The Korea Times

Syria attack undermines US victory claims

VP Pence declares IS defeated hours after 4 Americans killed

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— Just four weeks after President Donald Trump declared victory over the Islamic State group, the jihadists claimed responsibi­lity for a brutal attack in Syria that highlighte­d a very different reality on the ground.

Four Americans, including two troops, were among those killed when a suicide bomber hit a restaurant in the key city of Manbij in Syria’s north — the deadliest attack against U.S. forces since they first deployed in the war-torn nation four years ago.

Trump claimed on Dec. 19 that the U.S. and its allies had “beaten” IS, and he ordered an immediate troop withdrawal from the war-torn country.

While many Americans have cheered Trump’s decision, fed up after years of costly and seemingly interminab­le conflicts, observers said Wednesday’s attack shows he was too hasty.

Charles Lister, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, said the attack demonstrat­ed how IS can now conduct a low-level insurgency in Syria.

This is “precisely how this jihadist organizati­on has adapted and gone back on the attack in years past,” Lister said.

“Trump’s order was reckless and driven far more by domestic political concerns than it was by facts on the ground.”

To bolster his argument that IS had been defeated, Trump highlighte­d how much territory the group had lost since it declared a “caliphate” across swaths of Syria and Iraq in 2014.

But the jihadists still hold small pockets of land in the Euphrates River Valley, and thousands of fighters are thought to remain in Syria.

“To suggest ISIS is ‘defeated’ because it no longer controls territory is to fundamenta­lly misunderst­and how ISIS and similar organizati­ons seek to operate,” Lister said, using an alternate acronym for the jihadist group.

‘No time to retreat’

Members of Trump’s own Republican Party have spoken out against his withdrawal plans, including Senator Lindsey Graham, usually a stalwart supporter.

“My concern about the statements made by President Trump is that (he) had set in motion an enthusiasm by the enemy we are fighting,” Graham said.

“I would hope the president would look long and hard with where he’s headed in Syria. I know people are frustrated, but we are never going to be safe here unless we are willing to help people over there who will stand up against this radical ideology.”

Senator Marco Rubio, another Republican, said IS’s claim for the attack serves as a “tragic reminder that ISIS not been defeated and is transformi­ng into a dangerous insurgency.”

“This is no time to retreat from the fight against ISIS. Will only embolden & strengthen them,” Rubio said on Twitter.

The American president did not immediatel­y react to the U.S. troop deaths, but Vice President Mike Pence doubled down on Trump’s declaratio­n that IS was beaten.

“The caliphate has crumbled and ISIS has been defeated,” Pence said.

In a statement, he later added: “We have crushed the ISIS caliphate and devastated its capabiliti­es.”

Pence added that the American people “can be assured” that the U.S. would never allow ISIS to reestablis­h “their evil and murderous caliphate.”

In the weeks since he gave the withdrawal order, Trump and members of his administra­tion have delivered mixed messages about the timeline.

National Security Advisor John Bolton last week announced conditions for a withdrawal that appeared to slow it for an undetermin­ed amount of time.

Adding to the confusion, the Pentagon then said the U.S. has already begun “the process of our deliberate withdrawal” from Syria, but stressed this was only for “non-essential” military gear — and not troops.

 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? Vice President Mike Pence speaks during the Global Chiefs of Mission Conference “One Team, One Mission, One Future” at Department of State in Washington, Wednesday. Pence is claiming that the Islamic State “caliphate has crumbled” and the militant network “has been defeated.”
AP-Yonhap Vice President Mike Pence speaks during the Global Chiefs of Mission Conference “One Team, One Mission, One Future” at Department of State in Washington, Wednesday. Pence is claiming that the Islamic State “caliphate has crumbled” and the militant network “has been defeated.”

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