The Asian Age

Trump administra­tion messages open- ended Syria presence

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Washington: Six months after President Donald Trump said he wants US troops out of Syria, his top officials are hammering home what has become increasing­ly obvious: the US isn’t going anywhere.

Trump administra­tion members say there can be no troop pull- out until the Islamic State is permanentl­y defeated.

The US military has been involved in Syria since late 2014 and now has more than 2,000 troops in the country.

With broad gains on the battlefiel­d and the defeat of IS looking inevitable, Mr Trump in March said he wanted US troops out of Syria “very soon”, later adding the mission would come to a “rapid end”.

But defence secretary Jim Mattis warned that quitting Syria too fast would be a “strategic blunder” and James Jeffrey, the US special representa­tive for Syria engagement, this month said the US was “not in a hurry” to leave the wartorn nation.

Then

on Monday, Mr Trump’s national security adviser John Bolton pushed the idea of a US withdrawal even further off, tying such an event to Iran’s actions in Syria.

“We’re not going to leave ( Syria) as long as Iranian troops are outside Iranian borders,” he told reporters. “That includes Iranian proxies and militias,” he added.

With war still raging in Afghanista­n 17 years since the US- led invasion, and thousands of US troops stationed in Iraq after the US invaded in 2003, the prospect of a yet another openended engagement worries some.

“US policy is now to stay in Syria as long as Iran stays, and Iran doesn’t seem to be in a hurry to leave, and there is the chance for escalation, or accidents, involving Russian forces,” Andrew Parasiliti of the Rand Corporatio­n told AFP.

On September 17, Syrian air defences accidental­ly shot down a Russian military plane over the Mediterran­ean, killing all 15 crew members, as Israel was carrying out a raid on a Syrian army facility.

Moscow has blamed Israel for the incident, saying its pilots used the Russian plane as “cover” while conducting the air strike.

Syrian President Bashar al- Assad and “those who support him have a responsibi­lity to work for a political solution,” French foreign minister Jean- Yves Le Drian told reporters at the United Nations.

“If not, we risk heading toward a sort of perpetual war in the area,” he said.

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