US
Officials Start Talks on Arming Syria's Rebels
By BRADLEY KLAPPER
"AP" - WASHINGTON — The Obama administration began discussing Monday whether the Assad regime's rapid military advance across the heart of Syria necessitates a drastic U.S. response, with officials saying a decision on arming beleaguered rebels could happen later this week.
By BRADLEY KLAPPER
"AP" - WASHINGTON — The Obama administration began discussing Monday whether the Assad regime's rapid military advance across the heart of Syria necessitates a drastic U.S. response, with officials saying a decision on arming beleaguered rebels could happen later this week.
Top aides
from the State and Defense Departments, the CIA and other
agencies were gathering for a "deputies meeting" at the White
House on Monday afternoon. There, they'll seek to lay the
groundwork for a meeting that President Barack Obama will hold
with his senior national security staff, planned for Wednesday,
said U.S. officials, who weren't authorized to speak publicly on
the closed-doors talks and demanded anonymity.
Moved by
the Syrian regime's rapid advance, officials say the
administration could approve lethal aid for the rebels in the
coming days. The president and his advisers also will weigh the
merits of a less likely move to send in U.S. airpower to enforce
a no-fly zone over the civil war-wracked nation, officials said.
The White
House meetings are taking place as Syrian President Bashar
Assad's government forces are apparently poised for an attack on
the key city of Homs, which could cut off Syria's armed
opposition from the south of the country. As many as 5,000
Hezbollah fighters are now in Syria, officials believe, helping
the regime press on with its campaign after capturing the town
of Qusair near the Lebanese border last week.
Opposition
leaders have warned Washington that their rebellion could face
devastating and irreversible losses without greater support.
Secretary
of State John Kerry postponed a planned trip Monday to Israel
and three other Mideast countries to participate in White House
discussions, officials said. He may travel to the region later
in the week.
State
Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Monday that internal
administration discussions were focused on "helping the Syrian
opposition serve the essential needs of the Syrian people and
hasten a political transition."
White
House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama's Syria policy was under
constant review to find "what policy tools will help achieve our
goal, which is a transition in Syria to a post-Assad government
that respects the rights of the Syrian people and that gives
that country a chance for a better future, a democratic future
and an economically prosperous future."
While
nothing has been concretely decided, U.S. officials said Obama
was leaning closer toward signing off on sending weapons to
vetted, moderate rebel units. The U.S. has spoken of possibly
arming the opposition in recent months but has hesitated because
it doesn't want groups that are linked to al-Qaida and other
extremists fighting alongside the anti-Assad militias to end up
with the weapons.
Obama
already has ruled out any intervention that would require U.S.
military troops on the ground. Other options such as deploying
American air power to ground the regime's jets, gunships and
other aerial assets are being more seriously debated, officials
said, but they cautioned that a no-fly zone or any other action
involving U.S. military deployments in Syria were far less
likely right now. The U.S. can provide weapons without sending
soldiers into Syria, either by sending materiel to rebels in
neighboring Turkey and Jordan or working with regional allies.
The
president also has declared chemical weapons use by the Assad
regime a "red line" for more forceful U.S. action. American
allies including France and Britain have say they've determined
with near certitude that Syrian forces have used low levels of
sarin in several attacks, but the administration is still
studying the evidence. The U.S. officials said responses that
will be mulled over in this week's meetings concern the
deteriorating situation on the ground in Syria, independent of
final confirmation of possible chemical weapons use.
U.S.
lawmakers, particularly in the Senate, are clamoring for greater
action.
In a
letter to Obama on Monday, Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee, the
ranking Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations committee,
urged the president to start providing lethal aid as soon as
possible to "shift momentum away from radical Islamist groups,
the Assad regime and its militias toward more moderate
elements."
But Rep.
Adam Schiff, D-Calif., a member of House Intelligence committee,
said the U.S. shouldn't get drawn into the conflict. "We have a
poor track record of intervening in sectarian civil wars," he
said. "We need to be mindful of limitations in our ability to
shape the outcome and very resistant to being pulled in in a way
that we cannot later extricate ourselves very easily."
Any
intervention could have wide-reaching ramifications for the
United States and the region. It would bring the U.S. closer to
a conflict that has killed almost 80,000 people since Assad
cracked down on protesters inspired by the Arab Spring in March
2011 and sparked a war that has since been increasingly defined
by interethnic clashes between the Sunni-led rebellion and
Assad's Alawite-dominated regime.
And it
would essentially pit the United States alongside regional
allies Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Qatar in a proxy war against
Iran, which is providing much of the materiel to the Syrian
government's counterinsurgency and, through Hezbollah, more and
more of the manpower.
Syria's
precarious position in the heart of the Middle East makes the
conflict extremely unpredictable. Lebanon, across the western
border, suffered its own brutal civil war in the 1970s and the
1980s and is already experiencing increased interethnic
tensions. Iraq, to Syria's east, is mired in worsening violence.
And Israel to the southwest has seen shots fired across the
contested Golan Heights and has been forced to strike what it
claimed were advanced weapons convoys heading to Hezbollah, with
whom it went to war with in 2006.
At the
same time, it's unclear how Washington could fundamentally
change the trajectory of a conflict that has increasingly tilted
toward Assad in recent months without providing weapons to the
opposition forces or getting involved itself.
If the
regime seizes control of Homs, it would clear a path for it from
Damascus to the Mediterranean coast and firm up its grip on much
of the country.
___
Associated
Press writers Mathew Lee and Donna Cassata contributed to this
report.
No comments:
Post a Comment