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From: "walterlx" <[email protected]>
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Date: Thu, 21 Jun 2012 13:21:19 
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Subject: [CubaNews] NYT: C.I.A. Said to Aid in Steering Arms to Syrian 
Opposition

THE NEW YORK TIMES
June 21, 2012
C.I.A. Said to Aid in Steering Arms to Syrian Opposition
By ERIC SCHMITT

WASHINGTON — A small number of C.I.A. officers are operating secretly in 
southern Turkey, helping allies decide which Syrian opposition fighters across 
the border will receive arms to fight the Syrian government, according to 
American officials and Arab intelligence officers.

The weapons, including automatic rifles, rocket-propelled grenades, ammunition 
and some antitank weapons, are being funneled mostly across the Turkish border 
by way of a shadowy network of intermediaries including Syria's Muslim 
Brotherhood and paid for by Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, the officials said.

The C.I.A. officers have been in southern Turkey for several weeks, in part to 
help keep weapons out of the hands of fighters allied with Al Qaeda or other 
terrorist groups, one senior American official said. The Obama administration 
has said it is not providing arms to the rebels, but it has also acknowledged 
that Syria's neighbors would do so.

The clandestine intelligence-gathering effort is the most detailed known 
instance of the limited American support for the military campaign against the 
Syrian government. It is also part of Washington's attempt to increase the 
pressure on President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, who has recently escalated his 
government's deadly crackdown on civilians and the militias battling his rule. 
With Russia blocking more aggressive steps against the Assad government, the 
United States and its allies have instead turned to diplomacy and aiding allied 
efforts to arm the rebels to force Mr. Assad from power.

By helping to vet rebel groups, American intelligence operatives in Turkey hope 
to learn more about a growing, changing opposition network inside of Syria and 
to establish new ties. "C.I.A. officers are there and they are trying to make 
new sources and recruit people," said one Arab intelligence official who is 
briefed regularly by American counterparts.

American officials and retired C.I.A. officials said the administration was 
also weighing additional assistance to rebels, like providing satellite imagery 
and other detailed intelligence on Syrian troop locations and movements. The 
administration is also considering whether to help the opposition set up a 
rudimentary intelligence service. But no decisions have been made on those 
measures or even more aggressive steps, like sending C.I.A. officers into Syria 
itself, they said.

The struggle inside Syria has the potential to intensify significantly in 
coming months as powerful new weapons are flowing to both the Syrian government 
and opposition fighters. President Obama and his top aides are seeking to 
pressure Russia to curb arms shipments like attack helicopters to Syria, its 
main ally in the Middle East.

"We'd like to see arms sales to the Assad regime come to an end, because we 
believe they've demonstrated that they will only use their military against 
their own civilian population," Benjamin J. Rhodes, deputy national security 
adviser for strategic communications, said after Mr. Obama and his Russian 
counterpart, Vladimir V. Putin, met in Mexico on Monday.

Spokesmen for the White House, State Department and C.I.A. would not comment on 
any intelligence operations supporting the Syrian rebels, some details of which 
were reported last week by The Wall Street Journal.

Until now, the public face of the administration's Syria policy has largely 
been diplomacy and humanitarian aid.

The State Department said Wednesday that Secretary of State Hillary Rodham 
Clinton would meet with her Russian counterpart, Sergey V. Lavrov, on the 
sidelines of a meeting of Asia-Pacific foreign ministers in St. Petersburg, 
Russia, next Thursday. The private talks are likely to focus, at least in part, 
on the crisis in Syria.

The State Department has authorized $15 million in nonlethal aid, like medical 
supplies and communications equipment, to civilian opposition groups in Syria.

The Pentagon continues to fine-tune a range of military options, after a 
request from Mr. Obama in early March for such contingency planning. Gen. 
Martin E. Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told senators at 
that time that the options under review included humanitarian airlifts, aerial 
surveillance of the Syrian military, and the establishment of a no-fly zone.

The military has also drawn up plans for how coalition troops would secure 
Syria's sizable stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons if an all-out 
civil war threatened their security.

But senior administration officials have underscored in recent days that they 
are not actively considering military options. "Anything at this point 
vis-à-vis Syria would be hypothetical in the extreme," General Dempsey told 
reporters this month.

What has changed since March is an influx of weapons and ammunition to the 
rebels. The increasingly fierce air and artillery assaults by the government 
are intended to counter improved coordination, tactics and weaponry among the 
opposition forces, according to members of the Syrian National Council and 
other activists.

Last month, these activists said, Turkish Army vehicles delivered antitank 
weaponry to the border, where it was then smuggled into Syria. Turkey has 
repeatedly denied it was extending anything other than humanitarian aid to the 
opposition, mostly via refugee camps near the border. The United States, these 
activists said, was consulted about these weapons transfers.

American military analysts offered mixed opinions on whether these arms have 
offset the advantages held by the militarily superior Syrian Army. "The rebels 
are starting to crack the code on how to take out tanks," said Joseph Holliday, 
a former United States Army intelligence officer in Afghanistan who is now a 
researcher tracking the Free Syrian Army for the Institute for the Study of War 
in Washington.

But a senior American officer who receives classified intelligence reports from 
the region, compared the rebels' arms to "peashooters" against the government's 
heavy weaponry and attack helicopters.

The Syrian National Council, the main opposition group in exile, has recently 
begun trying to organize the scattered, localized units that all fight under 
the name of the Free Syrian Army into a more cohesive force.

About 10 military coordinating councils in provinces across the country are now 
sharing tactics and other information. The city of Homs is the notable 
exception. It lacks such a council because the three main military groups in 
the city do not get along, national council officials said.

Jeffrey White, a defense analyst at the Washington Institute for Near East 
Policy who tracks videos and announcements from self-described rebel 
battalions, said there were now about 100 rebel formations, up from roughly 70 
two months ago, ranging in size from a handful of fighters to a couple of 
hundred combatants.

"When the regime wants to go someplace and puts the right package of forces 
together, it can do it," Mr. White said. "But the opposition is raising the 
cost of those kinds of operations."

Neil MacFarquhar contributed reporting from Beirut, Lebanon. Souad Mekhennet 
also contributed reporting.





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