Russia
has targeted Syrian rebel groups backed by the Central Intelligence Agency in a
string of airstrikes running for days, leading the U.S. to conclude that it is
an intentional effort by Moscow, American officials said.
The assessment, which is shared by
commanders on the ground, has deepened U.S. anger at Moscow and sparked a
debate within the administration over how the U.S. can come to the aid of its
proxy forces without getting sucked deeper into a proxy war that PresidentBarack Obama says he
doesn’t want. The White House has so far been noncommittal about coming to the
aid of CIA-backed rebels, wary of taking steps that could trigger a broader
conflict.
U.S.
officials said Russia’s targeting of its allies on the ground was a direct
challenge to Mr. Obama’s Syria policy. Underlining the distrust, the Pentagon
decided against sharing any information with Moscow about the areas where U.S.
allies were located because it suspected Russia would use that information to
target them more directly or provide the information to President Bashar al-Assad’s regime.
“On
day one, you can say it was a one-time mistake,” a senior U.S. official said of
Russia’s strike on one of the allied rebel group’s headquarters. “But on day
three and day four, there’s no question it’s intentional. They know what
they’re hitting.”
U.S.
officials say they now believe the Russians have been directly targeting
CIA-backed rebel groups that pose the most direct threat to Mr. Assad since the
campaign began on Wednesday, both to firm up regime positions and to send a
message to Mr. Obama’s administration.
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