A Syrian rebel waves the independence flag outside Damascus. (Reuters/Ahmed Jadallah.)
The civil war in Syria is on the verge of
another escalation.
President Obama, who last year rejected a joint proposal from Hillary
Clinton, Leon Panetta, General Martin Dempsey and David Petraeus to get
involved militarily, is under new pressure to intervene. Great Britain
and France are toying with ending the arms embargo on military aid to
the Syrian rebels, which so far has come mostly from Saudi Arabia and
Qatar, with US encouragement.
According to CNN:
Under pressure from Democrats and Republicans, the Joint
Staff of the Pentagon and the US Central Command have updated potential
military options for intervention in Syria that could see American
forces—if ordered—doing everything from bombing Syrian airfields to
flying large amounts of humanitarian aid to the region, a senior US
military official said.
And the beleaguered, scandal-hit Senator Bob Menendez of New Jersey,
the relative lightweight who took over the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee after John Kerry moved to the State Department,
wants Obama to aid the rebels, too:
The chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), has joined the growing chorus of lawmakers
calling on the Obama administration to arm the rebels in Syria.
The Syrian rebels are looking for heavy weapons, including antitank and antiaircraft weapons.
But the problem continues to be that some of those weapons would fall
into the hands of the overtly Al Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front in Syria
and other extreme-Islamist groups. Just this week came the stunning but
not entirely surprising announcement that the Islamic State of Iraq,
which is controlled by Al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI), is one and the same
organization as the Nusra Front. In other words, the selfsame group that
the United States is helping Iraq’s government fight in Anbar province
and throughout Iraq is also the recipient of U.S. aid in Syria!
As the
Wall Street Journal reports:
Al Qaeda's branch in Iraq said it has merged with a
Syrian rebel extremist faction, in a push by the terrorist organization
to exert more influence on the Syrian rebellion and its outcome.
The declaration reflects cross-border coordination between al Qaeda
in Iraq and Syria's Jabhat al Nusra, or the al Nusra Front, a force with
growing battlefield clout that has been a target of U.S. efforts to
isolate rebel extremists in Syria. The two groups are already closely
linked; when the U.S. designated the Syrian group as a terrorist
organization in December, it described al Nusra as an alias for the
Iraqi group.
And Ayman al-Zawahiri, who leads Al Qaeda now, following the killing of Osama bin Laden, approves the merger, according to the
Journal:
The announcement from Iraq followed a statement on Sunday
by al Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri calling on Syrian rebels to direct
their fight at establishing a "jihadist Islamic state" there as they
seek to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad.
And, many Iraqi militants from Shiite-led radical groups with ties to Iran are
fighting in Syria:
By recognizing their role in Syria's war, Iraqi Shi'ite
fighters may gain recruitment momentum to help Assad, whose Alawite sect
is an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam, in a war that is splitting the region
along sectarian lines.
Message to Obama: Stay out.
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