The
fighters crossed over from Turkey on Friday and Saturday and are now
located in areas north of the city of Aleppo, said the London-based
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Their
arrival comes shortly after U.S. officials acknowledged that the
Pentagon's program to train and equip moderate Syrian rebels to help
fight ISIS had fallen far short of its original aims.
A
top U.S. general told the Senate last week that of the thousands of
fighters the U.S. military was supposed to train in the first year, only
four or five remained in place on the battlefield.
In light of the stark shortcomings, the Pentagon is expected to carry out a major overhaul of the training program for the rebels.
A
review of the effort has been underway since an initial group of some
54 rebels put into northern Syria this summer came under attack and are
no longer a functioning fighting force. That attack demonstrated that
units have to be larger so the forces can protect themselves, officials
said.
The fighters who entered
Syria in recent days have been supplied with four-wheel-drive vehicles
mounted with machine guns and ammunition, the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights said.
Warplanes
from a U.S.-led coalition are carrying out a bombing campaign against
ISIS positions in Syria and Iraq. But Western nations haven't sent
ground troops to fight against the militant group.
This report was sourced from cnn,com
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