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How Trump鈥檚 announcement of a withdrawal reverberated across Syria

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Ugur Can/DHA/AP
Representatives of some 150 Syrian tribes hold a conference in the village of Sajo, near the town of Azaz, Syria, Dec. 21, calling for the overthrow of the Syrian regime and for foreign militias to leave the country. Rebels say the withdrawal of US troops from Syria, following President Trump's surprise announcement, could result in an unstable vacuum in some areas.

When President Trump turned to Twitter to announce the imminent withdrawal of American troops from Syria, he triggered the resignation of two top United States defense officials and surprised foreign allies and adversaries alike.

For many Syrian opposition fighters who had allied themselves with the US forces on the ground, the reaction was both swift, and emotional.

鈥淧eople are petrified,鈥 says one Syrian Arab rebel, who has been fighting with the Americans against the Islamic State (ISIS) near al-Tanf, a strategic crossroads in southeastern Syria.

Why We Wrote This

How deep was the US commitment to its allies in Syria? That question has been asked all along. The Kurds and others knew President Trump favored a US withdrawal. Still, the timing came as a surprise.

鈥淗ow is the United States dropping us like that?鈥 asks the rebel, a local tribal leader who prefers to remain anonymous. 鈥淲e stood with them, and we were basically under their protection. Now we are at the mercy of the regime and the Russians.鈥

For Kurds in Syria, where the United States nurtured local alliances with the goal of eradicating ISIS, the news was confusing and devastating.

鈥淎fter four years focused on this region and after the establishment of bases in Syria, this decision comes as a surprise,鈥 says Leyla, an aid worker with the local charity Civil Waves in the northeastern city of Qamishli on the Syrian border with Turkey.聽鈥淭he American decision to pull out troops will have negative consequences for Syrians in general and Kurds in particular.鈥

US troops entered Syria for the first time in late 2015. What began as a deployment of 50 grew into an official total of about 2,000. They built up the Syrian Democratic Forces, a coalition of Syrian Arab and Kurdish fighters, with the mission of terminating ISIS 鈥 although their presence also became a factor in efforts to contain Iran, which supports the regime.

鈥淭here is a lot of confusion, fear and worry here about the security and political implications of this decision,鈥 adds Leyla. 鈥淧eople worry that World War III could get started if, for example, the Turks attack the region鈥. France said it will not drop the Kurds. Even if France is a great state, it is not that powerful.鈥

鈥楽yrians don鈥檛 want the regime鈥

The Kurdish area along Syria鈥檚 northern border has been beyond regime control for years.

In 2012, the Syrian regime pulled out of three mainly Kurdish inhabited areas of northern Syria. Two years later these regions rebranded themselves as de-facto autonomous cantons.

鈥淚f the Syrian regime came back that would be a disaster,鈥 Leyla says. 鈥淎fter seven years of destroying the country and killing the people, what good can we expect to come of that? There will be arrests and more [human rights] violations. Syrians don't want the regime.鈥

Leyla has a son serving as a volunteer in the YPG 鈥 the (Kurdish) People鈥檚 Protection Units 鈥 a militia credited with being fierce frontline fighters and enabling major victories against ISIS, from the improbable defense of besieged Kobane in 2014 to the liberation of Raqqa, the capital of the so-called caliphate, which now lies in ruins.

The group is the dominant Kurdish force in northeast Syria and the backbone of the Syrian Democratic Forces 鈥 although it does not make up its majority in terms of numbers. In a televised interview, Mustafa Bali, the SDF spokesman, called Mr. Trump鈥檚 decision to withdraw from Syria shocking.

Rodi Said/Reuters/File
A US military commander (second right) walks with Kurdish fighters from the People's Protection Units (YPG) at the YPG headquarters that was hit by Turkish airstrikes in Mount Karachok near Malikiya, Syria, in April 2017.

鈥淚t came as a surprise to us and even to the American forces here on the ground,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he war on terror is not over yet.鈥

The withdrawal, he warned, will cause a large void that will be exploited by terrorist forces, chief among them ISIS.

鈥淭hey will try to use this void to regroup and launch counter-attacks,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is a very unfortunate decision, which is not in keeping with the American commitments, or even with the commitments of the international coalition.鈥

Kurds鈥 focus is on Turkey

For Kurds in northeast Syria, however, the largest concern is not ISIS or its sleeper cells, but Turkey. Ankara views the US choice of partners as an existential threat at its doorstep 鈥 an offshoot of the Kurdish insurgency that has destabilized Turkey for decades. Turkey launched military operations in Syria in the summer of 2016 to flush out ISIS and the YPG.

In the Turkish-controlled Syrian town of Al-Bab, Arab fighters allied with Ankara display an appetite for battle. 鈥淭here will be battles in Kobane, Tel Abyad, Manbij, Ras Al-Ayn, Qamishli,鈥 predicts Khaldoun, a Syrian fighter who earns a monthly salary of 400 Turkish lira ($75), which is not enough to cover rent. 鈥淲e support the Turks because we have been displaced from our areas by Kurds.鈥

He believes that Turkey and the Syrian regime will strike a deal whereby the regime takes the rebel-controlled enclave of Idlib, and Turkey with its allies will take Manbij and other areas of strategic interest to Turkey. 鈥淚t鈥檚 obvious how things will play out,鈥 he says, eager to return to the border town of Tel Abyad.

Syria鈥檚 Kurds are also in the market for a deal. Senior politicians of the Democratic Union Party (PYD), which played a major role in setting up the self-administrations in northern and eastern Syria, have been making the rounds in European capitals. They are also said to have sent representatives to talk with Iran, Russia, and the regime.

Kaniwar Hasan, whose work at the Qamishli-based Al-Furat Center for Studies focuses on Turkey, says that if a US withdrawal really materializes, the region of the East Euphrates will see a major shift in the balance of power.

鈥淭he Washington disavowal of its Syrian Democratic Forces and its allies opens up the door to new scenarios and alliances,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he most likely realistic scenario regarding the fate of the East Euphrates region is talks between Damascus and the SDF in order to fill the vacuum created by the United States and (neutralize) Turkish threats.鈥澛

Hawas Sadoun, a Kurdish member of a Syrian opposition coalition that has engaged periodically in United Nations-sponsored negotiations with the regime, says all the possible scenarios raised by the US withdrawal are alarming, including a resurgent ISIS or an emboldened Turkey or Iran.

鈥淭he patterns of the Syrian regime, Iran, and their affiliated militias are well known,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey subject those who have not succumbed to their policies and criminal plans to repression and revenge.鈥 We鈥檝e witnessed how the regime has treated the reconciled areas and how it jailed people and forced them to join its ranks, despite promising not to harm them.鈥

Resurgent ISIS

At the same time, he argues, the regime no longer possesses the military ability to prevent ISIS and other terrorists organizations from regrowing and regaining their influence.

鈥淎ll these factors make the future frightening for the people of East Euphrates, especially the Kurds because of their vital role in fighting the terrorist organizations,鈥 he says.聽 鈥淎nyone who has been following the statements of President Trump and the US administration could see that many of them were indicating a withdrawal, but the timing was a surprise, because it contradicted with many of the statements made by officials of the US administration.鈥

Only two days prior to Trump鈥檚 announcement, points out Mr. Sadoun, the special US envoy for Syria Engagement, James Jeffrey, had defined the objectives for the presence of US forces in Syria as follows: the elimination of ISIS, putting an end to Iran鈥檚 influence and expansion in Syria, and achieving a political solution that guarantees stability in Syria and the region.

鈥淭he decision to withdraw the forces came before achieving any of these goals,鈥 notes Sadoun.

For the Syrian rebel fighter stationed near al-Tanf, the prospect of facing a resurgent ISIS fills him with foreboding, for himself and his family.

鈥淎s long as the US was present, we were not afraid,鈥 he says. 鈥淗ere I am not safe. What they don鈥檛 realize is that the next iteration of the Islamic State is going to be 10 times worse because the job is not done.鈥

The Americans 鈥渘eed to secure a way out for those who proved to be their allies on the ground,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 would work with them anywhere ... Afghanistan, Pakistan ... but I need my family to be safe.鈥

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