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Divided Syrian opposition faces feuds over leaders

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“We are hopeful that if this leadership structure can emerge in a new and enhanced way, it will be an organization that the international community can work with to better direct assistance, humanitarian assistance, non-lethal assistance, and other kinds of assistance,” State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said Friday.

She said the U.S. also hopes this new body will encourage more defections and give the Russians and Chinese “an address” where they can seek answers to questions about a post-Assad future.

But the SNC is not the only problem. Profound difficulties are also raised by Washington’s desire to incorporate elements from the ground – “those who are on the front lines fighting and dying today to obtain their freedom,” as U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton has put it.

Rebel fighters are still split into multiple, self-created brigades of military defectors and Syrian civilians who took up arms, some led by prominent local figures little known outside Syria. Most nominally belong to the umbrella Free Syrian Army, but their ties to it are often just lip-service. Rebels have set up civilian council to run affairs in towns and neighborhoods under their control, but finding a way to represent them in the opposition leadership could also be tough. Over every level there are ideological differences, including between Islamists and secularists.

Anthony Skinner, an analyst at Maplecroft, a British risk analysis company, is doubtful the U.S. initiative at Doha will succeed.

“That the SNC has been ineffective does not solely derive from the fact that many of its members have long been exiled and have been disconnected from the population at large. This is one of many factors,” he said. Serious doubts remain about whether the disparate opposition groups can work effectively under one umbrella, he said.

Already, the SNC is bristling, after Clinton said Wednesday that the Obama administration was suggesting names and organizations that should feature prominently in any new leadership to emerge from the conference.

“Only the people of Syria can decide who represents them and who doesn’t. No one else has a say in that,” said Abdelbaset Sieda, the SNC’s outgoing president. He spoke in Istanbul on Saturday at a function aimed at raising funds for orphaned Syrian children.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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