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U.S. to Send Special-Ops Forces to Syria

President Barack Obama authorizes the first sustained deployment of U.S. Special Forces in Syria to help out “local ground forces” in their fight against the Islamic State. The announcement came as key backers of Syria’s rival sides met in Vienna to find a political solution to the conflict.

Written by Syria Deeply Published on Read time Approx. 4 minutes

The United States on Friday announced its first sustained deployment of ground troops to Syria, saying a small special forces team would assist the fight against the Islamic State group, as major powers met in Vienna seeking a political solution to the war.

The deployment marks an escalation in Washington’s efforts to defeat ISIS, which has tightened its grip on swathes of Syria despite more than a year of U.S.-led air strikes.

Officials said President Barack Obama had authorised an initial deployment of “fewer than 50” special forces to northern Syria – parts of which are controlled by Syrian Kurdish forces fighting ISIS – moderating his long-standing refusal to put boots on the ground.

“They will help coordinate local ground forces and coalition efforts to counter ISIL,” said a senior administration official, using an alternative acronym for ISIS.

Washington will also deploy A-10 ground-attack planes and F-15 tactical fighter jets to the Incirlik base in southern Turkey, as part of the ramped-up effort.

The announcement came as key backers of Syria’s rival sides sought to overcome deep divisions over the conflict, with government allies Russia and Iran resisting western and Saudi pressure to force President Bashar al-Assad from power.

Top diplomats from 17 countries, as well as the United Nations and the European Union, gathered in Vienna for talks that bring together all the main outside players in the four-year-old Syrian crisis for the first time.

The West and Gulf monarchies led by Saudi Arabia want Assad to step down, but Moscow and Tehran insist he has a right to play a role in an eventual transition towards a mooted unity government and subsequent elections.

More talks in two weeks

France announced late on Friday afternoon that the talks had ended, with the major powers to meet again on the crisis in two weeks’ time.

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesperson Dmitry Peskov had said earlier that the talks were not about whether Assad should go.

“It is not the fate of Bashar al-Assad that is being discussed,” he told reporters in Russia.

“Any political settlement is hard to achieve before the forces of terrorism and extremism sustain a significant blow.”

Iran’s deputy foreign minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian also strongly denied reports that Tehran was ready to accept a scenario under which Assad would step down within six months, Iranian state television reported.

But Iran nevertheless joined the talks for the first time, in a sign of its growing diplomatic clout months after striking a landmark nuclear deal with world powers.

There were some signs of progress in Vienna, with Russia and Saudi Arabia exchanging a list of Syrian opposition groups with which they have contact, Russian deputy foreign minister Mikhail Bogdanov said, quoted by RIA Novosti state news agency.

And even getting Iran and Saudi Arabia – the Middle East’s foremost powers that back opposing sides in conflicts across the Arab world – to sit at the same table was seen as progress.

‘Very difficult’

US Secretary of State John Kerry sat at the head of the table for the meeting, which also included senior envoys from Russia, China, Turkey, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon, Egypt, Qatar, the UAE and Oman.

The Syrian government and the opposition were not represented at the discussions aimed at ending a war that has claimed a quarter of a million lives.

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir – whose kingdom supports the overthrow of Assad – was sat almost as far from his Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif as was possible at the tight U-shaped table in a conference room of Vienna’s Imperial Hotel.

Just before the talks, 40 people were killed on Friday when rockets fired by Syrian government forces crashed into a market in a rebel-held area outside Damascus, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

Kerry, while warning against expectations of an immediate solution, said he was hopeful about the talks.

“I don’t call it optimism. I am hopeful that we can find a way forward. It is very difficult,” he said ahead of the main meeting.

Russia, which has waged a month of intense air strikes against Assad’s armed opponents, has urged preparations for parliamentary and presidential elections in Syria.

But the idea has been rejected by rebels who say a vote would be impossible in the current circumstances, with millions of Syrians displaced, cities standing in ruins and two-thirds of the country in the hands of ISIS and various armed groups.

Underscoring the perils facing those fleeing the war, 26 migrants, including at least 17 children, drowned during the night while making the perilous journey from Turkey to Greece as they made a desperate bid to reach Europe.

The West has accused Russia of concentrating its air campaign in Syria on moderate opposition groups opposed to Assad’s rule, although Moscow says it is focusing on defeating ISIS and other “terrorist” organisations.

Russia said Friday its air force had hit 1,623 “terrorist targets” in Syria over the past month, including 51 training camps.

This article was originally published by the Middle East Eye and is reprinted here with permission.

Top image: U.S. and Iraqi special forces inside a makeshift prison in the town of Huwija, near Kirkuk, on Thursday, Oct. 22, 2015. (Kurdistan Regional Security Council via AP)

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