US lawmakers say forget Assad, focus on IS
Yahoo.com
By DEB RIECHMANN
WASHINGTON (AP) — In an unusual alliance, a House Democrat and
Republican have teamed up to urge the Obama administration to stop trying to
overthrow Syrian President Bashar Assad and focus all its efforts on destroying
Islamic State militants.
Reps. Tulsi Gabbard, a Democrat, and Austin Scott, a Republican,
introduced legislation on Friday to end what they called an "illegal
war" to overthrow Assad, the leader of Syria accused of killing tens of
thousands of Syrian citizens in a more than four-year-old civil war entangled
in a battle against IS extremists, also known as ISIS.
"The U.S. is waging two wars in Syria," Gabbard said.
"The first is the war against ISIS and other Islamic extremists, which
Congress authorized after the terrorist attack on 9/11. The second war is the
illegal war to overthrow the Syrian government of Assad."
Scott said, "Working to remove Assad at this stage is
counter-productive to what I believe our primary mission should be."
Publicly, the United States has focused its efforts on fighting IS and
urging Assad to step down. But beyond thousands of U.S. airstrikes targeting IS
in the region, the CIA began a covert operation in 2013 to arm, fund and train
a moderate opposition to Assad. The secret CIA program is the only step the
U.S. is taking on Assad militarily.
In the Philippines on Thursday for the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation
summit, President Barack Obama reiterated America's demand that Assad must go.
"The bottom line is: I do not foresee a situation in which we can end the
civil war in Syria while Assad remains in power," Obama said.
Since 2013, the CIA has trained an estimated 10,000 fighters, although
the number still fighting with so-called moderate forces is unclear. CIA-backed
rebels in Syria, who had begun to put serious pressure on Assad's forces, are
now under Russian bombardment with little prospect of rescue by their American
patrons, U.S. officials say.
For years, the CIA effort had foundered — so much so that over the
summer, some in Congress proposed cutting its budget. Some CIA-supported rebels
had been captured; others had defected to extremist groups.
Gabbard complained that Congress has never authorized the CIA effort,
though covert programs do not require congressional approval, and the program
has been briefed to the intelligence committees as required by law, according
to congressional aides who are not authorized to be quoted discussing the
matter.
Gabbard contends the effort to overthrow Assad is counter-productive
because it is helping IS topple the Syrian leader and take control of all of
Syria. If IS were able to seize the Syrian military's weaponry, infrastructure
and hardware, the group would become even more dangerous than it is now and
exacerbate the refugee crisis.
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