by Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
U.S. Defense Secretary Leon
Panetta attends a ceremony at army headquarters in Lima, Peru on
Saturday.
|
Photo credit: AP |
A team of U.S. military planners is in Jordan
to help the government grapple with Syrian refugees, bolster its
military capabilities and prepare for any trouble that may arise over
Syria's chemical weapons stockpiles, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta
said on Wednesday.
The team, led by special operations forces and
comprising about 150 troops, mainly from the U.S. Army, is constructing
a headquarters in the capital, Amman, from which to work with Jordanian
forces on joint operational planning and intelligence sharing, a senior
defense official said.
The official, speaking on condition of
anonymity, said the team had been in Jordan for several months and was
there when Panetta visited King Abdullah in early August. The number of
troops in the team has since grown, but there are no specific plans to
expand it further, the official said.
"We have been working with Jordan for a period
of time now ... on a number of the issues that have developed as a
result of what's happened in Syria," Panetta told a news conference in
Brussels.
He said those issues included monitoring chemical weapons sites "to determine how best to respond to any concerns in that area."
A second U.S. official, speaking on condition
of anonymity, said the small team of planners was not engaged in covert
operations and had been housed at the King Abdullah II Special
Operations Training Center, north of Amman, since the early summer.
While the U.S. has not intervened militarily
in Syria, President Barack Obama has warned Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad that any attempt to deploy or use chemical or biological
weapons would cross a "red line" that could provoke a U.S. response.
Late last month, Panetta said Syria had moved
some of its chemical weapons stocks to better secure them, but stressed
that the country's main chemical weapons sites remained intact and
secure under government control.
The U.S. military planners in Jordan are not focused solely on chemical weapons.
"We've also been working with them to develop
their own military operational capabilities in the event of any
contingency there," Panetta said. "And that's the reason we have ... a
group of our forces there."
A public website detailing the training center in Jordan can been seen here.
Some 294,000 refugees fleeing the 18-month conflict in
Syria have crossed into Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon and Turkey, or await
registration there, the U.N. refugee agency estimated late last month.
Up to 700,000 Syrian refugees may flee abroad by the end of the year, it
estimated.
Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=6038
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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