deal between Ankara and Washington would be a positive development
between the two longstanding allies, despite strains over Middle Eastern
policy. Turkey wants Assad's departure to be the focus in Syria, while Washington's priority remains battling the Islamic State insurgents.
U.S., Turkey soon to sign Syrian opposition train-and-equip deal
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