The Borneo Post (Sabah)

No Syria reconstruc­tion aid if Iran stays, says US

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WASHINGTON: The United States said Wednesday it will refuse any post-war reconstruc­tion assistance to Syria if Iran is present, expanding the rationale for US involvemen­t in the conflict.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, speaking to a pro-Israel group, vowed an aggressive push to counter Iran across the Middle East and said that Syria was a decisive battlegrou­nd.

“The onus for expelling Iran from the country falls on the Syrian government, which bears responsibi­lity for its presence there,” Pompeo told the Jewish Institute for National Security of America.

“If Syria doesn’t ensure the total withdrawal of Iranian-backed troops, it will not receive one single dollar from the United States for reconstruc­tion,” Pompeo said.

The onus for expelling Iran from the country falls on the Syrian government, which bears responsibi­lity for its presence there.

Pompeo’s speech effectivel­y broadens the official explanatio­n for why the United States is involved in Syria’s civil war, which a monitoring group says has killed close to 365,000 people since 2011.

Former president Barack Obama authorised military action with the goal of rooting out the Islamic State group, or ISIS, the extremist force that has boasted of a slew of grisly attacks both in Syria and the West.

The United States has about 2,000 troops in Syria, primarily to train and advise forces other than ISIS that are waging an increasing­ly precarious fight to topple President Bashar al-Assad.

Pompeo acknowledg­ed that Assad was stronger thanks to Iranian and Russian help and said that, with ISIS “beaten into a shadow of its former self,” new priorities had emerged.

“Defeating ISIS, which was once our primary focus, continues to be a priority. But it will now be joined by two other mutually reinforcin­g objectives,” Pompeo said.

“These include a peaceful political resolution to the Syrian conflict and the removal of all Iranian and Iranian-backed forces from Syria.”

The US funding threats are unlikely to make an immediate impact in Syria.

Trump, a vocal critic of foreign aid as he promotes an ‘America First’ policy, in August pulled the United States out of Syria’s near-term reconstruc­tion, suspending US$230 million after Gulf Arab allies made their own pledges.

But Pompeo’s speech marks a new sign that the United States is not leaving Syria anytime soon after Trump, a one time critic of foreign interventi­ons, earlier this year mused aloud about withdrawin­g troops.

Trump’s national security adviser John Bolton, a longtime hawk on Iran, told reporters last month that US troops would stay “as long as Iranian troops are outside Iranian borders.” — AFP

Mike Pompeo, US Secretary of State

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