Norway-trained ‘anti-ISIS’ rebels turn against the Syrian army

Norway-trained ‘anti-ISIS’ rebels turn against the Syrian army

The Syrian “rebels” Norway has trained to contribute to the fight against ISIS have now reportedly turned their weapons against the Syrian government. The rebels’ leader makes no secret of the fact that overthrowing Bashar Assad is their main goal.

The Norwegian-trained Syrian militia called the Revolutionary Command Army (MaT), which was established to help quell ISIS are now waging war against the Syrian leadership and pro-government forces, the Norwegian daily Klassekampen reported.

According to Klassekampen, the rebel group is now openly fighting for a regime change in Syria, while remaining an important part of US efforts to prevent Iranian influence in the region.

In May 2016, it was announced that Norwegian soldiers were to be dispatched to Syria’s southern neighbor Jordan to provide “training, counseling and operational support” to Syrian paramilitary groups fighting ISIS as part of the US-led Operation Inherent Resolve. In June 2016, the Norwegian parliament also green-lit similar missions in Syria itself.

While Norway’s Syrian ‘contribution’ was formally concluded in March this year when the mandate formally expired, the exact extent and nature of Norway’s involvement was largely kept secret. MaT commander Muhannad al-Talla confirmed to Klassekampen that his group was trained by Norwegians in al-Tanf in southeastern Syria, where the US maintains a base.

While both Prime Minister Erna Solberg and then-Defense Minister Ine Eriksen Søreide emphasized that the mandate was to fight ISIS, ensuring that they “won’t endanger the peace process,” al-Talla claimed that his Western allies never concealed that his soldiers were to fight both terrorists and the Syrian government.

The al-Tanf Base is a strategic outpost along the main route between Damascus and Baghdad. There, the US has created a 55-square-kilometer so-called safety zone, secured by US soldiers with the help of al-Talla’s units.

Within the zone, troops loyal to the government have been bombed at least two times by US combat aircraft. At the same time, several rebel groups, including MaT, have taken part in an offensive against government forces after Daesh’s withdrawal from eastern Syria. Insurgent Free Syrian Army (FSA) spokesman and counselor Ibrahim al-Idlibi confirmed to Klassekampen that Norway-trained “militia” took part in the struggle against Assad-associated forces, such as the operation “The Country is Ours” carried out in May and June 2017.

While the Syrian government has managed to reclaim most of the country’s territory from ISIS and various rebel groups, MaT leader Muhannad al-Talla is by his own admission not ready to lay down arms.

According to Klassekampen, MaT and other Western-supported paramilitary groups are part of a larger superpower game, where the US seeks to ensure control in the border area between Syria and Iraq to stop further Iranian influence in the region.

According to FSA spokesman al-Idlibi, the goal of MaT and similar rebel groups is to “fight Iranian and Shia groups” in the area. Al-Idlibi pledged that the fight will continue “until the mission is complete.”

Both Muhannad al-Talla and the Norwegian Ministry of Defense denied that Norwegians had ever participated in the fight against the Syrian government and its allies. Norway formally ceased its mission in Syria, with the Defense Ministry deciding to focus on Iraq.

Source: Sputnik