US welcomes Iraq’s step to take Daesh militants from Syria

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos on Thursday. (AFP)
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Updated 23 January 2026
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US welcomes Iraq’s step to take Daesh militants from Syria

  • Secretary of State Marco Rubio urges nations to repatriate citizens detained in prisons for the extremist group
  • US military moving thousands of detainees from camps and prisons in Syria

WASHNGTON: US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Thursday that Washington ​welcomed Iraq’s initiative to detain Daesh members in secure facilities in Iraq while also urging nations to repatriate their citizens in these facilities “to face justice.”
“The United States welcomes the Government of Iraq’s initiative to detain Daesh terrorists in secure facilities in Iraq, following recent instability in northeast Syria,” Rubio said in a statement. “Non-Iraqi terrorists ‌will be ‌in Iraq temporarily; the United States ‌urges ⁠countries ​to ‌take responsibility and repatriate their citizens in these facilities to face justice.”
Iraq’s Supreme Judicial Council said on Thursday it would begin legal proceedings against Daesh detainees transferred from Syria, a day after the US military announced its forces had transferred 150 of the suspected militants from Syria to ⁠Iraq.
The US military has said its operation could eventually see 7,000 detainees ‌moved out of Syria.
The United Nations said it ‍was taking management responsibility ‍for vast camps in Syria housing tens of thousands ‍of women and children associated with Daesh, after the rapid collapse of Kurdish-led forces who guarded them for years.
Iraq has begun taking in detainees transferred from prisons in Syria ​as the Kurds retreat, and has called on other countries to help take them in.
“This is ⁠a critical part of a long-term framework to prevent an Daesh resurgence, in line with proper burden sharing among Coalition members,” Rubio said on Thursday.
More than 10,000 members of Daesh, and tens of thousands of women and children associated with them, have been held for years in about a dozen prisons and detention camps guarded by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in Syria’s northeast.
The SDF has rapidly retreated this week after clashes with Syrian ‌government forces, raising concern about security at prisons and humanitarian conditions at the camps.


Iran and US diverge in views on sanctions relief, senior Iranian official to Reuters

Updated 30 min 48 sec ago
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Iran and US diverge in views on sanctions relief, senior Iranian official to Reuters

  • Renewed talks ‌scheduled in early March ⁠and ⁠could possibly lead to an interim deal

DUBAI: Iran and the United States have differing views over the scope and ​mechanism to lift sanctions on Tehran in exchange for curbs on its nuclear program, a senior Iranian official told Reuters on Sunday, adding that new talks were planned in early ‌March. The official ‌said Tehran ​could ‌seriously ⁠consider ​a combination of ⁠exporting part of its highly enriched uranium (HEU) stockpile, diluting the purity of its HEU and a regional consortium for enriching uranium, but in return Iran’s ⁠right to “peacful nuclear enrichment” ‌must be ‌recognized.
“The negotiations continue and ​the possibility ‌of reaching an interim agreement exists,” ‌the official said. Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said on Friday that he expected to have a draft ‌counterproposal ready within days following nuclear talks with the ⁠United ⁠States this week, while US President Donald Trump said he was considering limited military strikes.
The senior official said Tehran will not hand over control of its oil and mineral resources but US companies can always participate as contractors in Iran’s oil ​and gas ​fields.