The troop withdrawal, which Trump announced in December, rattled US allies fighting Islamic State in northeastern Syria. On Friday, speaking at a security conference in Munich, US Senator Lindsey Graham said the United States would keep its capacity in the region, according to Reuters.
“There’s one thing I don’t understand on American policy in this region,” Jean-Yves Le Drian told Graham. “How can one be very firm against Iran and at the same time abandon northeast Syria, when one knows that in the end it favors Iranian activities in the region?”
“It’s a mystery to me.”
France is one of Washington’s main allies in the US-led coalition fighting Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, with its warplanes used to strike militant targets, its heavy-artillery backing Kurdish-led fighters and its special forces on the ground.
“You’ve started to clarify the mystery by saying that the US will maintain its capacity. I didn’t know that, that’s news to me,” Le Drian said, adding with a hint of irony: “That fills me with joy.”
Trump has pulled the United States out of an international nuclear accord with Iran, imposed tough new economic sanctions on Tehran and told European capitals to do the same.
But his declaration that he was removing all 2,000 US troops from Syria stunned allies, including the Kurdish fighters who control swathes on northern Syria but who Turkey perceives as an enemy.
Graham said in return for the United States keeping capacity in the region, its allies should deploy troops to monitor a safe zone in northeastern Syria.
US officials have crisscrossed the Middle East in recent weeks to reassure allies that Washington remains committed to the region, though Le Drian has expressed skepticism.
Reporter's code: 50101
<p style="text-align:left">France&rsquo;s foreign minister on Friday, February 15, said he was mystified by US policy on northeastern Syria after US President Donald Trump&rsquo;s decision to withdraw troops. He claimed that the move 'would only benefit Iran.'
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