Did U.S. Weapons Supplied To Syrian Rebels Draw Russia Into The Conflict?
By Liz Sly October 11 at 8:20 PM
BEIRUT American antitank missiles supplied to Syrian rebels are playing an unexpectedly prominent role in shaping the Syrian battlefield, giving the conflict the semblance of a proxy war between the United States and Russia, despite President Obamas express desire to avoid one.
The U.S.-made BGM-71 TOW missiles were delivered under a two-year-old covert program coordinated between the United States and its allies to help vetted Free Syrian Army groups in their fight against President Bashar al-Assad. Now that Russia has entered the war in support of Assad, they are taking on a greater significance than was originally intended.
So successful have they been in driving rebel gains in northwestern Syria that rebels call the missile the Assad Tamer, a play on the word Assad, which means lion. And in recent days they have been used with great success to slow the Russian-backed offensive aimed at recapturing ground from the rebels.
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More missiles are on the way, he said. New supplies arrived after the Russian deployments began, he said, and the rebels allies have promised further deliveries soon, bringing echoes of the role played by U.S.-supplied Stinger antiaircraft missiles in forcing the Soviet Union to withdraw from Afghanistan in the 1980s.
The hits also plunged Washington into what amounts to a proxy war of sorts with Moscow, despite Obamas insistence this month that were not going to make Syria into a proxy war between the United States and Russia.
Its a proxy war by happenstance, said Jeff White of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, who counted at least 15 tanks and vehicles destroyed or disabled in one day. The rebels happen to have a lot of TOWs in their inventory. The regime happened to attack them with Russian support. I dont see it as a proxy war by decision.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/did-us-weapons-supplied-to-syrian-rebels-draw-russia-into-the-conflict/2015/10/11/268ce566-6dfc-11e5-91eb-27ad15c2b723_story.html
Hydra
(14,459 posts)And nobody saw it coming, right?
bemildred
(90,061 posts)No doubt good advertising too.