US officials are weighing sending more special operations troops to Syria, where the contingent of American fighters currently numbers around 50, a senior military official told AFP on Saturday.
A US official speaking on the condition of anonymity said the additional troops would be used to bolster US special operations sent to Syria several months ago.
“Presumably they would do more of what they’re already doing,” said the official, who said the mission would be expected to take on “no new capabilities but an increase of the current capabilities.”
The official said no determination has been made about the number of troops who could be sent or whether they will be sent at all.
“Nothing has been decided yet,” the official said.
The Pentagon last year said it was sending about 50 special operations troops to work with anti-ISIS fighters in Syria, although officials have said next to nothing about their whereabouts or progress since, and have worked hard to ensure no information about the commandos’ presence is released, citing security reasons.
US Defense Secretary Ash Carter has said the American forces are directly engaged in pinpointing targets in Syria.
Some were involved in helping identify targets during coalition airstrikes in late February to liberate the Syrian town of Shaddadi from ISIS control.
Washington has led an international coalition against the ISIS group in Iraq and Syria since August 2014.
The United States, which has ruled out large-scale troop deployments on the ground, has stressed the importance of special operations commandos working with sympathetic local forces and helping to advise and equip them to fight ISIS.
US Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman General Joe Dunford recently said that the White House and Pentagon had discussed providing troop reinforcements in Iraq, where some 3,900 US forces are currently on the ground.
Russia acknowledged last week that it also has dispatched special forces to Syria, in support of troops fighting to bolster the regime of Syrian President Basher al-Assad.
Moscow has also been flying a bombing campaign in Syria since Sept. 30, also launching cruise missiles from ships and submarines.
A truce brokered by Moscow and Washington went into effect late February to end hostilities between the Damascus regime and Syrian rebels. The ceasefire did not extend however to fighters with the ISIS group or the Al-Nusra Front, the Syrian offshoot of al-Qaida.
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