Pentagon
to deploy 400 troops to train Syrian rebels
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[January 16, 2015]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S.
military is planning to deploy more than 400 troops to help train Syrian
rebels to fight the Islamic State, along with hundreds of U.S. support
personnel, a Pentagon spokesman told Reuters on Thursday.
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The U.S. military has not yet identified where it will draw its
forces from for the training mission, expected to begin in the
spring at sites outside Syria, Colonel Steve Warren said. Turkey,
Qatar and Saudi Arabia have offered to host the training.
Warren did not offer additional details on the troop figures, first
reported by Defense One website.
The training program is a part of President Barack Obama's
multi-year plan to field local forces in Syria to halt and
eventually roll back Islamic State fighters, while pounding them
with U.S.-led airstrikes.
The Pentagon has estimated that it can train more than 5,000
recruits in the first year and that up to 15,000 will be needed to
retake areas of eastern Syria controlled by Islamic State.
Critics in Congress have said the Pentagon program won't aid Syrian
opposition forces fast enough, however, and question whether it is
too small to influence the course of Syria's multi-pronged civil war
between President Bashar al-Assad and his opponents.
Across the border in Iraq, Obama has authorized more than 3,000 U.S.
troops to advise and train Iraqi and Kurdish forces.
The disclosure of the planned troop deployments for the Syria
training mission came just days after senior U.S. officials met
Syrian opposition and civil society leaders in Istanbul to discuss
the program.
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U.S. Major General Michael Nagata, Combined Joint Interagency Task
Force - Syria Director, and U.S. Special Envoy for Syria Daniel
Rubinstein led the meeting on the U.S. side.
"These introductory meetings were an important step as we prepare to
launch the train-and-equip program later this spring with our
international partners," said Pentagon spokeswoman Commander Elissa
Smith.
(Reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)
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