Blood on his hands: 2020 Democrats slam Trump over Syria
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[October 16, 2019]
By Simon Lewis
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democratic
presidential hopefuls denounced President Donald Trump's decision to
pull U.S. troops back from northern Syria, saying in an Ohio debate on
Tuesday he had endangered America's longtime Kurdish allies while
empowering foes Russia and Syria.
In the first Democratic presidential debate since Trump announced the
withdrawal, the 12 candidates on the stage were united in painting the
Republican president as reckless and a danger to American interests
around the world.
But some, including leading progressive candidate Elizabeth Warren, said
if they were president they would also seek to end the U.S. military
presence in the Middle East.
"I think that we ought to get out of the Middle East," said Warren, a
U.S. senator from Massachusetts. "I don't think we should have troops in
the Middle East."
Warren, whose electoral platform is dominated by domestic policy fixes,
did not say how she would differ from Trump in her handling of the Syria
situation. But she slammed the president foreign policy approach as
erratic.
"He has sucked up to dictators, he has made impulsive decisions that
often his own team doesn't understand," Warren said. "He has cut and run
on our allies, and he has enriched himself at the expense of the United
States of America."
Fellow progressive Bernie Sanders, a U.S. senator from Vermont,
criticized Trump for first signaling the withdrawal in a tweet.
"What he has done is wreck our ability to do foreign policy, to do
military policy, because nobody in the world will believe this
pathological liar," he said.
ENDLESS WARS
Trump has defended his reversal of longstanding U.S. policy in Syria as
part of a plan to withdraw the United States from "endless" wars in the
region. But critics, including senior figures in his own Republican
Party, cast it as a betrayal of the Kurds, loyal allies who lost
thousands of fighters in battle against Islamic State.
The abrupt withdrawal from northern Syria cleared the way for a Turkish
cross-border assault on Kurdish militia, forcing 160,000 people from
their homes, according to the United Nations, and raising fears of a
revival of Islamic militancy.
It also allowed President Bashar al-Assad and his ally, Russia, to push
into territory held by the Kurds, giving them a foothold in the biggest
remaining swathe of Syria that had been beyond their grasp through much
of its eight-year-old war.
Trump has since ordered almost all troops pulled out of the country.
Former Vice President Joe Biden, who has touted his long experience in
foreign policy as a key strength of his candidacy, said if he was
president he would have protected the Kurds.
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Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe
Biden speaks as Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren listen
during the fourth U.S. Democratic presidential candidates 2020
election debate at Otterbein University in Westerville, Ohio U.S.,
October 15, 2019. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
"It has been the most shameful thing that any president has done in
modern history in terms of foreign policy," he said.
He would send in "air cover" to protect American troops and make it
clear they were not being pulled out, Biden said.
"Our commanders across the board, former and present, are ashamed of
what's happening here," he said.
VETERANS
Hawaii congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard took a different view. A veteran
of the Iraq war, Gabbard has defined her campaign around ending
America's overseas conflicts, but has come in for criticism for
meeting Assad and defending his regime.
"Donald Trump has the blood of the Kurds on his hand, but so do many
of the politicians in our country from both parties who have
supported this ongoing regime change war in Syria that started in
2011, along with many in the mainstream media who have been
championing and cheerleading this regime change war,"
she said.
Gabbard was confronted by Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend,
Indiana, who served in the U.S. Navy Reserve in Afghanistan and who
has urged Congress to repeal a law passed days after Sept. 11, 2001,
that paved the way for the campaigns against al Qaeda and Taliban
militants.
"The slaughter going on in Syria is not a consequence of American
presence, it's a consequence of a withdrawal and the betrayal by
this president of American allies and American values," said
Buttigieg.
Brian Katulis, a senior fellow on national security at the Center
for American Progress, a liberal thinktank in Washington, said the
candidates were not offering a clear alternative to Trump when it
came to tough foreign policy issues including how to deal with
terrorism.
"Instead, we have a Democratic field that has leaned towards the
slogans of 'end endless wars' without offering much clarity about
what they would actually do as president."
(Reporting by Simon Lewis, Editing by Soyoung Kim and Sonya
Hepinstall)
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