Nusra Front Wins 'Hearts and Minds' as CIA-Trained Syrian Rebels Suffer
"...."It is simply difficult to acquire the number of Syrian rebels willing to participate in the training under current parameters," Jennifer Cafarella, with the Institute for the Study of War, told Fox News in June....""...But it now looks like another key part of Washington’s fight against Daesh may be in danger of failure. Receiving Western backing, the Free Syrian Army, the region’s largest opposition group, is suffering from low morale...."
"They regularly steal our salaries," Salabeh added. "We’re supposed to get $400 a month, but we only actually receive $100."
He also identified the lack of proper treatment for those wounded in battle.
"If somebody is wounded, they just dump him in Jordan and abandon him," Salabeh said. "Widows of martyred fighters also receive nothing after deaths."..."
A lynchpin in America’s Syrian strategy, the Free Syrian Army (FSA) is reportedly in tatters, threatening Western efforts to combat Daesh, also known as ISIL or Islamic State.
But it now looks like another key part of Washington’s fight against Daesh may be in danger of failure. Receiving Western backing, the Free Syrian Army, the region’s largest opposition group, is suffering from low morale.
"They regularly steal our salaries," Salabeh added. "We’re supposed to get $400 a month, but we only actually receive $100."
He also identified the lack of proper treatment for those wounded in battle.
"If somebody is wounded, they just dump him in Jordan and abandon him," Salabeh said. "Widows of martyred fighters also receive nothing after deaths."
These conditions have created a cycle of failure. Due to low morale, the FSA has few military wins, consequently causing the US to pull back on the funding which could improve conditions and morale.
"The lack of battlefield success has mitigated against them," Ed Blanche, a member of London’s International Institute for Strategic Studies, told Stars and Stripes, adding that, "they haven’t been getting significant (outside) support because they haven’t been showing results."
According to Elias Hanna, a former Lebanese general and professor of geopolitics at the American University of Beirut, people are frustrated with the Free Syrian Army’s lack of progress and are instead turning to the Nusra Front, a regional al-Qaeda affiliate.
"The number of such FSA units is on the rise. The Russian aviation carries out 30-40 airstrikes daily to support them," Gerasimov said during a meeting with military diplomatic corps representatives, according to RIA Novosti.
"We also supply them with weapons, ammunition and materials."
In turn, the Free Syrian Army has offered to share “precise intelligence” with Russia to coordinate attacks.
"We have precise intelligence, documents, maps, and we can share them with the Russians so that their strikes on Daesh are more effective," General Hossam Awak, head of FSA intelligence, told Sputnik.