The Syrian crisis: Where's U.S. aid going?
updated 6:43 PM EST, Thu January 24, 2013
Inside a Syrian refugee camp
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- The U.S. ambassador to Syria says the U.S. has provided $210 million in humanitarian aid
- The assistance has to be discrete, he said, to protect workers from being targeted
- Washington has also provided $35 million worth of assistance to Syria's political opposition
- Ambassador: We can help, but it's up to Syrians to find their way forward
On Thursday, that ambassador returned to the region along with a U.S. delegation, touring a Syrian refugee camp
in Turkey to bring more attention to the growing humanitarian crisis.
As the civil war has intensified in Syria, hundreds of thousands of
people have sought refuge in Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan and other neighboring countries.
Ambassador Robert Ford
gave an exclusive interview to CNN's Ivan Watson and described what the
U.S. is doing to help the refugees and the Syrian opposition.
Ivan Watson: The U.S. has given $210 million in aid
(to Syria), but I think that there is a perception problem because no
one can actually point at what that help is. So people conclude there is
no help.
Robert Ford: The
assistance is going in. It's things like tents, it's things like
blankets, it's things like medical equipment, but it doesn't come in big
boxes with an American flag on it because we don't want the people who
are delivering it to be targeted by the Syrian regime.
The regime is going after
and killing people who are delivering supplies. You see them bombing
even bakeries and bread lines. So we're doing that, in part, to be
discrete.
The assistance is going in ... but it doesn't come in big boxes with an American flag on it.
Robert Ford, U.S. ambassador to Syria
Robert Ford, U.S. ambassador to Syria
The needs are gigantic.
So even though a great deal of American materials and other countries'
materials are arriving, the needs are still greater. And that's why
we're going to Kuwait to talk to the United Nations and to talk to other
countries about how we can talk together to provide additional
assistance.
Watson: The head of the Syrian National Coalition, which the U.S. government has backed,
came out with a statement very critical of the international community,
saying we need $3 billion if you want us to have any say on events on
the ground inside Syria. Where is that money?
Ford:
(Sheikh Ahmed) Moaz al-Khatib is a good leader, and we think highly of
him and we have recognized his (coalition) as the legitimate
representative of the Syrian people. And, of course, he wants to get as
many resources as possible because of the humanitarian conditions that I
was just talking about. Especially the ones inside Syria.
But we also, at the same
time, have to build up those (aid) networks I was talking about. In
some cases, they start out with just a few people. We don't need just a
few people, we need hundreds of people, thousands of people on the
inside of Syria organized to bring these things in.
And so step by step, the
Syrians, Moaz al-Khatib and his organization, need to build that
capacity. We can help build it, we can do training and things like that.
But in the end, Syrians have to take a leadership role in this.
Watson: Is Washington giving money to the Syrian National Coalition?
Ford: We
absolutely are assisting the (coalition), with everything from training
to, in some cases, limited amount of cash assistance so that they can
buy everything ranging from computers to telephones to radios.
New aid for Syrian rebels?
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Syrian refugees live in cold, wind, rain
Frankly, if not for the
American assistance in many cases, the activists inside Syria wouldn't
be in contact with the outside world. It's American help that keeps them
in contact with the outside world.
Watson: But, how much assistance has this coalition gotten from the U.S.?
Ford:
So far, we've allocated directly to the coalition in the neighborhood of
$35 million worth of different kinds of equipment and assistance. And
over the next few weeks, couple of months, we'll probably provide
another $15 million worth of material assistance.
Watson: Washington recently blacklisted Jabhat al-Nusra,
the Nusra Front, calling it a terrorist organization even though inside
Syria, it has attracted a lot of respect for its victories and for
comparative lack of corruption compared to many rebel groups. How has
blacklisting the Nusra Front helped the Syrian opposition?
Ford:
We blacklisted the Nusra Front because of its intimate links with al
Qaeda in Iraq, an organization with whom we have direct experience,
which is responsible for the killings of thousands of Iraqis, hundreds
of Americans. We know what al Qaeda in Iraq did and is still doing, and
we don't want it to start doing that in Syria -- which is why we
highlighted its incredibly pernicious role.
I think one of the
things that our classification of Nusra as a terrorist group did is it
set off an alarm for the other elements of the Free Syrian Army. There
was a meeting of the Free Syrian Army to set up a unified command, (and)
Nusra Front was not in that meeting -- which we think is the right
thing to do. As Syrians themselves understand that Nusra has a sectarian
agenda, as they understand better that Nusra is anti-democratic and
will seek to impose its very strict interpretation of Islam on Syria --
which historically is a relatively moderate country in terms of its
religious practices -- as Syrians understand that better, I think they
will more and more reject the Nusra Front itself.
Watson:
But I've seen the opposite. As I go into Syria, I hear more and more
support and respect for the Nusra Front, and more and more criticism for
the U.S. government each time I go back.
Ford: I
think that people, Ivan, are still understanding what Nusra is. I have
heard criticism from the Nusra Front from people like Moaz al-Khatib
who, in Marrakesh (Morocco) in his speech, said he rejected the kind of
ideology which backs up Nusra. ... We have heard that from the senior
commander of the Free Syrian Army as well. And so the more people
understand inside Syria what Nusra is and represents, I think they will
agree that is not the group on which to depend for freedom in Syria.
Watson: Do you think the U.S. government could have done more?
Ford: I
think the Syrians, as I said, are the ones who will bring the answer to
the problem -- just as in Iraq, Iraqis brought the solution to the Iraq
crisis, to the Iraq war. The Americans can help, and we helped in Iraq,
but ultimately it wasn't the Americans. Despite our help, it was
Iraqis.
In Syria, again, it has
to be Syrians who find their way forward. Twenty-three million Syrians
need to find their way forward. We can help, and we are helping: $210
million in humanitarian assistance, $50 million to help the political
opposition get organized for the day after (Bashar) al-Assad goes. These
are important bits of help. But ultimately, it's not the American help.
It's the Syrians themselves.
end quote from:
repeat quote:
Ivan Watson: The U.S. has given $210 million in aid
(to Syria), but I think that there is a perception problem because no
one can actually point at what that help is. So people conclude there is
no help.
Robert Ford: The
assistance is going in. It's things like tents, it's things like
blankets, it's things like medical equipment, but it doesn't come in big
boxes with an American flag on it because we don't want the people who
are delivering it to be targeted by the Syrian regime.
The regime is going after
and killing people who are delivering supplies. You see them bombing
even bakeries and bread lines. So we're doing that, in part, to be
discrete.
The assistance is going in ... but it doesn't come in big boxes with an American flag on it.
Robert Ford, U.S. ambassador to Syria
Robert Ford, U.S. ambassador to Syria
The needs are gigantic.
So even though a great deal of American materials and other countries'
materials are arriving, the needs are still greater. And that's why
we're going to Kuwait to talk to the United Nations and to talk to other
countries about how we can talk together to provide additional
assistance. end repeat quote from above.
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