Sunday 4 November 2012

The U.S. "Primarily Political Leaders " in Syrian Opposition .

              The   U.S.  would  recruit   the  opposition  to   form   a   new   anti-government   organization   and   replace   the   Syria   Naional  Council  ,the  main    opposition  in   exile   because   of   the   serious  violence  in   Syria  like   a  terrorist   war  .

             
(CNN) -- Frustrated with the current leadership of the largely ineffective opposition movement against President Bashar Al-Assad, the State Department said Thursday it has identified individual Syrians who "show leadership" and is "bringing them to the attention" of opposition members who will gather November 7 in Doha, Qatar.
"This is primarily political leadership. People who can not only organize but provide services. Because what this really is about is the day after, and the day will come when Assad falls, and there needs to be in place structures that can provide governance and services to the people," said Patrick Ventrell, acting deputy State Department spokesman.
U.S. officials, including the Ambassador to Syria currently working in Washington, have met the individuals in several ways, an administration official told CNN.




These include opposition conferences, governance training sessions run by the United States in Istanbul, and through recommendations by other opposition members.
The focus, the official said, is on people with political and administrative skills, not military skills. Although some of them, the official said, may have fought against the government as part of the opposition.
The United States says the current leadership, the Syrian National Council, has failed to unite the opposition.
Ventrell directly criticized the group, comprised largely of ex-pat Syrians, saying that "after many months, (it) has not succeeded in broadening its leadership -- not to more insiders, not ethnically and not geographically.
"Meanwhile, we and our friends of the Syrian people, have encountered individuals who have already displayed leadership and want to be part of Syria's future."
There is a "sense of urgency," Ventrell said. U.S. officials have said they are concerned that radicals might try to hijack the revolution with the opposition mired in its own politics.



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