Obama waives ban on arming terrorists to allow aid to Syrian opposition.(WE).BY Joel Gerkhe.
President Obama waived a provision of federal law designed to prevent the supply of arms to terrorist groups to clear the way for the U.S. to provide military assistance to “vetted” opposition groups fighting Syrian dictator Bashar Assad.
Some elements of the Syrian opposition are
associated with radical Islamic terrorist groups, including al Qaeda, which was
responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks in New York, Washington, D.C., and
Shanksville, Pa., in 2001. Assad’s regime is backed by Iran and Hezbollah.
The president, citing his authority under the Arms Export Control Act, announced today that he would “waive the prohibitions in sections 40 and 40A of the AECA related to such a transaction.”
Those two sections prohibit sending weaponry to
countries described in section 40(d): “The prohibitions contained in this
section apply with respect to a country if the Secretary of State determines
that the government of that country has repeatedly provided support for acts of
international terrorism,” Congress stated in the Arms Control Export Act.
“For purposes of this subsection, such acts shall
include all activities that the Secretary determines willfully aid or abet the
international proliferation of nuclear explosive devices to individuals or
groups or willfully aid or abet an individual or groups in acquiring
unsafeguarded special nuclear material,” the law continues.
The law allows the president to waive those
prohibitions if he “determines that the transaction is essential to the national
security interests of the United States.”
Under section 40(g) of the AECA, the Obama team must also provide Congress — at least 15 days before turning over the weapons — "the name of any country involved in the proposed transaction, the identity of any recipient of the items to be provided pursuant to the proposed transaction, and the anticipated use of those items," along with a list of the weaponry to be provided, when they will be delivered, and why the transfer is key to American security interests.
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