, trains
Maghaweir al-Thowra rebels in
CBRN defense at
al-Tanf, 6 August 2022
Wartime operations The elimination of the first wave of U.S.-backed rebels affected recruitment of new candidates. The program has proven very controversial in Congress and faces an uncertain future. Some rebels left the program after being asked to sign an agreement pledging not to attack pro-Assad forces. However, the
Washington Posts Missy Ryan and Greg Jaffe reported on Monday, 21 September 2015, that the Executive Office of the President is working on a plan to provide weapons "to a wider array of rebel groups in Syria and relaxing vetting standards, effectively deepening America's involvement in the ongoing civil war." A US official said recruiting of moderate Syrian rebels to go through training programmes in Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia or the United Arab Emirates would cease, and, instead, a much smaller training centre would be set up in Turkey, where a small group of "enablers" (predominantly leaders of opposition groups) would be taught operational methods such as how to call in airstrikes. In November 2016, the main train and equip programme suffered a major setback when three
American special forces trainers were killed while entering King Faisal Air Base in Jordan in
a deadly attack. The Americans had been detailed to the CIA to train rebels to combat ISIS. On 31 January 2017, the SDF received a number of
armoured personnel carriers produced by
ArmorGroup. U.S. military official Col. John Dorrian confirmed that the
armoured vehicles were supplied by the U.S. By July 2017, more than 8,500 members of the SDF have been trained by the U.S.-led coalition and in the first half of 2017, more than 400 vehicles and other equipment have been delivered to over 40,000 SDF troops. On 27 July 2017, the Qaryatayn Martyrs Brigade deployed forces from the
al-Tanf border crossing and headed to the frontlines to fight the
Syrian Armed Forces. The
US-led Coalition stated that this deployment violated the agreement for U.S.-backed forces to only fight ISIL and not the Syrian government, and planned to cease support for the group.
Fall of the Assad Regime In 2021, while fighting in Syria almost entirely subsided, four opposition groups remained part of the program, the
Anti-Terror Units, the
Internal Security Forces, the
Provisional/Regional Internal Security Forces, and
Maghawir al-Thawra. In 2024, when major fighting in Syria began again during the
Fall of the Assad regime, the opposition groups being trained through the program were the earlier-included Internal Security Forces and Provisional/Regional Internal Security Forces, the Syrian Free Army (a merger between Maghawir al-Thawra and several smaller FSA units), and several factions within the
Syrian Democratic Forces, specifically the Commandos, Special Operations Team, Syrian Arab Coalition, and
People's Defense Units. During the
offensives which led to the collapse of the Assad regime, the Syrian Free Army led a rebel offensive from
Al-Tanf into
Palmyra and northern Damascus. American intelligence informed them of the regime's weakness ahead of its collapse, giving the SFA time to integrate several smaller militias into its structure and enabling another FSA unit, the
Suqour al-Sham Brigade, to redeploy to the al-Tanf garrison from northern Syria in anticipation of helping the SFA offensive. ==See also==