Middle East
Obama Could Revisit Arming Syria Rebels as Assad Holds Firm
Reuters
By MARK LANDLER and MICHAEL R. GORDON
Published: February 18, 2013
WASHINGTON — When President Obama
rebuffed four of his top national security officials who wanted to arm
the rebels in Syria last fall, he put an end to a months of debate over
how aggressively Washington should respond to the strife there that has
now left nearly 70,000 dead.
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But the decision also left the White House with no clear strategy to
resolve a crisis that has bedeviled it since a popular uprising erupted
against President Bashar al-Assad
almost two years ago. Despite an American program of nonlethal
assistance to the opponents of the Syrian government and $365 million in
humanitarian aid, Mr. Obama appears to be running out of ways to speed
Mr. Assad’s exit.
With conditions continuing to deteriorate, officials could reopen the
debate over providing weapons to select members of the resistance in an
effort to break the impasse in Syria. The question is whether a wary Mr.
Obama, surrounded by a new national security team, would come to a
different conclusion.
“This is not a closed decision,” a senior administration official said.
“As the situation evolves, as our confidence increases, we might revisit
it.”
Mr. Obama’s decision not to provide arms when the proposal was broached
before the November election, officials said, was driven by his
reluctance to get drawn into a proxy war and by his fear that the
weapons would end up in unreliable hands, where they could be used
against civilians or Israeli and American interests.
As the United States struggles to formulate a policy, however, Mr. Assad
has given no sign that he is ready to yield power, and the Syrian
resistance has been adamant that it will not negotiate a transition in
which he has a role.
Even if Mr. Assad was overthrown, the convulsion could fragment Syria
along sectarian and ethnic lines, each faction supported by competing
outside powers, said Paul Salem, who runs the Middle East office of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “Syria,” he said, “is in the process not of transitioning but disintegrating.”
The debate over Syria is not limited to the United States. On Monday,
European Union foreign ministers decided against easing an arms
moratorium despite objections by Britain. In what appeared to be a
compromise, the ministers agreed to “provide greater nonlethal support
and technical assistance for the protection of civilians,” according to
the European Union’s Web site.
As the Syria conflict has unfolded, the State Department has funneled
$50 million of nonlethal assistance to the Syrian opposition, including
satellite telephones, radios, broadcasting equipment, computers,
survival equipment and related training. An FM radio network is to
connect broadcasting operations in several Syrian cities in the next
several days. The State Department has also helped train local councils
in areas freed from the Syrian government’s control.
But the State Department does not provide nonlethal assistance to armed
rebel factions. This has greatly limited the influence the United States
has with armed groups that are likely to control much of Syria if Mr.
Assad is ousted.
“The odds are very high that, for better or worse, armed men will determine Syria’s course for the foreseeable future,” said Frederic C. Hof, a former senior State Department official and a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council. “For the U.S. not to have close, supportive relationships with armed elements, carefully vetted, is very risky.”
Because units of the anti-Assad Free Syrian Army have captured prisoners
and detained criminals in the areas they control, Mr. Hof said, it is
essential that either the United States or an ally train rebel staff
officers in judicial procedures and make them sensitive to human rights
concerns.
Though the White House has focused on the risks of providing weapons,
other nations have had no such reservations. Russia has continued to
provide arms and financial support to the Assad government. Iran has
supplied the government with weapons and paramilitary Quds Force
advisers. Hezbollah has sent militants to Syria to help Mr. Assad’s
forces. On the other side, antigovernment Qaeda-affiliated fighters have
been receiving financial aid and other support from their backers in
the Middle East.
The arming plan that was considered last year originated with David H.
Petraeus, then the director of the Central Intelligence Agency, and was
supported by former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. The goal
was to create allies in Syria that the United States could work with
during the conflict and if Mr. Assad was removed from power. Each had a
reason for supporting it.
Mr. Petraeus had experience as a general in Iraq training Iraqi fighters
and had long worried that militants traveling through Syria to join Al Qaeda in Iraq
might one day reverse course and challenge the Assad government. Mrs.
Clinton signed on to the initiative after frustration that the Russians
had walked away from a transition plan she thought was agreed on in
June.
Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta supported the plan, which offered a
way to influence the military situation inside Syria without involving
American forces. So did Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, calculating that it was important to bring the
conflict to a close before the Syrian state collapsed and there was
nothing to hand over to Mr. Assad’s successor.
“I thought if there were a way to resolve the military situation more
quickly, it would work to the benefit not only of the Syrian people but
also us,” General Dempsey told reporters en route to Afghanistan this
month, though he acknowledged that his support was “conceptual” and that
“enormous complexities remained.”
But the president, who had campaigned on the theme that “the tide of
war” was receding, was more skeptical, fearing that such a move would,
in effect, draw the United States into a proxy war against the Syrian
government and its Iranian and Russian backers, with uncertain results.
His wariness was reinforced, officials said, by his closest advisers,
including Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and the national security
adviser, Thomas E. Donilon, both of whom advised against it.
Also skeptical, officials said, was Susan E. Rice, the ambassador to the
United Nations. Her opposition was noteworthy, given that she had
pushed for military intervention in Libya.
“In a situation as chaotic as Syria’s,” said an official, speaking on
the condition of anonymity, “you don’t know where weapons might end up,
and what the consequences are if those weapons are used against
civilians, against Israel, against American interests.”
To avoid any risk of Israeli aircraft being targeted if weapons fell
into the wrong hands, the plan would not have provided rebels with
shoulder-fired missiles. But that meant that the operation would be less
effective against Mr. Assad’s forces.
After Mr. Petraeus resigned because of an extramarital affair and Mrs. Clinton was sidelined with a concussion,
the issue was shelved. Mr. Donilon convened few meetings of top
officials after the election, which also limited the chance of
revisiting the question.
A big question is whether the makeup of Mr. Obama’s new team would
discourage the likelihood of a major policy shift. Secretary of State
John Kerry has said that he plans to advance ideas on how to change the
situation on his first trip later this month, ideas that appear to
include eliciting more cooperation from the Kremlin.
But it remains to be seen if the Russians will soften their position. In
a phone conversation on Sunday, Mr. Kerry and Sergey V. Lavrov,
Russia’s foreign minister, discussed how the United States and Russia
might encourage a political transition in Syria and said they would try
to meet in the coming weeks, said Victoria Nuland, the State Department
spokeswoman.
Other ideas under consideration include how State Department funds might
be used to expand support to the Syrian opposition.
Chuck Hagel, the president’s nominee for defense secretary, who has yet
to be confirmed by the Senate, has expressed reluctance, dating back to
the Iraq war, to become entangled in foreign conflicts.
Mr. Petraeus’s likely replacement at the C.I.A., John O. Brennan, is a
25-year veteran of the agency. One official said Mr. Brennan’s
background suggested he might be more focused on bolstering its
clandestine intelligence-gathering capabilities instead of its
paramilitary-style operations.
Against all that, however, is the grim reality that Mr. Assad seems no
closer to leaving than he did months ago. For all of Mr. Obama’s deep
reservations, the White House says it is taking no options off the
table, with officials pointing out that over time, it is learning more
about the rebel factions.
“We have consistently looked at all elements of our Syria policy,
including what we can and should supply to the opposition,” said
Benjamin J. Rhodes, a deputy national security adviser.
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