Arab News

Mattis faces questions from allies on Daesh strategy in ME

-

HELSINKI: As Daesh loses its remaining stronghold­s in Iraq and Syria, US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis is facing a growing chorus of questions from NATO allies and partners about what the next steps will be in the region to preserve peace and ensure the militants do not rise again.

Heading into a week of meetings with Nordic countries and allies across Europe, Mattis must begin to articulate what has been a murky American policy on how the future of Syria unfolds.

Speaking to reporters traveling with him to Finland, Mattis said the main question from US allies is: What comes next? And he said the key is to get the peace process on track.

“We’re trying to get this into the diplomatic mode so we can get things sorted out,” said Mattis, who will meet with NATO defense ministers later this week, “and make certain (that) minorities — whoever they are — are not just subject to more of what we’ve seen” under the Assad regime until now.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in late October repeated Washington’s call for Assad to surrender control, looking past recent battlefiel­d gains by his Russianbac­ked forces to insist that “the reign of the Assad family is coming to an end.”

Tillerson made the comments after meeting with the UN’s envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura, who later announced plans to resume UN-mediated peace talks on Nov. 28. It will be the eighth such round under his mediation in Geneva since early 2016.

Mattis said intelligen­ce assessment­s two to three months ago made it clear that Daesh was “going down.” He said informatio­n based on the number of Daesh individual­s taken prisoner and the number of fighters who were getting wounded or were deserting the group made it clear that “the whole bottom was dropping out.”

But while he said the effort now is to get the diplomatic process shifted to Geneva and the UN, he offered few details that suggest the effort is moving forward.

In addition to the diplomatic efforts, Mattis said the US is still working to resolve conflicts with Russia in the increasing­ly crowded skies over the Iraq and Syria border, where a lot of the fighting has shifted.

On Friday, Assad’s military announced the capture of the eastern Syrian city of Deir Ezzor, while Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi proclaimed victory in retaking the town of Qaim on the border, the militants’ last significan­t urban area in the country.

Focus has now turned to Boukamal, the last urban center for the militants in both Iraq and Syria where Syrian troops — backed by Russia and Iranian-supported militias — and US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) are vying for control of the strategic border town.

The proximity of forces in the area has raised concerns about potential clashes between them as they approach Boukamal from opposite sides of the Euphrates River, and now from across the border with Iraq.

Mattis said that as forces close in, the fighting is getting “much more complex,” and there is a lot of effort on settling air space issues with the Russians.

He also declined to say whether the US will begin to take back weapons provided to Syrian Kurdish fighters, known as the YPG. The US has argued that the YPG has been the most effective fighting group in the battle to oust Daesh from Raqqa, but Turkey opposed the arming effort because it believes the YPG is linked to a militant group in Turkey.

 ??  ?? US Secretary of Defense James Mattis speaks to journalist­s onboard their flight to Helsinki, Finland, on Sunday. (AFP)
US Secretary of Defense James Mattis speaks to journalist­s onboard their flight to Helsinki, Finland, on Sunday. (AFP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia