US Begins Vetting Syrian Rebels for Military Training: Pentagon
TEHRAN (Tasnim) - The US military began vetting a group of Syrian rebels eligible for training and assistance in the fight against Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) militants, a step that paves the way for training to begin in weeks, the Pentagon said.
Rear Admiral John Kirby, the Pentagon press secretary, said about 100 moderate Syrian rebels had been vetted to participate in the training and assistance effort, with no derogatory information uncovered to weigh against their involvement.
Kirby said 1,500 other potential candidates had been identified and were awaiting more rigorous screening before being admitted to the program, Reuters reported.
"Our assessment is we could be ready sometime within the next four to six weeks to begin actual training," Kirby told a Pentagon briefing, noting that the vetting was "an important first step."
A week ago, the United States and Turkey signed an agreement to use a site in Turkey for the effort. Turkey agreed to provide a new facility for the training, which would be conducted by an equal number of US and Turkish troops.
The site is one of four where US and coalition partners may offer training to Syrian rebels to fight against Islamic State militants. Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Qatar also have offered sites, a US official said recently.
The Pentagon spokesman said the training was to prepare Syrian rebels to fight ISIL militants who overran parts of Syria and Iraq last year, not to join the civil war aimed at toppling President Bashar al-Assad.