Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Diplomat quits early

U.S. envoy forged coalition to fight Islamic State.

- By Rukmini Callimachi and Eric Schmitt New York Times

Brett Mcgurk, the special presidenti­al envoy to the coalition fighting the Islamic State, has accelerate­d his resignatio­n, telling colleagues this weekend that he could not carry out President Donald Trump’s newly declared policy of withdrawin­g the 2,000 troops stationed in Syria.

Mcgurk, a seasoned diplomat considered by many to be the glue holding together the sprawling internatio­nal coalition fighting the terrorist group, was supposed to retire in February. But according to an email he sent to his staff, he decided to move forward his departure to Dec. 31 after Trump did not heed his own commanders and blindsided America’s allies in the region by abruptly ordering the troop withdrawal.

His decision follows close on the departure of Secretary of Defense

Jim Mattis, whose own resignatio­n letter has been seen as a rebuke of the president’s actions in the region.

“The recent decision by the president came as a shock and was a complete reversal of policy that was articulate­d to us,” Mcgurk said in the email to his colleagues. “It left our coalition partners confused and our fighting partners bewildered.”

“I worked this week to help manage some of the fallout but — as many of you heard in my meetings and phone calls — I ultimately concluded that I could not carry out these new instructio­ns and maintain my integrity,” he said.

With more than a decade of experience in Iraq spanning three administra­tions, Mcgurk helped stitch together the 79-nation coalition led by the United States to fight the Islamic State. The coalition oversaw the battle to take back territory from the terrorist group.

In a shift from the way the insurgency had been fought during the Bush administra­tion, one of the Obama administra­tion’s core doctrines was that America’s allies in the region needed to take the lead in recapturin­g territory from the terrorist group, with U.S. forces providing air support and limited logistical assistance.

This meant that the ground war to take back key cities captured by Islamic State, like Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria, took years to mount. It came down to Mcgurk to negotiate alliances and broker military aid to the mosaic of armed groups and government­s vying for control of the region.

On Twitter, Trump did not directly address Mcgurk’s resignatio­n but took credit for defeating the Islamic State.

 ?? Getty Images ?? Brett Mcgurk, U.S. special Presidenti­al Envoy for Iraq and Syria, seen in Manama in October, has resigned, citing key disagreeme­nts with President Donald J. Trump.
Getty Images Brett Mcgurk, U.S. special Presidenti­al Envoy for Iraq and Syria, seen in Manama in October, has resigned, citing key disagreeme­nts with President Donald J. Trump.

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