EU Lifts Arms Embargo To Syrian Rebels In Strong Nudge To Assad

Since rebels seized Raqqa from the government, they have posted guards at state buildings, returned bread prices to pre-war levels and opened a hotline that residents can phone to report security issues, according to... Since rebels seized Raqqa from the government, they have posted guards at state buildings, returned bread prices to pre-war levels and opened a hotline that residents can phone to report security issues, according to anti-regime activists. Despite the city lying in ruins and its people living in the poorest conditions one imaginable, the faith is still there. Rebels have killed security forces in public squares and driven their bodies through the streets. The most powerful rebel brigades are extremist Muslims and include Jabhat al-Nusra, which the America says is linked to al-Qaida. The first major Syrian city to fall totally under rebel control, Raqqa is set to be the best test case yet for how opposition fighters will administer territory amid Western concerns over who fills the vacuum if President Assad is ousted. While the city's new rulers try to govern, they are struggling with the same divisions that have hampered the rebel movement's effectiveness throughout Syria's civil war. MORE LESS

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union has ended its arms embargo to Syria’s outgunned rebels just as top U.S. and Russian diplomats try to persuade Syria’s opposition and President Bashar Assad’s regime to attend peace talks in Geneva.

The diplomatic moves, accompanied by an unannounced visit by Sen. John McCain to rebel forces in Syria, aim to put more pressure on Assad to seek a negotiated settlement to end Syria’s 2-year-old civil war.

The prospect of EU nations being able to send weapons to the rebels while maintaining stiff economic sanctions against Assad’s regime also sends a message to Russia. Moscow has unabashedly sent weapons to Assad’s regime — and EU arms deliveries could partially re-balance the firepower in the war.

Russia’s deputy foreign minister, Sergei Ryabkov, lashed out at the move, saying it undermines the efforts of both Russia and the U.S to mediate peace talks.

He called the decision “a manifestation of double standards.”

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.

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