Posted on Aug 21, 2015
RallyPoint Shared Content
0
0
0
From: Albawaba News

The Pentagon’s train and equip program has produced just 54 “moderate” rebels in Syria at a cost of $41 million, according to a report.

The rebels, who have been “painstakingly vetted” and “equipped with fancy new weapons,” make up a group known as the New Syria Force, a key part of the US campaign against Daesh (ISIL), CNN reports.

A member of the group, which is fiercely opposed to the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, has appealed to the United States to speed up the training program.

“Nearly 17,000 Syrian men want to join, but the training is very slow,” Abu Iskander said in an interview with CNN. “We need it to be faster -- 30 days instead of 45 days. More trainees -- for example, our training in Jordan did 85 -- we should have been 500 there and another 500 in Turkey.”

Another 70 rebels are due to complete their courses shortly, according to the report.

The Pentagon had initially announced that it intended to produce 5,400 rebels a year as a proxy ground force to fight against both ISIL [Daesh] and the Assad government.

Abu Iskander said much of their work in Syria involves providing information on targets for US airstrikes.

“I go to the front line against ISIS, and I give locations for the warplanes to bomb,” he told CNN. “We have developed communication devices using satellites that can target from any place on the front line whether we see it or not.”

“There are daily drone flights and they're in the sky as I talk to you now. I speak to the Americans every hour, a total of four hours a day,” the fighter added.

At least five newly trained rebel were recently captured by the al-Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front, reinforcing the skepticism that the US program is unsustainable.

http://www.albawaba.com/news/us-military-spent-41-million-train-54-syrian-rebels-report-732724
Posted in these groups: Train2 TrainingMoney budget Budget
Avatar feed
Responses: 3
LCDR Deputy Department Head
1
1
0
That's not bad! Less than a million each?
(1)
Comment
(0)
LCDR Deputy Department Head
LCDR (Join to see)
>1 y
MCPO Roger Collins ouch! I've been trying to find more about this for the last 30 minutes and it looked to me like a lot of this money was "invested" into the support structure needed which would mean as time goes on and more are trained, the cost per person will drop drastically. Let me find a good source though before I say for sure.
(0)
Reply
(0)
LCDR Deputy Department Head
LCDR (Join to see)
>1 y
MCPO Roger Collins I'm less and less certain that I'm correct on the money. I think it really is costing close to a million each...
(0)
Reply
(0)
MCPO Roger Collins
MCPO Roger Collins
>1 y
I will never understand how we have such excellence in our training programs yet seldom effectively with foreign militaries. S. Korea would be the lone exception. IMO It is a leadership issue on their side. However our people should be able to see that.
(1)
Reply
(0)
SSgt Alex Robinson
SSgt Alex Robinson
>1 y
Love the tongue in cheek comment.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
PO1 Sojourner "Chancy" Phillips
0
0
0
And people have the nerve to to complain about the money spent on training a few women in Ranger School.
(0)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
LTC Stephen F.
0
0
0
Edited >1 y ago
That is a lot of our tax dollars to spend with very little short term return on the investment. I hope that significant amount of expenditure is based on costs such as salary of the trainers; but< i expect that those costs were already factored out.
(0)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close