The News-Times

Senior U.S. envoy in Syria highly critical of troop withdrawal

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WASHINGTON — A senior American diplomat has written a highly critical assessment of the Trump administra­tion’s abrupt withdrawal of troops from northeast Syria last month, a decision that paved the way for an attack on U.S.allied forces in the area, officials said Thursday.

In an internal memo, William Roebuck, the top American diplomat in northern Syria, takes the Trump administra­tion to task for not doing more to prevent Turkey’s invasion or protect the Kurds, who fought alongside U.S. forces in the battle against the Islamic State group, according to two U.S. officials familiar with the matter.

One of the officials described the memo, which was obtained and first revealed by The New York Times, as “lengthy and harsh.” The officials were not authorized to discuss internal documents publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Roebuck’s memo highlights how Trump’s decision to withdraw American troops was deeply divisive, even within his own administra­tion. The move was widely criticized by Democrats and Republican­s as abandoning a key ally in the fight against the Islamic State.

Turkey invaded days after President Donald Trump ordered the small number of U.S. special forces in the area to leave.

In the memo quoted by the Times, Roebuck said there was no way to know if more pressure on Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, would have stopped the operation.

“It’s a tough call, and the answer is probably not. But we won’t know because we didn’t try,” the Times quoted Roebuck as writing.

He also raised concerns about the possibilit­y that Turkishbac­ked militias taking part in the operation were undiscipli­ned and could commit atrocities amounting to war crimes.

Roebuck, a top deputy to the U.S. special envoy for Syria, James Jeffrey, said the withdrawal of U.S forces had badly, if not irreparabl­y, damaged the trust of the Kurds. The memo was sent to Jeffrey and a number of other officials who deal with Syria policy.

Jeffrey is in Ankara, Turkey’s capital, for discussion­s with the Turks on putting in place an Oct. 17 deal negotiated by Vice President Mike Pence that created a buffer zone along portions of the TurkeySyri­a border. On Wednesday, a senior U.S. official said Jeffrey was raising concerns about alleged war crimes.

Trump’s ordered withdrawal from the northeast has been somewhat tempered by the deployment of forces to protect oil fields in Kurdishhel­d areas, some of which are vulnerable to attacks by IS, Roebuck wrote in the memo. But he also said those deployment­s would play into longheld beliefs in the Mideast that the U.S. is only interested in the region for its oil.

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