Kerry urges involvement of ground forces in anti-IS fight

Kerry urges involvement of ground forces in anti-IS fight

PanARMENIAN.Net - Syrian and other Arab ground forces must be found to take on Islamic State, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Thursday, December 3 saying the militant group would not be defeated by air strikes alone, Reuters reports.

Kerry was speaking hours after Britain began bombing Islamic State targets in Syria, joining forces with France and the United States, nearly three weeks after the jihadist group killed 130 people in attacks across Paris.

British Prime Minister David Cameron says there are as many as 70,000 moderate opposition fighters in Syria ready to take on Islamic State with the help of foreign air strikes, an assertion opponents of the bombing campaign have questioned.

Kerry suggested that if a political solution could end the fighting between the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and opposition groups and sufficient ground troops could be mustered, the militant group could be vanquished in months.

Asked later if he meant Western ground forces, Kerry said after a meeting in Belgrade of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE): “(I'm) talking about Syrian and Arab, as we have been consistently.”

A U.S. official said Kerry was speaking mainly of Syrian ground forces, but it was conceivable troops of other Arab nations could be involved.

It is unclear if any Arab state would contribute significant ground forces to Syria anytime soon because of disagreements about the war and the fact that many militaries are already stretched tackling insurgencies, protecting borders or fighting conflicts closer to home.

In a policy reversal, the United States on Oct. 30 said it would send up to 50 U.S. special forces to Syria to coordinate on the ground with U.S.-backed rebels.

Kerry met his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, on the sidelines of the OSCE meeting, with Washington and Moscow at odds over the fate of Assad more than four years into a war that has killed over 250,000 people.

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