Los Angeles Times

So long, Syria. Now what?

Re “A half-baked plan for Syria,” editorial, Dec. 20

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Contrary to the advice of his national security advisors, President Trump has impulsivel­y decided to withdraw from Syria the 2,000 American Special Forces soldiers fighting Islamic State within 30 days, thus abandoning the Kurdish forces who have fought alongside the U.S. for many years.

Allies are force multiplier­s for the U.S., and abandoning the Kurds will cause other long-term or potential allies to question the reliabilit­y of American commitment­s. This is a significan­t cost to American security. Dan Caldwell

Malibu The writer is a professor of political science at Pepperdine University.

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I suppose that even I can support a Trump decision.

Trump’s decision to withdraw U.S. soldiers from Syria makes sense to me — just as limiting the role of the U.S. in that country made sense to President Obama. Our insistence that U.S. policies since World War II have led us to some kind of “exceptiona­lism” has caused us to engage in unwise misadventu­res.

Any attempted reduction in our military escapades does not bother me. Ralph Mitchell

Monterey Park

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Amid the clamoring over Trump’s ill-advised decision to pull our troops out of Syria, I suppose it’s inconvenie­nt to remember that it was Obama who dismissed Islamic State as the “J.V. team” and did far less than enough to stop those worthies when it would’ve been easy to do so. Michael Jenning

Van Nuys

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Instead of paying attention to critics who got us into these Mideast military fiascos in the first place, we should give Trump credit for getting us out of Syria. Chris Norby

Fullerton

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