USA TODAY US Edition

Religious and ethnic minorities flee Syria following cease-fire

Trump’s policy angers Evangelica­l base in US

- Deirdre Shesgreen HUSSEIN MALLA/AP FILE

WASHINGTON – When Bassam Ishak heard that Vice President Mike Pence had secured a cease-fire in Syria – one that included protection­s for religious minorities – he felt a wave of optimism that his family back home would be safe.

But in the weeks since that deal was announced in Turkey on Oct. 17, Ishak’s hometown in northern Syria has nearly emptied, with Christians and Kurds fleeing amid fears of persecutio­n by Turkish-backed militias.

When he announced the cease-fire, Pence emphasized Turkey’s commitment to shield religious and ethnic minorities in the region. But Ishak and others say extremist paramilita­ry groups have not adhered to the U.S.-brokered deal, continuing their attacks and terrifying residents in their path.

“They are frightened. These are communitie­s who grew up hearing stories about the genocide against their people by Turkey in 1915,” said Ishak, who left Syria in 2011 and now lives in Washington.

He was referring to the Seyfo massacre, the little-known slaughter of an estimated 300,000 Christians by the Ottomans during World War I.

“For them to see this happening is like history repeating itself. This is why they’re fleeing,” Ishak told USA TODAY. The 60-year-old Syriac Christian last visited his home in 2018; he now represents the Syrian Democratic Council, the political arm of the U.S-allied Syrian Democratic Forces, in Washington.

Ishak’s fears help explain why the unfolding crisis in Syria has sparked such a visceral reaction from Christian leaders in the U.S., prompting some of President Donald Trump’s most stalwart defenders to voice outrage over his decision to withdraw U.S. troops from northeast Syria. Critics say Trump’s move gave Turkey the green light to invade Syria and betrayed the Kurdish forces, known as the SDF, America’s chief ally in the fight against the Islamic State terrorist group.

Now, some predict there will be an “ethnic cleansing” against the U.S.-allied Kurds, as well as the Yazidis and other minorities in northern Syria.

There is not a precise count of the number of Christians living in this region, but some experts put the figure at about 100,000. The region is diverse, with Arabs, Kurds, Yazidis and others living in relative harmony. The SDF, which is also an ethnically mixed force, gained control of this region after the Syrian civil war broke out. Now, however, Turkey has moved in and Syrian government forces, under the brutal regime of Bashar al-Assad, are also vying for control.

Trump and other top White House officials have strongly defended the decision to withdraw U.S. troops stationed on the Turkey-Syria border. And they say the cease-fire has mostly held – staving off more severe violence.

“The Turkish leaders made real commitment­s to the vice president and me when we were on the ground” in Ankara, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told Fox News on Oct. 30. Pompeo traveled with Pence for the Oct. 17 negotiatio­ns with Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Pompeo said the Trump administra­tion would continue to monitor the situation and make sure Turkey complies with the agreement. And he said he has not received reports of a genocide in the making.

The administra­tion has also authorized $50 million in assistance for Christians and other religious and ethnic minorities in northeast Syria.

A senior administra­tion official, speaking on the condition of anonymity

“It is a zone of death, and we’re complicit.” David Eubank American Christian missionary in Syria

to provide a candid assessment, said the White House has received conflictin­g reports from inside Syria, and officials are “very aware” of the possibilit­y that targeted violence could spiral.

“We certainly would not declare an ethnic cleansing right now,” this official said. “But we are aware, very aware, of the possibilit­y and have been very clear that that’s not something we’re willing to tolerate.”

The situation in Syria is not just a fraught foreign policy problem. It also has domestic political consequenc­es. If Evangelica­ls become disenchant­ed with Trump over his Syria policy, it could cost him dearly in the 2020 election. White Evangelica­l voters supported Trump by an overwhelmi­ng margin in the 2016 election, 80% to 16%, and they have remained deeply loyal amid a cascade of controvers­ies.

But Trump’s decision to withdraw most U.S. forces from Syria opened a rift. Perhaps the most notable criticism came from televangel­ist Pat Robertson, who slammed Trump’s decision.

“The president, who allowed (Washington Post journalist Jamal) Khashoggi to be cut in pieces without any repercussi­ons whatsoever, is now allowing the Christians and the Kurds to be massacred by the Turks,” Robertson said during an Oct. 7 episode of his Christian Broadcasti­ng Network show, “The 700 Club.”

Others have raised their voices as well. An American Christian missionary in Syria, David Eubank, has been posting near-daily photos and videos on Twitter, displaying the unfolding crisis in real time and pleading for Trump to reverse course.

In an Oct. 30 video, the former U.S. Army Ranger describes helping Kurds and Christians who have abandoned their homes in northern Syria.

“It is a zone of death, and we’re complicit,” says Eubank, the founder of Free Burma Rangers, a humanitari­an group that assists ethnic minorities in war zones.

Trump administra­tion officials have tried to quiet the Evangelica­l storm, reaching out to leaders privately and publicly.

Victoria Coates, Trump’s deputy national security adviser for Middle East and North African affairs, recently went on American Family Radio, to address concerns raised by the show’s host Tony Perkins, a powerful conservati­ve Christian leader.

 ??  ?? Salwa Hanna and her children carry their belongings after they arrive at the Bardarash refugee camp north of Mosul, Iraq, on Oct. 17.
Salwa Hanna and her children carry their belongings after they arrive at the Bardarash refugee camp north of Mosul, Iraq, on Oct. 17.

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