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Friday, October 4, 2024

US maintains troop level in Syria post-withdrawal announcement

The US maintains its deployments in Syria after announcing it's withdrawal by moving troops away from the northern border to eastern provinces, northern Iraq, and Syrian oil fields.

The number of US troops in Syria remains roughly stable at just under 1,000 three weeks after President Donald Trump announced their withdrawal, a US official said Monday.

The withdrawal of American troops from Syria’s northern border opened the way for Turkey’s military incursion against Kurdish forces in the country.

Trump’s decision to protect oil fields in the eastern province of Deir Ezzor led the Pentagon to send reinforcements to that area while US troops move away from areas close to the Syrian border with Turkey, the US official said on condition of anonymity.

The legality of the US operation to guard the oil fields remains a subject of debate even within the Pentagon.

Reinforcements have started to arrive in Deir Ezzor, while some troops have been sent to the north to help secure the withdrawal from that area and others have moved from Syria to northern Iraq.

But overall, the number of American troops in Syria is similar to that before the announcement of the withdrawal in mid-October.

“We remain below 1,000 and the withdrawal continues,” the official said.

Read more: Trump declares victory over IS in Syria, orders US troops home

The withdrawal has not been entirely free of hitches, with Turkish artillery shells falling close to a US patrol Sunday near the “safe zone” that Turkey has set up in northern Syria near the border.

Shells fell within a kilometer (0.6 miles) of the road the patrol was on but the patrol was not hit, the US Central Command said.

The US official said the shells did not target the Americans. The legality of the US operation to guard the oil fields remains a subject of debate even within the Pentagon.

The withdrawal of American troops from Syria’s northern border opened the way for Turkey’s military incursion against Kurdish forces in the country.

In private, some officials express doubt about the possibility of denying the Syrian government access to the fields if Kurdish fighters, who now control the area with the Americans, reach a deal with President Bashar al-Assad to share the profits from the oil.

Read more: In Iraq, political wrangling spawns debate over US troops

Asked Friday about the US mission to protect Syria’s oil fields, Defense Secretary Mark Esper said the goal was to deny access to them to the Islamic State group “and other actors in the region.”

He did not specify what actors they were. No one at the Pentagon would say Monday if the Syrian regime and Russia were among these actors.

AFP with additional input by GVS News Desk.