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Senior US senator says he will ask Trump to rethink Syria pullout

By Reuters - Dec 30,2018 - Last updated at Dec 30,2018

WASHINGTON — A senior Republican senator said he would try to persuade US President Donald Trump at a White House lunch on Sunday to reconsider his order for a total US military pullout from Syria and leave some US troops there.

Senator Lindsey Graham warned that removing all US forces would hurt US security by allowing Daesh to rebuild, betraying US-backed Kurdish fighters battling remnants of the militant group, also known as ISIS, and enhancing Iran's ability to threaten Israel.

The South Carolina Republican said he would ask Trump ‘‘to sit down with his generals and reconsider how to do this. Slow this down. Make sure we get it right. Make sure ISIS never comes back. Don't turn Syria over to the Iranians’’. 

I want to fight the war in the enemy's backyard, not ours," Graham said in an interview on CNN's State of the Union show. 

Graham praised Trump, who visited US troops in Iraq last week, for announcing that a US force would remain there. But he said ISIS, while holding only slivers of territory, remained a potent threat in northeastern Syria.

‘‘That's why we need to keep some of our troops there,’’ he said.

The Pentagon says it is considering plans for a ‘‘deliberate and controlled withdrawal.” One option, according to a person familiar with the discussions, is for a 120-day pullout period.

Graham, an influential lawmaker on national security policy who sits on the Senate Armed Services Committee, is an ally of Trump, although he has opposed some of his foreign policy decisions. 

He has joined other Republicans and Democrats in criticising Trump's order for the pullout of all 2,000 US troops deployed in Syria in support of anti-Daesh fighters made up mostly of Kurds.

Turkey views the Kurdish militia, known as the YPG, as a branch of its own Kurdish separatist movement. It is threatening to launch an offensive against the YPG, igniting fears of significant civilian casualties.

US commanders planning the US withdrawal are recommending that YPG fighters battling Daesh be allowed to keep US-supplied weapons, according to US officials. That proposal would likely anger NATO ally Turkey, where Tump's national security adviser, John Bolton, holds talks this week.

Trump decided on the Syria withdrawal in a phone call with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, ignoring the advice of top national security aides and without consulting lawmakers or US allies participating in anti-. operations. The decision prompted defence secretary Jim Mattis to resign. 

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