Los Angeles Times

Syrian leader tells U.S. troops to go

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BEIRUT — Syrian President Bashar Assad threatened to attack a region held by U.S.-backed Kurdish fighters in northeaste­rn Syria, saying in an interview broadcast Thursday that American troops should leave the country.

The remarks on Russian TV reflect that despite pressure on multiple fronts, Assad is seeking to consolidat­e control after seven years of civil war.

With military backing from Russia and Iran, he has reclaimed most of the territory lost to rebels in the wake of the popular uprising that swept the country in 2011 and quickly descended into allout civil war. But large patches of territory remain beyond his control, including the expansive region north of the Euphrates River that is administer­ed by the Syrian Kurds.

Speaking to the Russian channel RT, Assad said he has opened the door to negotiatio­ns with the Kurdishrun administra­tion while preparing to “liberate by force.”

Forces loyal to Assad and the Syrian Kurds have clashed sporadical­ly over the eastern oil province of Dair Alzour. They led rival campaigns against the militant group Islamic State last year and maintain a protracted front against each other along the Euphrates.

The United States, which supports the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, operates air bases and outposts in the Kurdish-administer­ed region.

“The Americans should leave,” Assad said. “Somehow, they are going to leave.”

The Syrian president also is under pressure from Israel over growing Iranian influence in Syria. Iran, in conjunctio­n with the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, operates a network of militias recruiting from across the Mideast to fight on Assad’s behalf and maintains a command structure separate from the Syrian government. Israel in recent months ramped up its strikes on reported Hezbollah and Iranian positions and weapons depots in Syria, sparking fears of a regional war.

In the TV interview, Assad maintained there are no Iranian troops in Syria, only Iranian officers advising the Syrian army. He denied reports that Iranians have been killed in Israeli strikes.

“Actually, we had tens of Syrian martyrs and wounded soldiers,” he said.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, which monitors the war through a network of activists in Syria, says at least 68 Iranian and pro-Iranian forces have been killed in Israeli strikes since April.

Assad said that Israeli strikes destroyed a “big part” of Syrian air defenses but that they have been rebuilt, “stronger than before, thanks to Russian support.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said his government won’t accept a permanent Iranian presence anywhere in Syria.

Also Thursday, Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman visited Moscow for talks focusing on Syria. His Russian counterpar­t, Sergei Shoigu, said the two would discuss the situation in southweste­rn Syria, along its border with Israel.

The Syrian government’s plans to recapture rebelheld parts of the region have raised Israeli concerns that Iran and Hezbollah could take up positions along the frontier.

Russian news reports said Moscow wants to cut a deal that would see Russian military police deployed to areas near Israel. The agreement calls for Iranian forces to pull out and Syrian rebels to surrender heavy weapons.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said Thursday that Iranian troops and Hezbollah fighters are preparing to withdraw from the south, namely the regions of Dara and Quneitra near the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

 ?? Delil Souleiman AFP/Getty Images ?? U.S. SOLDIERS and Kurdish fighters in eastern Syria this month. Syrian Kurds have helped the American military battle Islamic State.
Delil Souleiman AFP/Getty Images U.S. SOLDIERS and Kurdish fighters in eastern Syria this month. Syrian Kurds have helped the American military battle Islamic State.

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