Syrian opposition head fears US-Iran thaw could benefit Assad

Ahmed Jarba says unfreezing of Iranian funds could leave Tehran more money to support Assad; says there are efforts to unify rebel forces on the ground.

Head of Syrian National Coalition Ahmed Jarba 370 (photo credit: REUTERS/Murad Sezer )
Head of Syrian National Coalition Ahmed Jarba 370
(photo credit: REUTERS/Murad Sezer )
KUWAIT - The head of the Syrian National Coalition opposition group said on Sunday a thaw in relations between Washington and Tehran could strengthen President Bashar Assad's hand in Syria's civil war.
Ahmed Jarba said a disbursement of Iranian funds frozen in overseas bank accounts as part of a deal under which Iran is to curb its nuclear activity in exchange for sanctions relief could leave it more cash to spare to support Assad.
"I am worried about this closeness (in relations) from the financial side," Jarba said in an interview with Reuters, referring to relations between the United States and Iran.
"There are frozen Iranian funds in foreign banks. If these funds were released to Iran, part of it could go to the Syrian regime and this complicates matters even more," he said during a visit to Kuwait, which hosts a Gulf Arab summit on Tuesday.
"We have conveyed this worry to the Arab and international parties and they were understanding," he said.
Iran is the main backer, along with Russia, of Assad's government in a conflict that has lasted more than two years, killed more than 100,000 people and uprooted millions.
Western diplomats say Iran provides Syria with billions of dollars of aid and an undisclosed number of military advisers.
Assad making gains
More secure than a year ago, Assad has consolidated his power around Damascus and central Syria after months of steady military gains. He faces little internal pressure to make concessions to the mainly Sunni rebels.
Infighting among Syria's rebel groups has undermined their fight against Assad and made Western governments hesitant to back them.
Jarba said the coalition would try to unify factions inside Syria ahead of the "Geneva 2" peace talks scheduled for January 22.
"There are efforts to unify the opposition on the ground ... the armed opposition. We will meet in Turkey this month," he said, adding factions would include the new Islamic Front, a union of six rebel groups, but not al-Qaida-linked groups.
The Syrian National Coalition has little physical presence in Syria and little influence over militant Islamist brigades that play a major role in the fight against Assad's forces.
In a sign of the friction among rebel groups, fighters from the Islamic Front took control of the Western-backed Free Syrian Army bases on the Turkish border, rebels and activists said on Saturday.
The rise of hardline Islamist groups, including some linked to al-Qaida, has unsettled powers including the United States, who fear that if the militants came to power, they would eventually turn their weapons on Western targets.
While the Islamic Front does not include either of Syria's two al-Qaida-affiliated units - the Nusra Front and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) - it does include radical Islamists who have coordinated with them.