Some U.S. allies in the fight against Islamic State militants in Syria may be willing to send troops to accompany and support the Syrian opposition force the coalition is planning to train and send back to Syria, Army General Ray Odierno said on Wednesday. Odierno, the U.S. Army
chief of staff, told the Senate Armed Services Committee the military
was aware the Syrian opposition force would need help and support once
it returned home and was studying how best to provide that assistance. Asked
whether forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad might
immediately try to wipe out the coalition-trained opposition, Odierno
said the allies would be cautious about where the troops were inserted
and what operations they initially undertook. "As
we look at employing those forces once they're trained, I think we've
got to be very careful about how we do that," Odierno said. "I think we
would work with ... some of our allies that might be able to put some
people in there with them." "We'd
be very careful in where we place them and what their initial missions
would be as they continue to develop capability," he added. "I also
believe there would be some enabler support that would be necessary in
order to help them." Odierno
did not specify what type of enablers might be necessary. The word is
often used to refer to troops who do intelligence or surveillance,
medical evacuation, communications and other jobs that support combat
operations. The Army chief
said that since the purpose of the opposition force was to confront
Islamic State militants, the allies would make an effort initially to
place it in a location where it was not likely to come under attack from
Assad's military. The
U.S. military last month began vetting Syrian opposition members to
identify candidates to receive military training at camps being set up
in up to four countries across the region. The allies have identified about 2,000 Syrian opposition candidates for the training so far, a Pentagon spokeswoman said. About
400 have progressed through the first stage of vetting, which involves
compiling biographical data. The final stage is a full biometric
screening, she said. The full vetting process takes about six weeks. Coalition
partners hope to train 5,000 to 5,500 Syrian opposition members per
year, beginning small with about 200 to 300 trainees per group. (Reuters)
Some U.S. allies may send troops to Syria with trainees: Army chief

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