Syrian fighters to exploit US strikes

Syrian fighters to exploit US strikes
Updated 01 September 2013
Follow

Syrian fighters to exploit US strikes

Syrian fighters to exploit US strikes

BEIRUT: Opposition fighters across Syria are preparing to launch attacks that exploit anticipated US-led military strikes, but there are no plans to coordinate with Western forces, a Syrian rebel commander said on Saturday.
The United States said on Friday it was planning a limited response to punish Syrian President Bashar Assad for a “brutal and flagrant” chemical weapons attack it says killed more than 1,400 people in Damascus 10 days ago. Washington has five cruise-missile equipped destroyers in the region.
Qassim Saadeddine, a former Syrian army colonel and spokesman for the rebels’ Supreme Military Council, said the council had sent a selection of rebel groups a military plan of action to use if strikes took place.
“The hope is to take advantage when some areas are weakened by any strikes. We ordered some groups to prepare in each province, to ready their fighters for when the strike happens,” he told Reuters, speaking by Skype.
“They were sent a military plan that includes preparations to attack some of the targets we expect to be hit in foreign strikes, and some others that we hope to attack at the same time.”
The Supreme Military Council is the armed wing linked to the National Coalition, an umbrella group considered to be the opposition’s political leadership abroad.
Saadeddine said the plans had been prepared without any help from foreign powers. He said no information had been offered to them by the United States or any other Western countries such as France, which has supported carrying out a strike on Assad.
“The United States considers us to be one of the two parties engaged in a civil war, they haven’t spoken to the rebel leadership at large, though they have communicated to the political leaders in the Coalition,” Saadeddine said. “There may have been consultations with the head of our council, Salim Idriss, but I cannot confirm this.”
Saadeddine said his forces assessed that a Western attack would happen in the coming days and would last about three days.
Saadeddine said the rebels liaising with the council had drawn up a list of potential targets for any strike.
“We think it will be something among military sites such as the headquarters of military leadership, military airports, certain weapon storage areas, or launchpads and installations for large missiles such as Scuds,” he said.
Other sites seen by rebels as likely targets, Saadeddine said, were those belonging to elite forces believed most loyal to Assad — the Fourth Armored Division and the Republican Guard. The opposition blames those units for playing a role in the poison gas attack.
Other rebels contacted, without links to the council, said they were also trying to prepare for a potential strike, but that they were struggling to come up with a plan of action.
The specter of US military action and further intervention in the Muslim world is generating troubled and conflicting emotions throughout America.
People cite misgivings about their country’s role as “world policeman.”
There’s a deep ambivalence about how to use American military power for good without committing the US to another intractable war.
Those sentiments are reflected in a series of interviews conducted by AP across the country and borne out in recent polling.
In town after town, Americans weary of war after a dozen years of it are expressing unease, concern, fear — and often resignation.