CIA Expands Role in Syria  Fight

_http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324373204578376591874909434.h
tml?mod=djemITP_h

_ 
(http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324373204578376591874909434.html?mod=djemITP_h)
 
Agency Feeds Intelligence to Rebel Fighters, in  Move That Deepens U.S. 
Involvement in Conflict 


By ADAM ENTOUS, SIOBHAN GORMAN and NOUR MALAS Wall Street  Journal
 
March 22, 2013


The Central  Intelligence Agency is expanding its role in the campaign 
against the Syrian  regime by feeding intelligence to select rebel fighters to 
use against  government forces, current and former U.S. officials said.

The move is  part of a U.S. effort to stem the rise of Islamist extremists 
in Syria by aiding  secular forces, U.S. officials said, amid fears that the 
fall of President  Bashar al-Assad would enable al Qaeda to flourish in 
Syria.

_Enlarge  Image_ (mip://0bf14c58/default.html??) 
 (mip://0bf14c58/default.html??) 
 (mip://0bf14c58/default.html??) 
Reuters/Giath Taha

Demonstrators chant and wave opposition flags during a protest of  Syrian 
President Bashar al-Assad Friday.

The expanded CIA role bolsters  an effort by Western intelligence agencies 
to support the Syrian opposition with  training in areas including weapons 
use, urban combat and countering spying by  the regime.

The move comes as the al Nusra Front, the main al  Qaeda-linked group 
operating in Syria, is deepening its ties to the terrorist  organization's 
central leadership in Pakistan, according to U.S.  counterterrorism officials.

The provision of actionable intelligence to  small rebel units which have 
been vetted by the CIA represents an increase in  U.S. involvement in the 
two-year-old conflict, the officials said. The CIA would  neither confirm nor 
deny any role in providing training or intelligence to the  Syrian rebels.

The new aid to rebels doesn't change the U.S. decision to not take  direct 
military action. President _Barack Obama_ 
(http://topics.wsj.com/person/O/Barack-Obama/4328)  last year rejected a  
CIA-backed proposal to provide arms 
to secular units fighting Mr. Assad, and on  Friday he reiterated his 
argument that doing so could worsen the  bloodshed.

He also warned that Mr. Assad's fall could empower extremists.  "I am very 
concerned about Syria becoming an enclave for extremism because  extremists 
thrive in chaos, they thrive in failed states, they thrive in power  
vacuums," Mr. Obama said at a news conference in Amman, Jordan.

The new  CIA effort reflects a change in the administration's approach that 
aims to  strengthen secular rebel fighters in hope of influencing which 
groups dominate  in post-Assad Syria, U.S., European and Arab officials said.

The CIA has  sent officers to Turkey to help vet rebels that receive arms 
shipments from Gulf  allies, but administration officials say the results 
have been mixed, citing  concerns about weapons going to Islamists. In Iraq, 
the CIA has been directed by  the White House to work with elite 
counterterrorism units to help the Iraqis  counter the flow of al Qaeda-linked 
fighters 
across the border with  Syria.

The West favors fighters aligned with the Free Syrian Army, which  supports 
the Syrian Opposition Coalition political group.

Syrian  opposition commanders said the CIA has been working with British, 
French and  Jordanian intelligence services to train rebels on the use of 
various kinds of  weapons. A senior Western official said the intelligence 
agencies are providing  the rebels with urban combat training as well as 
teaching them how to properly  use antitank weapons against Syrian bunkers.

The agencies are also  teaching counterintelligence tactics to help prevent 
pro-Assad agents from  infiltrating the opposition, the official said.

Among other U.S.  activities on the margins of the conflict, the Pentagon 
is helping train  Jordanian forces to counter the threat posed by Syria's 
chemical weapons, but  isn't working directly with rebels, defense officials 
say.

The extent of  the CIA effort to provide intelligence to Syrian rebels 
remains cloaked in  secrecy. The U.S. has an array of intelligence capabilities 
in the region,  mainly on the periphery of the conflict.

The U.S. uses satellites and  other surveillance systems to collect 
intelligence on Syrian troop and aircraft  movements as well as weapons depots. 
Officials say powerful radar arrays in  Turkey are likewise used to track 
Syrian ballistic missiles and can pinpoint  launch sites.

The U.S. also relies on Israeli and Jordanian spy agencies,  which have 
extensive spy networks inside Syria, U.S. and European officials  said.

The current level of intelligence sharing is limited in scope  because the 
CIA doesn't know whether it can fully trust fighters with the most  
sensitive types of information, several U.S. and European officials said. The  
CIA, 
for example, isn't sharing information on where U.S. and Israeli  
intelligence agencies believe the Syrian government keeps its chemical weapons, 
 
officials said.

Rebel leaders and some U.S. lawmakers say more robust  U.S. support is 
needed to turn the tide in the civil war. These officials say  the CIA's 
current 
role comes as too little, too late to make a decisive  difference in the 
war.

In a letter to Mr. Obama this week, Senate Armed  Services Committee 
Chairman Carl Levin, a Michigan Democrat, joined Republican  Sen. John McCain 
of 
Arizona in calling for the president to take "more active  steps to stop the 
killing in Syria and force Bashar al-Assad to give up  power."

Sens. Levin and McCain urged the White House to consider using  precision 
airstrikes to take out Mr. Assad's air force and Scud missile  batteries, 
among other military options.

The CIA got a green light from  the White House last year to look for ways 
to provide limited support to the  rebels, current and former officials 
said. But officials say the ramp-up has  been slow, in part because of the 
difficulty of identifying reliable partners  among the Syrian opposition to 
work 
with the U.S.

A senior U.S. official  said the decision to provide actionable 
intelligence to vetted rebel units  "shows that we're working on the 
humanitarian level 
and the diplomatic level and  on the intelligence level."

"This would be a more direct level of  engagement on the intelligence 
front," the official added.

Officials said  one of the advantages of providing actionable intelligence 
to rebel units is  that such information is generally of operational use for 
a limited period  because would-be targets move around the battlefield.

Arms, in contrast,  can be used for years and passed between groups, 
reducing U.S. control over  where they end up.

The shift in part reflects growing Israeli concerns  about the limited 
ability of the U.S. to shape the outcome in Syria. In recent  months, Israeli 
officials have privately pressed their European and American  counterparts to 
strengthen secular forces in Syria because of concerns that the  al Nusra 
Front will become more entrenched the longer the civil war drags on,  
according to Israeli and European officials.

Israeli officials are  concerned that the U.S. reluctance to more directly 
intervene will limit  Washington's leverage in a post-Assad Syria. "Israel 
would welcome America's  influence in shaping the post-Assad Syria" said a 
senior Israeli official  involved in deliberations on the neighboring Arab 
country.

U.S. and  European officials said they fear that the al Nusra Front, which 
has seized  control of swaths of northern Syria, could dominate the country 
once Mr. Assad  falls.

U.S. counterterrorism officials said they have seen a growth in  
communications among operatives from al Nusra Front, al Qaeda in Iraq and al  
Qaeda's 
central leadership in Pakistan. Officials also report growing numbers of  al 
Qaeda fighters traveling from Pakistan to Syria to join the fight with al  
Nusra.

The ties to al Qaeda's central operations have become so  significant that 
U.S. counterterrorism officials are debating whether al Nusra  should now be 
considered its own al Qaeda affiliate instead of an offshoot of al  Qaeda 
in Iraq, as it has generally been viewed within the U.S. government,  
according to a person familiar with the debate.

Al Nusra is "an  organization that resembles an army more than a quaint 
little terrorist group,"  said Seth Jones, an al Qaeda specialist at the Rand C
orp. think tank in  Washington. "As this war drags on against Assad and as 
long as they are able to  build up their capabilities, it's going to make it 
all the more harder to target  them once the regime falls."

Write to Adam Entous at [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) 
, Siobhan Gorman at_siobhan_ (mailto:[email protected])  
[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  and Nour Malas at 
[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) 

A  version of this article appeared March 23, 2013, on page A1 in the U.S. 
edition  of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: CIA Expands Role in 
Syria  Fight.



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