US considering sending more troops to Syria

US considering sending more troops to Syria
More US troops could head to Syria if capable partners on the ground could be found, US Defence Secretary said on Sunday
2 min read
09 November, 2015
Carter said the US wants to find capable and motivated local forces [Getty]

More troops from the United States could "absolutely" be deployed to Syria if Washington identifies more "capable local forces" as partners in the fight against the Islamic State group [IS], US Defence Secretary Ashton Carter said in an interview broadcast on Sunday.

Carter's comments to ABC News came about a week after the White House announced the deployment of "fewer than 50" special operations personnel in the north of the war-ravaged nation, in a bid to strengthen forces battling IS fighters.

You need local forces involved who can keep the peace after you've helped them win the peace
- Ashton Carter

"In order to have victory stick, you have to have local forces involved who can keep the peace after you've helped them win the peace," Carter said in an interview taped aboard the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt in the South China Sea.

"Now those are hard to find in Iraq and Syria," he told the This Week news programme.

"If we find additional groups that are willing to fight ISIL [the IS] and are capable and motivated, we'll do more. The president has indicated a willingness to do more, I certainly am prepared to recommend he do more, but you need to have capable local forces - that's the key to sustainable victory."

When asked if that could mean more US forces on the ground, Carter replied: "Absolutely."

The US backtracks

Obama's authorisation of the first sustained deployment of US forces to Syria reversed a long-standing refusal to put boots on the ground in the war-wracked country, where more than 250,000 people have been killed since March 2011.

While US fighters are believed to have previously carried out covert missions in Syria - they had not been deployed there on a continuous basis.

For over a year, the US has led a 65-member coalition that has conducted air strikes against Islamic State targets in Iraq and Syria. But that has had only a limited impact in stopping the extremist advance.

Carter said the US deployment "is intended to help bring to bear all that the United States can bring to bear, in the way of intelligence, air power and so forth, to help these motivated, capable local forces."

"This is an instance of the whole strategy. We have to beat ISIL. We will beat ISIL. ISIL's heart is in Syria and Iraq."