Pompeo: US committed to countering Daesh, Iran despite Syria troop withdrawal

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, left, and Jordan's Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi shake hands, in Amman, Jordan, Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2019. (AP)
Updated 08 January 2019
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Pompeo: US committed to countering Daesh, Iran despite Syria troop withdrawal

  • Secretary of State says committed to the security of Jordan
  • Pledges that Daesh would not be allowed to regroup

AMMAN: The US decision to withdraw troops from Syria will not jeopardise Washington's efforts to counter threats from Iran and Daesh, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Tuesday.
Pompeo was speaking in Jordan on the first leg of his Middle East tour designed to reassure allies after Donald Trump said the US had defeated Daesh in Syria and the 2,000 American troops were no longer needed there.
The US troops in Syria have served as a counterweight to the Syrian government, which is backed by Iran and Russia.
But Pompeo said Washington was not stepping down from its efforts to challenge Iran. The US was "redoubling not only our diplomatic but our commercial efforts to put real pressure on Iran," he said.
"There is enormous agreement on the risk that Iran poses to Jordan and other countries in the region," Pompeo added.

Jordan has expressed worries in the past about Iranian influence near the Jordanian border in southern Syria.
"We all have problems with Iran's expansionist policies in the region," Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said during the meeting with Pompeo.

The secretary of state said the US is fully committed to the security of Jordan and its partnership with the kingdom.

The top US diplomat, on his longest trip since taking the post last year, pledged that Daesh would not be allowed to regroup following a string of battlefield defeats.
But in a stark reminder of the lingering threat, a war monitor reported that the terrorist group had killed 23 US-backed fighters in a counterattack in eastern Syria aimed at defending their last bastion.
After setting off on the trip to eight Arab capitals, Pompeo told reporters he would show that "the United States is still committed to all the missions that we've signed up for with them over the past two years."
The eight-day tour comes weeks after Trump announced that the United States would quickly pull its 2,000 soldiers out of Syria, declaring that Daesh had been defeated.
His advisers have since been walking back his timeline, with national security adviser John Bolton saying Monday in Jerusalem that the United States would verify that the group is truly beaten before withdrawing.
Highlighting that Daesh emerged during the tenure of Trump's predecessor Barack Obama, Pompeo said the campaign to destroy the movement's self-styled "caliphate" in war-battered Syria has been "enormously successful."
"And I am confident that we will continue to ensure that the kind of rise that ISIS had under the Obama administration doesn't occur again," he said on his plane.

*With AFP

 


Senior Hamas figure among 7 killed in Israeli airstrike

Updated 16 January 2026
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Senior Hamas figure among 7 killed in Israeli airstrike

  • Pair of Israeli airstrikes hit Gaza's Deir Al-Balah, killing a Hamas commander
  • Boy, aged 16, among the dead

CAIRO: A senior figure in the armed wing of Hamas was among seven people killed on Thursday in a pair ​of Israeli airstrikes in Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip, a Hamas source said.
The Israeli military did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the incident. The Hamas source said one of the dead was Mohammed Al-Holy, a local commander in the group’s armed wing in Deir Al-Balah.
Hamas condemned the ‌strikes on ‌the Al-Holy family, in a statement ‌that ⁠did ​not mention ‌Mohammed or his role in the group. It accused Israel of violating the ceasefire deal in place since October, and attempting to reignite the conflict.
Health officials said the six other dead in the incident included a 16-year-old.
Israel and Hamas have traded blame for violations of the ceasefire ⁠and remain far apart from each other on key issues, despite ‌the United States announcing the start ‍of the agreement’s second phase ‍on Wednesday.
More than 400 Palestinians and three Israeli ‍soldiers have been reported killed since the ceasefire took effect in October.
Israel has razed buildings and ordered residents out of more than half of Gaza where its troops remain. Nearly ​all of the territory’s more than 2 million people now live in makeshift homes or damaged buildings ⁠in a sliver of territory where Israeli troops have withdrawn and Hamas has reasserted control.
The United Nations children’s agency said on Tuesday that over 100 children have been killed in Gaza since the ceasefire, including victims of drone and quadcopter attacks.
Israel launched its operations in Gaza in the wake of an attack by Hamas-led fighters in October 2023 which killed 1,200 people, according to Israeli tallies. Israel’s assault has killed 71,000 people, according to ‌health authorities in the strip, and left much of Gaza in ruins.