Islamic State, declared defeated by Trump, is regrouping in west Syria, U.S. commander says
WASHINGTON — Elements of the Islamic State group are working to rebuild in western Syria, where the U.S. has little visibility or presence, the top U.S. commander for the Middle East warned Wednesday.
In the region west of the Euphrates River where the Syrian government is in control, “conditions are as bad or worse” than they were leading up to the rise of Islamic State, said Gen. Frank McKenzie. “We should all be concerned about that.”
McKenzie said insurgents are operating with some degree of freedom, and he said the U.S. and its allies have little hope Syria will do anything to tamp down the group there. The western part of the country has historically been controlled by Russian-backed Syrian government troops, while the U.S. and its allies, the Syrian Democratic Forces, have largely been in the north and eastern part of the country.
President Trump has touted the defeat of Islamic State as one of his key national security achievements. He ordered the removal of U.S. forces from the northern border near Turkey as part of a planned move to pull all American troops out of the country. But he was eventually convinced by U.S. military leaders to leave U.S. forces in the east to continue working with the SDF and help protect oilfields from Islamic State.
Speaking online to a United States Institute of Peace forum from his U.S. Central Command office in Tampa, Fla., McKenzie said that the slow-moving effort to transfer people out of Syrian refugee camps has been further complicated and delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic. And that, he said, fuels concerns about the radicalization of people — particularly the youth — in the camps, which officials worry are breeding grounds for Islamic State insurgents.
The Al Hol camp in northeastern Syria is home to as many as 70,000 people — mostly women and children — who were displaced by the ongoing civil war in Syria and the battle against Islamic State. Many fled as the U.S.-backed SDF cleared out the last pockets of land held by the militants last year.
It could have been a wild boar rooting in the underbrush. Or perhaps a bird.
Leanne Erdberg Steadman, the Institute of Peace director for countering violent extremism, said getting people out of the camps is key to having them abandon violence and secure a new future. Officials said there have now been the first few reported cases of COVID-19 at Al Hol.
McKenzie said concerns about blocking the spread of the virus among European allies and other nations in the region has complicated efforts to repatriate camp residents to their home nations.
Repatriation is the key to clearing out the refugee camps, and the U.S. has aggressively pushed to get allies to take their own citizens back. Most nations, however, are reluctant to take in potential insurgents. And the potential spread of COVID-19 is now an added fear.
McKenzie said that unless political leaders find a way to de-radicalize and repatriate the displaced people in the camps, there will be another Islamic State resurgence in the future.
“As young people grow up, we’re going to see them again unless we can turn them in a way to make them productive members of society,” he said. “We can either deal with this problem now or deal with it exponentially worse a few years down the road.”
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