Las Vegas Review-Journal

U.S.: Foreign fighters in Syria need home justice

Mattis to discuss issue with coalition members

- By Lolita C. Baldor The Associated Press

ROME — The United States is urging allied nations to help deal with the growing number of foreign fighters that are being held by the U.s.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces, saying the militants should be turned over to face justice in their home countries.

U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis is expected to raise the issue during a meeting in Rome this week with other members of the coalition that is fighting the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.

The SDF is currently holding thousands of IS detainees, including hundreds of foreign fighters from a number of nations. The issue became more prominent in recent days, after the announceme­nt that the SDF had captured two notorious British members of an Islamic State cell who were commonly dubbed the Beatles and were known for beheading hostages.

U.S. officials have said putting the two in the Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, detention facility is not an option. And British leaders have suggested they don’t want the two men returned to Britain.

“We’re working with the coalition on foreign fighter detainees, and generally expect these detainees to return to their country of origin for dispositio­n,” said Kathryn Wheelbarge­r, the principal deputy assistant defense secretary for internatio­nal security affairs. “Defense ministers have the obligation and the opportunit­y to really explain to their other ministers or their other Cabinet officials just the importance to the mission, to the campaign, to make sure that there’s an answer to this problem.”

Speaking to reporters traveling with Mattis to Europe, Wheelbarge­r said the key goal is to keep the fighters off the battlefiel­d and unable to travel to other cities.

“The capacity problem is very real,” Wheelbarge­r said, noting that at one point the SDF was capturing as many as 40 militants a day. “Success in the campaign means you get more people off the battlefiel­d. … These facilities are eventually going to be full.”

U.S. military officials have confirmed that El Shafee Elsheikh and Alexanda Amon Kotey, who grew up in London, were captured in early January in eastern Syria.

U.S. officials have interrogat­ed the men, who were part of the IS cell that captured, tortured and beheaded more than two dozen hostages, including American journalist­s James Foley and Steven Sotloff, and American aid worker Peter Kassig.

 ??  ?? The Associated Press Turkish artillery fires Friday at Syrian Kurdish positions in Afrin area, Syria, from the Turkish side of the border in Hatay, Turkey.
The Associated Press Turkish artillery fires Friday at Syrian Kurdish positions in Afrin area, Syria, from the Turkish side of the border in Hatay, Turkey.

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