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Trump Accuses Syrian Kurds of Releasing ISIS Terrorists


Mon 14 Oct 2019 | 07:08 PM
Ahmed Moamar

US President Donald J. Trump said that that forces of the Syrian Kurds in the northern districts may be releasing prisoners who are considered terrorists affiliated to ISIS Organization.

He warned that the Kurds attempt to take US forces to the field to deter the Turkish forces from sweeping the Kurdish stronghold in Syria.

US President tweeted that the Kurds maneuver to discharge ISIS captives to urge the USA to intervene in the internal Syrian affairs.

He revealed that the USA and other European countries are about to impose new harsher sanctions on Turkey.

Trump excluded waging war on Turkey the active member of NATO.

He predicted the continuous wars will come to an end later.

He stressed that the USA won’t engage in any war as the Middle East peoples have been waging wars since 200 years ago.

"The European governments have missed chances to recover their ISIS terrorists," Trump said. "They wanted the USA to pay costs of restoring those terrorists to their native countries."

The autonomous Kurdish administration in north and east Syria said on Sunday that 785 people, most of them are  foreigners, of ISIS Organization broke out camp of concentration of Ain Isa where they were detained.

Turkey has started a wide attack on the Kurdish stronghold in the northern part of Syria.

That operation was named” Spring of Peace” to abolish the terrorist corridor and to establish a safe zone there.

Turkey considers units of Protection of the Kurdish People as the outlawed PKK   terrorist party.

https://see.news/us-congress-opens-investigation-against-trump/

The Turkish-Kurdish terrorists allied to their culprits in Syrian within what is called Syria’s Democratic Forces.

Kurdish-led forces in Syria have struck a deal with Bashar al-Assad’s government to hand over areas along the border to the Syrian army in a last ditch effort to halt a Turkish attack, according to the UK Independent .

 

The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, one of the west’s key allies in the fight against Isis, said the army would be deployed along the border with Turkey “to repel this aggression and liberate the areas entered by the Turkish army and its hired mercenaries”.

 

The deal was struck in response to a wide-scale military operation launched by Turkey against the SDF last week, which has killed more than 60 civilians and sparked fears of ethnic cleansing.