The US army dispatched a new convoy, including several trucks loaded with
military and logistic equipment, to al-Shadadi base in Southern Hasaka via
Simalka border-crossing at Iraq-Syria border.
In the meantime, a field source disclosed that a sum of 20 US military trucks
entered Ein Issa base in Northern Raqqa on Sunday, adding that the trucks were
handed over to the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).
The US is trying to continue providing the SDF with arms and ammunition after
the country's decision to pull forces out of the war-hit country.
Meanwhile, US Senator Lindsey Graham has called on Trump to devaluate his
decision over withdrawal from Syria.
The militant-affiliated Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) reported on
Sunday that a long convoy of almost 200 US army trucks, carrying weapons,
munitions and logistical equipment, left the US bases in Iraq on Saturday and
arrived in coalition bases in Raqqa, Manbij and Ein Issa in Northeastern Syria.
In the meantime, the Kurdish militia reported that the trucks arrived in the
town of Amouda and left then for the US-run bases in Northeastern Syria, adding
that the arms and ammunition cargo is to be delivered to the SDF.
The convoy arrived after the US military decided to withdraw from Syria but
leave the SDF armed in the region.
The White House plan to withdraw 2,000 American troops from Syria has been put
on hold, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, a critic of President Donald Trump's
recent Syria policy, said, adding that the president has agreed to reevaluate
his policy.
Graham suggested Sunday Trump now better understands the stakes in Syria and has
agreed to reevaluate, for now, his plans to immediately withdraw all US troops
from the war-torn country.
After a lunch with Trump, Graham said outside the White House that talks about
removing military personnel from the country are in a "pause situation", adding
that, still, Trump remains committed to bringing American soldiers and women
home, even as he continues to weigh the greater regional dynamics.
"We talked about Syria and he told me some things I didn’t know that made me
feel a lot better about where we’re headed in Syria," Graham told reporters.
"I think we're slowing things down in a smart way," the Republican senator told
reporters, stating that "but the goal has always been the same. To be able to
leave Syria and make sure ISIS (ISIL or Daesh) never comes back".
Graham announced that Trump was "thinking long and hard about Syria and how to
withdraw the forces" after ensuring that Daesh is destroyed, that
Washington-allied Kurdish fighers are protected and that "Iran doesn't become
the big winner of our leaving".
When Trump tweeted that "we have defeated" Daesh in Syria, several military and
security experts stressed that he was overstating the case, and warned against a
hasty withdrawal.
Speaking to CNN after his appearance in the White House driveway, Graham said he
didn't mean to suggest that Trump is pausing troop withdrawal altogether.
"He has not reversed his decision" to withdraw troops from the Middle Eastern
country, Graham stated, adding that "the pause is to assess the effects of the
conditions on the ground".
The White House did not clarify whether Trump had come to a new determination
about the Syria withdrawal plans, which drew widespread criticism when they were
first announced earlier this month.
Graham, who has emerged as one of Trump's closest allies on Capitol Hill, had
criticized him on the decision to withdraw troops, warning that Daesh is not
fully defeated and that US adversaries like Russia would benefit from the
choice. In the wake of the announcement, Graham issued a scathing statement in
which he denounced the decision as "a Barack Obama-like mistake made by the
Trump Administration".
Trump’s decision to pull the troops out of Syria has been appalling not just to
the US allies, including in the Middle East, but also to the members of the US
Congress. Some influential senators of both parties have opposed Trump’s policy.
Graham and many other Republican and Democratic lawmakers have warned that
pulling out of Syria would pose jeopardize the region with instability.
But, Trump defended his decision to withdraw all American military forces from
Syria amid a widespread backlash from lawmakers across the isle.
Trump has claimed that US’ mission in Syria – the defeat of Daesh – was
complete, and that the American military would begin an immediate withdrawal
from the country, criticizing personnel from his national security team that
resigned.
The US leader stated that his decision was "no surprise" and that it was time
for American troops to "come home and rebuild", claiming that the United States
had initially planned to deploy their force to Syria for three months, but
eventually the American troops stayed there several years.
Brett McGurk announced his resignation last Saturday, following in the footsteps
of Defense Secretary James Mattis who announced his own resignation on Thursday.
Both men are said to have had differences with Trump over his plan to withdraw
US forces stationed in Syria.
American officials have been sending mixed signals over Washington's Syria
policy since Trump took office in 2017.
In late March, Trump stated that the US would be "coming out of Syria very soon"
and letting "other people take care of it now", which went against
previously-outlined plans by the Pentagon and the State Department to keep
troops in Syria to "support our partners", "prevent the return of terrorist
groups" and transition to a "post-(Bashar) Assad leadership".
But days later, Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley announced that the US would not
pull its troops out of Syria until its goals were accomplished there.
Also in mid-April, the White House said Trump wanted to bring troops back from
Syria as soon as possible, but not before their goals were fulfilled, as
Washington had some 2,000 troops and a number of military contractors acting in
the war-torn country.
In early May, in one of the strongest signs a full US withdrawal was unlikely
anytime soon, Mattis said Washington and its allies would not want to pull
troops out of Syria before diplomats won peace.
White House National Security Adviser John Bolton said in late September that
the US would keep a military presence in Syria until Iran withdrew its forces.
Syria has been gripped by foreign-backed militancy since March 2011. The US-led
coalition has been conducting airstrikes against what are claimed to be Daesh
targets inside Syria since September 2014 without any authorization from the
Damascus government or a UN mandate.
Source:Farsnews