Pentagon
finishes contingency plans for Syria invasion
Officials
with the US Department of Defense have confirmed that the Pentagon
has finalized procedures that outline how American forces could soon
combat the government of war-torn Syria and officially involve itself
in that state’s bloody uprising
RT,
15
June, 2012
After
months of rumors suggesting that the US has unofficially made efforts
to weaponize rebel forces fighting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad,
officials with the Defense Department tell CNN that the Pentagon has
finished drafting blueprints that lay-out just how the US military
could aid in ousting the leader with America’s own troops.
In
their report, CNN cites Defense Department officials speaking on
condition of anonymity; in a separate sit-down however, Joint Chiefs
of Staff Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey confirms to the outlet that
intensifying violence overseas in recent months has prompted the
Pentagon to expedite establishing a role for US forces.
The violence
"gives us all pause that have been in Iraq and seen how these
issues become sectarian and then they become civil wars and then they
become very difficult to resolve," Dempsey
tells CNN this week.
"There
is a sense that if the sectarian violence in Syria grows, it could be
worse than what we saw in Iraq," he
adds.
Although
the issue of involving US forces in the war against Assad’s regime
has been on the table since the beginning of the uprising,
authorities in Washington — off the record — have all but
officially thrown their hat in the ring in regards to offering
assistance. RT reported earlier this week that intelligence forces
have revealed to Israel’s Debka news agency that the US was
believed to be readying the establishing of a no-fly zone in Syria,
and last month discussed murmurings that suggested US President
Barack Obama had quietly approved a shipment of anti-tank weapons to
Syrian rebels.
CNN’s
report confirms that the military has indeed drafted instructions
that lay-out the implementation of the no-fly zone. Additionally,
officials say that a large number of US troops could soon be
installed overseas to aid in the war.
As
early as March of this year, lawmakers including John McCain
(R-Arizona) began rallying together to ask Congress to consider
authorizing strikes on Assad. Without the permission of the United
Nations, though, the US has been hesitant to offer any formal
assistance.
“NATO
took military action to save Kosovo in 1999 without formal UN
authorization. There is no reason why the Arab League, or NATO, or a
leading coalition within the Friends of Syria contact group, or all
of them speaking in unison, could not provide a similar international
mandate for military measures to save Syria today,” Sen.
McCain told Capitol Hill constituents earlier this year.
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