Deputy foreign minister criticises effort officials say launched in Jordan this week, saying US is ‘complicating conditions for a political solution’

This article is more than 5 years old

This article is more than 5 years old

Syria’s deputy foreign minister on Saturday criticised a new US programme to train moderate rebel fighters in Jordan, saying it will only fuel terrorism and further complicate efforts to reach a political solution to the country’s long and brutal civil war.

The remarks by Faisal Mekdad were published in his weekly column for the Lebanon-based Al-Binaa newspaper.

US officials say the programme is part of a broader effort to build a force capable of fighting Islamic State extremists – not President Bashar al-Assad’s forces. Officials said on Thursday the training started in Jordan with about 90 rebels. The programme will expand to training sites in Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, with 400 fighters completing the prescreening process.

Mekdad said Washington would be better off helping those who are fighting terrorism, instead of cooperating with what he said were terrorists. His government refers to all armed opposition as “terrorists” and accuses Turkey and Saudi Arabia of aiding them to undermine Assad.

“In doing so, the United States is supporting terrorism, and is complicating conditions for a political solution in Syria,” he wrote.

“The United States should put its hand in the hands of those countries that want to fight terrorism instead of putting its hands in the hands of terrorists and those supporting them.”

Many among the rebels have also criticised the programme, calling it a drop in the ocean that would not change realities on the ground.

Syrian rebels have been pleading for international help – particularly weapons – ever since the uprising against Assad’s rule that began in 2011 devolved into an outright civil war. Moderate rebels have long said that the west’s failure to bolster their forces helped fuel the rise of militants like the Islamic State group.

Assad’s forces, backed by Shia fighters from Lebanon’s Hezbollah and by funding and arms from Iran, have suffered significant recent losses in the south and north. Assad vowed recently to make a push to regain lost territories.

On Saturday, Syrian TV said five civilians were killed when rebels shelled a government-controlled district in the disputed northern city of Aleppo.