Pentagon plan to have US-trained rebels fight ISIS is a flop, with just five remaining

No more than five US-trained Syrian rebels are fighting the Islamic State, astoundingly short of the envisioned 5,000, the top US commander in the Middle East told angry lawmakers who branded the training program “a total failure.”
After the first 54 fighters were sent in to fight in July, a Syrian affiliate of al-Qaeda attacked the group, killing several and taking others hostage while many fled. Asked how many remain, Gen. Lloyd Austin told the Senate Armed Services Committee on Wednesday, “It’s a small number. ... We’re talking four or five.”
Congress has approved US$500 million to train Syrian fighters, and officials have said fewer than 200 are going through training now. One of the problems has been that many Syrian fighters want training and equipment to fight the government forces of President Bashar Assad, but the US program is limited to rebels who agree to only battle the militants.

The stunning admission from Austin came as defence officials scrambled separately to respond to allegations that they skewed intelligence assessments to give a rosier picture of conditions on the battlefield.
The Obama administration was already struggling to defend its military strategy to “destroy and degrade” the terrorist group with an air campaign and programs to train, assist and equip local forces. Lawmakers and Republican presidential candidates have assailed the administration, contending that it has had limited or no success in fighting the militants.