UNITED
NATIONS, May
26 -- The US
Senate Armed
Forces
Committee last
week passed
out a bill
which "authorizes
the Secretary
of Defense to
provide
equipment,
training,
supplies, and
defense
services to
assist vetted
members of the
Syrian
opposition."
This is viewed
as a fruit of
Ahmad Jarba's
lobbying, and
was quickly
cited by his
Syrian
Opposition
Coalition's
"Secretary
General Badr
Jamous," who said
"the U.S.
National
Defense
Authorization
Act that
authorizes the
Secretary of
Defense to
provide
equipment,
training,
supplies, and
defense
services to
assist vetted
members of the
Syrian
opposition
augurs a
significant
change in
world’s
dealing with
the conflict
in Syria.”
But what
does "vetted"
mean? Shouldn't
it mean, not
or no longer
linked to the
recruitment of
child soldiers,
including in
light of
the full
Congress' 2008
Child Soldiers
Prevention
Act?
Background:
the UN's
recent report
on Children
and Armed
Conflict,
which Inner
City Press
first wrote
about on May
14 to be
issued as a
document of
the Security Council
under the
symbol
S/2014/339,
has ten
paragraphs
over three
pages about
Syria.
But it does
not clear the
Free Syrian
Army of
earlier
charges of
child soldier
recruitment.
It names as
those
"recruiting
and using
children in
Syria...
several
FSA-affiliated
groups" as
well as the
Kurdish YPG,
the al Nusra
Front, ISIS
and Ahrar
al-Sham. There
are paragraphs
on the
government,
too.
As to the Free
Syrian Army
the new UN
report states
that "most
children
associated
with the
FSA-affiliated
group, as
young as 14
years,
indicated that
they had
received
weapons
training and
4,000 to 8,000
Syrian pounds
pay per month.
Examples are
given; "a 17
year-old boy
who joined the
al-Murabiteen
battalion of
the Falloujat
Houran FSA
brigade in
Bosra al-Sham,
Dara'a
Governate,
reportedly
received a
fifteen-day
weapons
training in
al-Lajat
valley close
to Bosra
al-Sham."
Also, "In June
2013, two
brothers, aged
16 and 17,
joined the
FSA-affiliated
Majd al-Islam
brigade in
Dara'a, where
they cleaned
weapons and
performed
security
duties."
In the
report's final
paragraph on
Syria
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon says
his Special
Representative
"engaged with
representatives
of the Syrian
National
Coalition on
their
commitments in
relation to
the protection
of children in
armed
conflict." But
the SNC is not
the FSA, and
this is not an
"action plan."
Inner City
Press asked
questions at
an SNC press
conference on
May 14, here
- but this is
not resolved.
These
advance copies
have been
known to be
changed before
"final"
release, in a
process for
which a description,
and then proposals
for reform,
were provided
here
and then
here.
Back in late
January amid
reports that
the US already
provides or is
ready to
provide aid to
armed groups
in Syria like
the Free
Syrian Army
(FSA), on
January 29
Inner City
Press first
highlighted
and then on
January 30
first asked
the US Mission
to the UN
about a
finding in the
UN's
then-unpublished
report on
Children and
Armed Conflict
in Syria:
"Throughout
the
reporting
period, the
United Nations
received
consistent
reports of
recruitment
and use of
children by
FSA-affiliated
groups." (Now
final, here,
Para 12).
The US
has cited the
recruitment
and use of
child soldiers
to suspend US
aid to armies
of governments
which had
previously
been receiving
it.
Inner City
Press asked,
and continues
to ask,
how could the
US provide aid
to a non-state
group which
even the UN
has found
using child
soldiers?
On February
13, Inner City
Press was able
to put this
question to
the UN's
humanitarian
chief Valerie
Amos.
Amos said "in
terms of
recruiting
children into
armed groups,
we see
culpability on
all the sides
to the
conflict, and
therefore
anyone who has
any kind of
influence with
those groups
needs to be
making it
clear that
this is not
acceptable." Video
here, from
Minute 10:11.
On February
14, the
following was
received from
US Mission
deputy
spokesperson
Tony Deaton: