BREAKING NEWS: The US will directly arm Syrian Kurdish and Arab fighters to fight the Islamic state (IS) in Raqqah reports the Washington Post last Friday. So far, more details have not been released yet. Most likely weapons would go to the newly formed 2,000 strong tribal army headed by Abu Issa, and the Kurdish People’s Protection Units, and supplied through Iraqi Kurdish territory.

Syrian Arab tribes recently formed the tribal army, which was branded as the Syrian Arab Coalition by the Pentagon.

The US finally made the decision to support the Kobani model of YPG and FSA fighters in the countryside of Raqqah, and Hasakah province. There were earlier signs of a possible US policy shift. In mid-September, Foreign Policy reported that the US is hoping to avoid another fiasco by embedding Syrian rebels with larger local forces, including possibly Kurdish troops.

On 22 September, CNN reported that U.S. military commanders have proposed a program to provide arms and ammunition to a coalition of up to 5,000 anti-ISIS Syrian rebels now operating in northern Syria, the Pentagon branded the ‘Syrian Arab Coalition’ which works closely with the YPG.

Although there ongoing disputes between FSA rebels and the Kurds, FSA rebels in Raqqah want to move forward.

“We do disagree with the YPG on some matters, but we are currently moving past these differences” for the sake of the larger battle against the Islamic State, Liwa Thuwar a-Raqqa spokesman Abu Muath told Syria Direct.

Kurdish controlled territories in Iraq and Syria.

“So, what we are doing with the train and equip, we are looking where we have had success, so looking to the Kurdish community in the east, and build on that,” president Obama said in a press conference last Thursday in a response to increased Russian support for the Syrian government against rebel groups to protect Assad.

Moreover, the YPG denied Russian media reports that they support Russian operations, and confirmed that the relation between the US-led coalition and the People’s Protection Units (YPG), “will not simply continue but emerge stronger against committed enemy, the Daesh terrorists,” the YPG said last Thursday.

Last Friday, IS-militants attacked the Abdulaziz Mountain close to Tal Tamr, which is an important for future operations in Raqqah. This shows the IS is aware and scared of the future joint FSA-YPG operations backed by the US-led coalition.

“Here is Mount Abdul Aziz, which is a very important position. Before any operation against Raqqa can be launched, it is really important that you’ve got Mount Abdul Aziz covered,” a YPG fighter told Journeyman Pictures.

Strategic Mountain Abdul Aziz (Wikimapia)

On 15 September, the US set up a meeting between Democratic Union Party (PYD) leader Salih Muslim, and KRG president Masoud Barzani in Erbil, in order to pressure both to coordinate against the Islamic state (IS). And surprisingly, on 20 September, a delegation from Barzani’s KDP party participated in the PYD’s party congress. This is 100 per cent related to the plans to equip Arab and Kurdish fighters in northern Syria.

Finally, the US has realised that supporting FSA groups in Aleppo province would not result in anything due to the strong presence of the al-Nusra front and Jaish al-Fath. Nusra will not allowed US-armed rebels to fight IS, since they fear these US-backed rebels groups could turn their back on Nusra in the future. As a result, US-backed rebel Jamal Marouf was kicked out from Idlib by Nusra in January, and now allegedly resides in Kobani under protection of Kurdish YPG fighters (see Dabiq*).

Sheikh Obeid Hassan Khalil says they have 2,000 FSA rebel fighters to ‘liberate’ Raqqah.

Using the Kurdish areas as a safe zone for FSA-rebels in the Raqqah and Hasakah provinces is easier than inserting FSA-rebels into Aleppo’s countryside, as I argued for the Atlantic Council. Earlier, I co-wrote a piece for the Daily Beast that showed FSA-fighters handed over their weapons to Nusra in the Aleppo province. As a result, the Pentagon stopped sending recruits to Syria.