The Hill
A bipartisan group of lawmakers is calling on President Obama not to supply shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles to Syrian rebels fighting President Bashar al-Assad.
“We urge you to maintain your stance in opposition to sending MANPADS into Syria and also request that you strongly discourage all nations from doing so,” the 27 House lawmakers wrote in a letter to Obama this week.
Obama has long opposed sending the missiles — Man-Portable Air-Defense Systems, or MANPADS — to Syrian rebels. The fear is that the weapons could easily fall into the hands of terrorists and be used against civilian aircraft.
But a Wall Street Journal article in April said the CIA was being urged by partners such as Turkey and Saudi Arabia to provide the weapons, with modifications. The proposed modifications include limits on how long the batteries last or geographical sensors to prevent them from being fired outside designated areas of Syria.
The Journal report specifies the administration still considers MANPADS a red line and that the administration has proposed different systems it believes would be less of a danger. The article also stresses that the CIA supplying any more powerful weapons is a “Plan B” if the tenuous cease-fire and peace talks completely collapse.
The lawmakers, concerned about the reports, highlighted the administration’s own quotes in the past in opposition to supplying the weapons.
“We strongly support that view, as MANPADS can easily be hidden in the trunk of a car or even in a golf bag, making their proliferation a serious threat to civilian airliners in the region — including Israeli airliners — and across the world,” the lawmakers wrote.
Further, they wrote, Congress has repeatedly voted to block sending MANPADS to Syria through the 2015 and 2016 appropriations bills.
Sending MANPADS to Syria also appears to violate at least three U.S.-backed international agreements, they wrote.
Concerns about weapons falling into the hands of terrorists were realized last year when Pentagon-backed rebels fighting the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria surrendered to an al Qaeda affiliate, the lawmakers said.
“The concerns repeatedly and unanimously expressed by the House of Representatives were validated when the Pentagon confirmed that last September, Syrian rebels vetted and trained by the United States handed over their equipment to the al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front,” they wrote.