PTI, Washington :
The US military will keep around 200 troops in Syria after President Donald Trump’s pullout from the war-torn country, the White House said on Thursday.
“A small peace-keeping group of about 200 will remain in Syria for a period of time,” White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said.
The announcement comes amid fierce criticism of Trump’s decision to withdraw America’s 2,000 or so troops from Syria by April 30, with members of his own Republican Party blasting the move.
In December, Trump declared victory over the Islamic State group in Syria, even though thousands of jihadists remain and fighting continues around their last holdout.
Critics have decried a number of possible outcomes from a precipitous withdrawal, including a Turkish attack on US-backed Kurdish forces and a resurgence of ISIS.
Sanders did not provide additional details, but the troops’ “peace-keeping” designation could pave the way for European allies to commit forces for such a mission.
Acting Defence Secretary Patrick Shanahan visited Europe last week where he attempted to convince allies to maintain a troop presence in Syria after the US pulls out.
But he struggled to persuade other countries why they should risk their forces with America gone.
Trump earlier on Thursday spoke with Turkish President Recep Erdogan, and the two men discussed Syria, according to a White House summary.
“The two presidents agreed to continue coordinating on the creation of a potential safe zone” in Syria, the readout said.
ISIS imposed its brutal ideology on a territory roughly the size of the United Kingdom, attracting thousands of supporters from abroad, at the height of its rule.
But the jihadists have since lost almost all their territory save for a tiny sliver of around half a square kilometer (a fifth of a square mile) in the eastern Syrian village of Baghouz.
The US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) are working towards evacuating civilians remaining in the holdout, so they can polish off the dying ISIS “caliphate” whether through an assault or a surrender deal.
Syria’s Kurds have long demanded the repatriation of foreigners accused of belonging to ISIS in their custody, but their home countries have been reluctant.
US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he was barring a US-born former ISIS propagandist from returning home from Syria, where the conflict has killed more than 360,000 people and displaced millions since 2011.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Thursday that the diplomatic status of the father of Alabama woman Hoda Muthana means she is not a US citizen.
It came after a lawyer for the family of a teenager who fled London to join the jihadists when she was 15 said Britain was revoking her citizenship.
The announcement comes amid fierce criticism of Trump’s decision to withdraw America’s 2,000 or so troops from Syria by April 30, with members of his own Republican Party blasting the move.
In December, Trump declared victory over ISIL in Syria, even though thousands of jihadists remain and fighting continues around their last holdout.
Sanders did not provide additional details, but the troops’ “peace-keeping” designation could pave the way for European allies to commit forces for such a mission.
Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan visited Europe last week where he attempted to convince allies to maintain a troop presence in Syria after the US pulls out.
But he struggled to persuade other countries why they should risk their forces with America gone.
Trump earlier Feb. 21 spoke with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and the two men discussed Syria, according to a White House summary.
“The two presidents agreed to continue coordinating on the creation of a potential safe zone” in Syria, the readout said.
At the height of its rule, ISIL imposed its brutal ideology on a territory roughly the size of the United Kingdom, attracting thousands of supporters from abroad.
But the jihadists have since lost almost all their territory save for a tiny sliver of around half a square kilometer (a fifth of a square mile) in the eastern Syrian village of Baghouz.
The US military will keep around 200 troops in Syria after President Donald Trump’s pullout from the war-torn country, the White House said on Thursday.
“A small peace-keeping group of about 200 will remain in Syria for a period of time,” White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said.
The announcement comes amid fierce criticism of Trump’s decision to withdraw America’s 2,000 or so troops from Syria by April 30, with members of his own Republican Party blasting the move.
In December, Trump declared victory over the Islamic State group in Syria, even though thousands of jihadists remain and fighting continues around their last holdout.
Critics have decried a number of possible outcomes from a precipitous withdrawal, including a Turkish attack on US-backed Kurdish forces and a resurgence of ISIS.
Sanders did not provide additional details, but the troops’ “peace-keeping” designation could pave the way for European allies to commit forces for such a mission.
Acting Defence Secretary Patrick Shanahan visited Europe last week where he attempted to convince allies to maintain a troop presence in Syria after the US pulls out.
But he struggled to persuade other countries why they should risk their forces with America gone.
Trump earlier on Thursday spoke with Turkish President Recep Erdogan, and the two men discussed Syria, according to a White House summary.
“The two presidents agreed to continue coordinating on the creation of a potential safe zone” in Syria, the readout said.
ISIS imposed its brutal ideology on a territory roughly the size of the United Kingdom, attracting thousands of supporters from abroad, at the height of its rule.
But the jihadists have since lost almost all their territory save for a tiny sliver of around half a square kilometer (a fifth of a square mile) in the eastern Syrian village of Baghouz.
The US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) are working towards evacuating civilians remaining in the holdout, so they can polish off the dying ISIS “caliphate” whether through an assault or a surrender deal.
Syria’s Kurds have long demanded the repatriation of foreigners accused of belonging to ISIS in their custody, but their home countries have been reluctant.
US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he was barring a US-born former ISIS propagandist from returning home from Syria, where the conflict has killed more than 360,000 people and displaced millions since 2011.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Thursday that the diplomatic status of the father of Alabama woman Hoda Muthana means she is not a US citizen.
It came after a lawyer for the family of a teenager who fled London to join the jihadists when she was 15 said Britain was revoking her citizenship.
The announcement comes amid fierce criticism of Trump’s decision to withdraw America’s 2,000 or so troops from Syria by April 30, with members of his own Republican Party blasting the move.
In December, Trump declared victory over ISIL in Syria, even though thousands of jihadists remain and fighting continues around their last holdout.
Sanders did not provide additional details, but the troops’ “peace-keeping” designation could pave the way for European allies to commit forces for such a mission.
Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan visited Europe last week where he attempted to convince allies to maintain a troop presence in Syria after the US pulls out.
But he struggled to persuade other countries why they should risk their forces with America gone.
Trump earlier Feb. 21 spoke with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and the two men discussed Syria, according to a White House summary.
“The two presidents agreed to continue coordinating on the creation of a potential safe zone” in Syria, the readout said.
At the height of its rule, ISIL imposed its brutal ideology on a territory roughly the size of the United Kingdom, attracting thousands of supporters from abroad.
But the jihadists have since lost almost all their territory save for a tiny sliver of around half a square kilometer (a fifth of a square mile) in the eastern Syrian village of Baghouz.