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As Syrian government forces make gains on the ground, the limited lethal aid U.S. President Barack Obama promised the opposition has yet to be sent - almost a month after his announcement.
The issue seems to be Congress, where approval is being stalled while lawmakers debate the types of weapons to send, and to which groups.
White House Press Secretary Jay Carney told reporters Friday the administration has been talking with lawmakers in an effort to settle those questions and speed up approval.
“The fact is, we are working with Congress on the issue of the president’s announcement of enhanced military assistance,
but I do not have anything about specific shipments to provide to you," said Carney.
Deciding which groups should receive aid is difficult.
Shifting alliances among the groups complicate this decision, according to Michael Rubin at Washington’s American Enterprise Institute.
“There has been a steady radicalization as this debate has been occurring for the last two years,
and so the opposition which we looked at back a year, a year-and-a-half ago, when we had this debate, is not the same opposition that starts today.
The opposition has become steadily more radical," said Rubin.
Rubin says another question is which arms the opposition wants and whether the U.S. is willing to provide them.
“What the Syrian opposition wants is a qualitative military edge.
They want, for example, surface-to-air missiles,
and that raises a whole new set of political questions about whether or not we think that the Syrian opposition should have them, whether, when push comes to shove,
we trust the Syrian opposition not to turn on us or our allies," he said.
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