WASHINGTON: Syria’s Al-Qaeda affiliate Nusra Front abducted
five more rebels believed to have been trained by the United States after raiding areas along the
Turkish border in the past 24 hours, a monitoring group said Tuesday.
The
British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the militant group was now holding a total of
13 men from “Division 30,” a Syrian rebel unit that includes some fighters recently trained by the
U.S. military.
It was not immediately clear whether the five men abducted
overnight had been on the new U.S. military training programme or on an existing, separate CIA-led
program.
On Friday, Nusra Front said in a statement it had detained a
number of Syrian rebels trained by the United States and warned any others they should abandon the
program.
The Pentagon said at the time that no members of an initial group
of around 60 U.S.-trained rebels had been abducted.
However, a U.S.
official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Tuesday that the United States believes that at
least five Syrian rebels who were trained by the U.S. military have been captured by the Nusra
Front.Details surrounding the capture of the U.S.-trained fighters were still unclear, including the
precise timing.
Two U.S. defense officials said it took place in the days
after Friday’s attack by Nusra against some of the U.S.-trained Syrian rebels and the
Western-aligned Syrian opposition force they hailed from, known as Division
30.
Reuters has reported that one of the U.S.-trained Syrian fighters was
killed in Friday’s attack. It was the first known battlefield casualty of the U.S. military’s
program, which was launched in May and only fielded its first recruits in recent
weeks.
The U.S. military’s training program has been challenged from the
start, with many candidates being declared ineligible and some even dropping
out.
U.S. President Barack Obama’s requirement that they target militants
from ISIS has sidelined huge segments of the Syrian opposition, which is focusing instead on
battling Syrian government forces. Only around 60 have been deployed to the battlefield so
far.
The Pentagon, which had last week offered assurances that none of the
U.S.-trained Syrian fighters had been captured, declined to publicly provide those assurances
Monday. It also would not comment on the status of the U.S.-trained
fighters.
“We’re not in a position to be able to provide you tactical
details,” spokesman Capt. Jeff Davis told a news briefing, while acknowledging “developments” since
the Pentagon’s assurances last week.
Davis said the United States remained
committed to defending the Syrian fighters, including against the threat from Nusra Front, noting
that the U.S. used airstrikes to help repel the attack by suspected Nusra Front fighters
Friday.
The U.S. administration Monday said it was prepared to take
“additional steps” to defend the U.S.-trained forces, warning President Bashar Assad’s regime “not
to interfere.”
A U.S.-led coalition has provided air support for Kurdish
and rebel militia fighting ISIS since September 2014, but has not struck regime
positions.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Assad’s regime could be
targeted if it attacked the new U.S.-backed forces. The United States, Earnest said, was “committed
to using military force where necessary to protect the coalition-trained and equipped Syrian
opposition fighters.”
There was no official reaction from the Syrian
government Tuesday, but a political figure close to the regime told AFP that the U.S. had “relayed a
message to Damascus not to worry about these statements.”
“It’s about
hitting Al-Nusra hard, not the Syrian army,” he said.
Syrian Foreign
Minister Walid al-Moallem arrived in Tehran Tuesday for talks with officials from allies Iran and
Russia that are expected to focus on efforts to end the civil war in his
country.
He was due to meet Mikhail Bogdanov, Russian President Vladimir
Putin’s special envoy to the Middle East, later Tuesday evening before holding talks with Iranian
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif Wednesday, Iranian media
reported.
Speaking about Moualem’s visit, Iranian deputy foreign minister
Hossein Amir-Abdollahian suggested the chances of a diplomatic resolution of the war were growing.
“Fortunately we see a change in the strategy of regional players in the Syrian crisis. If four years
ago they believed war is the only solution, now they prefer to focus on diplomacy,” he was quoted as
saying by Fars News Agency.
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