The Jerusalem Post

Trump demands Europe put citizens who joined ISIS on trial

Calls on UK, France, Germany to accept over 800 fighters captured by US

- • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN

President Donald Trump demanded that European countries take back and put on trial their citizens who became ISIS fighters and have been captured by the US and its partners in Syria.

In two tweets on Saturday night, Trump said that if the UK, France, Germany and others did not act, then the Washington might be forced to release the fighters.

“The United States is asking Britain, France, Germany and other European allies to take back over 800 ISIS fighters that we captured in Syria and put them on trial,” the president tweeted. “The Caliphate is ready to fall. The alternativ­e is not a good one in that we will be forced to release them...”

“The US does not want to watch as these ISIS fighters permeate Europe, which is where they are expected to go. We do so much, and spend so much – time for others to step up and do the job that they are capable of doing,” he tweeted.

Trump announced that the US was withdrawin­g from Syria on December 19 and reiterated his view that the US has defeated ISIS in Syria, noting that they are “pulling back after 100% Caliphate victory.”

The battle against ISIS in Syria is nearing its end, with US Vice President Mike Pence, Senator Lindsey Graham and others asserting at the Munich Security Conference that ISIS was down to just a few hundred square meters of territory in Syria.

The US-led coalition and its Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) partners have been hammering ISIS along the Euphrates River and isolating their last fighters in a place called Baghuz. In the past weeks, tens of thousands of civilians have fled, including many suspected ISIS members and their families. European members say that ISIS told them they should try to escape and surrender while local ISIS fighters sought to melt into the civilian population. Some ISIS members have gone undergroun­d into tunnel systems along the Iraq-Syria border.

Mustafa Bali, head of the SDF press office, said on Saturday that ISIS is holding civilians hostage. “The final operation is to be finished in the coming days following the rescue of civilians.”

Among the civilians who have fled are numerous Europeans, including one well known British teenager who joined the Islamic group in 2015 and now wants to come home. MI6 head Alex Younger warned in Munich that Western jihadists might return to their home countries and could pose a threat.

Security Minister Ben Wallace has said that UK citizens who joined ISIS have a right to return to the UK and would be prosecuted if they had committed offenses. But the UK won’t provide consular services to its citizens in eastern Syria and there is no way for them to get home.

Some of the ISIS war criminals who are now held in eastern Syria are wanted in Iraq for genocide. They are in a kind of legal limbo, since the SDF is not seen as a state by European countries, and human rights organizati­ons oppose the SDF handing over the suspected criminals to Iraq. At the same time, it is unclear how else they would return to Europe.

An estimated 5,000 Europeans joined ISIS. According to a report at Radio Free Europe that figure includes 750 from the UK, 600 from Germany and 1,600 from France. The UK initially sought to strip some of its citizens who joined ISIS of their citizenshi­p. More than 100 UK citizens were stripped of citizenshi­p in 2017, according to reports, before a court ended the practice.

The SDF holds more than 3,200 suspected ISIS members and their families, including people from 41 countries and hundreds of men who are thought to be hardened fighters and war criminals. Some of them are accused of torture, beheadings, enslavemen­t, traffickin­g, mass rape, genocide, murder, terrorism and other crimes.

The US says it wants European countries to increase their commitment to Syria. In Munich, America’s top general went hat in hand to ask for more troops while the US seeks to draw down its 2,000 personnel on the ground. Yet Trump’s tweet suggesting that the US captured the ISIS fighters and that the US could release them is being met with criticism.

The ISIS detainees are actually held by the SDF, which must decide what to do with them. The US and the 79-member coalition have generally excluded the SDF from meetings – such as the recent one in Washington on February 6.

The forces have not participat­ed in Munich or in other important conference­s.

Furthermor­e, the SDF sent a delegation to Washington in late July to lobby the US to remain in Syria. It has also asked for more support to help hold the detainees. The suggestion that they might be released by Trump does not appear to have been coordinate­d with the SDF, but illustrate­s US concerns and desires to pressure Europe to do more.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? DEFENDANTS ACCUSED of being members of a terrorist group in 2015, in a courtroom in Calle, Germany.
(Reuters) DEFENDANTS ACCUSED of being members of a terrorist group in 2015, in a courtroom in Calle, Germany.

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