Confirmation
from unexpected quarters of what we already knew.
New
York Times: CIA officers regulating arms traffic to Syria opposition
groups
According
to report, U.S. operatives are stationed in southeast Turkey to
ensure weapons meant for anti-Assad groups do not fall in hands of
groups linked to al-Qaida.
21
June, 2012
U.S.
intelligence officers are secretly operating near Turkey's border
with Syria, in an attempt to ensure that weapons meant for Syrian
opposition groups do not end up in militias aligned with al-Qaida,
the New York Times reported on Thursday.
According
to the report, citing a U.S. official, a small group of CIA officials
are stationed in southeast Turkey, where they regulate the influx of
automatic rifles, rocket-propelled grenades, ammunition and anti-tank
weapons to the various rebel factions.
Speaking
to the New York Times, one Arab intelligence official said that
clandestine American attempts were geared at collecting information
on the various opposition groups, as well as "to make new
sources and recruit people."
In
addition, American officials and retired CIA operatives indicated
that the administration of U.S. President Barack Obama was
considering other ways of assisting the anti-Assad insurgency, such
as satellite imagery and detailed intelligence on Syrian troop
locations and movements.
More
than 14,400 people, mainly civilians, have been killed since the
revolt against President Bashar Assad erupted in March 2011,
according to the opposition.
On
Wednesday, opposition sources said that at least 47 people, including
28 soldiers, were killed in violence across Syria.
"The
dead were 14 civilians mainly from the central provinces of Homs and
Hama, five revolutionary fighters and 28 soldiers," Rami Abdel
Rahman, the spokesman for the opposition Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights, told dpa.
He
added that 20 of the Syrian troops were killed in clashes with rebels
in the northwestern province of Latakia.
In
Idlib, near the Syrian-Turkish border, five Syrian soldiers were
killed when a car bomb exploded near their checkpoint, the U.K.-based
organization said in a statement.
Meanwhile,
three soldiers were killed in fighting with rebels in the town of
Kernaz in Hama, it said.
Five
rebels were killed in similar clashes that took place in Kurdish
mountain area near the border with Turkey, Abdel Rahman said.
He
added that the rebels had seized an unspecified number of military
personnel along with their weapons.
In
the central province of Homs, rebel fighters told dpa that Syrian
troops were using helicopters in attacks on the al-Rastan and
al-Kurssiar areas, setting several wheat fields ablaze.
Syrian
troops also shelled areas in Hama, a central dissident province,
opposition activists said.
The
surge in violence came hours after the head of the UN observing
mission in Syria told the UN Security Council that his team would
remain in the country until a political solution was reached.
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