The NPR Politics Podcast - Why Are U.S. Troops In Syria?

Episode Date: December 10, 2024

After more than 50 years in power, the Assad regime has fallen in Syria. How does the situation in Syria affect the United States, and the foreign policy ambitions of the incoming Trump administration...? This episode: political correspondent Sarah McCammon, national security correspondent Greg Myre, and senior national political correspondent Mara Liasson.The podcast is produced by Jeongyoon Han and Kelli Wessinger, and edited by Casey Morell. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Support for this podcast and the following message come from Autograph Collection Hotels, with over 300 independent hotels around the world, each exactly like nothing else. Autograph Collection is part of the Marriott Bonvoy portfolio of hotel brands. Find the unforgettable at autographcollection.com. Hi, this is Hannah. And Armand. We're on the fifth and final day of our road trip from Boston, Massachusetts to Phoenix, Arizona, accompanied by my dog, Finn.
Starting point is 00:00:29 This podcast was recorded at 108 PM Eastern time on Tuesday, December 10th, 2024. Things may have changed by the time you hear this, but hopefully I'll be settling into my new home in Phoenix. Here's the show. ["The Star-Spangled the show. Oh, congratulations. That's a long trip and a lot of weather and geography changes. Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Sarah McCammon. I cover politics.
Starting point is 00:00:56 I'm Greg Myrie. I cover national security. And I'm Mara Liason, senior national political correspondent. Today on the show, we're taking a look at the major changes in recent days in Syria and what those events mean for US foreign policy as a new administration prepares to take office in Washington. Greg, let's start with the big news of the weekend. Bashar al-Assad, the country's longtime leader, has been deposed. What happened and why did this happen now after so many years of civil war?
Starting point is 00:01:26 Yeah, it was quite shocking and as somebody who's followed Syria for a long time, I mean, we're talking about more than 50 years of rule by Bashar Assad's father, Hafez Assad, and now by Bashar Assad. So between them, they date back to the Nixon administration. Little aside, I saw a great picture posted just before Nixon resigned. He went to Syria in 1974, posed with Hafez Assad, and there's little Bashar Assad, eight-year-old in short pants, standing with him in the photo. So quite an extraordinary image if we think about that time till today. Danielle Pletka Wow. And just reinforces how long this family
Starting point is 00:02:02 has been ruling. Richard McKeon Absolutely. And the Assad rule has been under threat since the Civil War erupted back in 2011. But it looked like Assad had survived that. He was getting a lot of help from Russia and Iran. In the past four years, there'd been a truce that was kind of sort of holding. And it seemed he had at least reestablished control over most of the country, the populated areas, the capital, Damascus. But then, just dramatically, in the space of less than two weeks, this rebel group known as HTS
Starting point is 00:02:35 captured Aleppo, the second biggest city, and then just came charging down from the north, capturing a new city every couple days, and rode into Damascus over the weekend. Assad fled. He has landed in Russia. Russia says they are giving him asylum there. And more than 50 years of this brutally repressive regime has just collapsed overnight. And often you see this with really authoritarian regimes is that they won't fall apart gradually. They will look like they're pretty stable, pretty steady, and then all of a sudden they just collapse overnight. That's what's happened here,
Starting point is 00:03:13 and now there's a huge challenge for this one rebel group, HTS, but many other factions as well, and elements of the ousted regime. Can they work together? Can they cooperate? Can they form a government and put Syria back together again after more than a decade of a really horrific civil war? Danielle Pletka Greg, who is in control of Syria right now? Greg Hickman Well, nobody's in control of all of Syria. This group, HTS, which stands for Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, is an Islamist group. The U.S. put HTS on the U.S. terrorist list back in 2012. The group was affiliated with Al-Qaeda.
Starting point is 00:03:55 Now, the group has disavowed those ties back in 2016. They've tried to present themselves as a more moderate group, and they have ruled up in northwest Syria for the past several years. And most people say they've lived up to that. They don't require women to wear the hijab. They haven't cracked down on ethnic or other religious minorities. So it hasn't been a really hard line Islamist rule. But that's certainly where they came from. And there are certainly all these other groups
Starting point is 00:04:25 who are very skeptical, very suspicious within Syria itself, and the US as well. It's still on the terrorist watch list, which means the US can't deal directly with it right now. It's sort of working around it, it seems, maybe to an indirect party. So HTS is the group that's in the capital, Damascus, and many of the big cities, but there are other factions, the Kurds in the northeast, for example, a Turkish-supported group up along the border between Turkey and Syria. So there isn't just one group in charge, and both politically and militarily, they have
Starting point is 00:04:59 to sort this out. That's going to be a huge challenge. Right now, remind us, what is the US role in Syria? What has it been in recent years? Yeah, you'd really go back about a decade. So it was 2014 when the Islamic State started rampaging across the Middle East. It took huge chunks of territory very quickly in Iraq and in Syria. And so President Obama at that time decided the U.S. needed to send in troops back into the region to battle the Islamic State. They did. They fought
Starting point is 00:05:31 them for several years with some partners in those areas. By the end of 2018, the U.S. had effectively defeated the Islamic State and in the northeastern part of Syria in particular. By now, President Trump is in his first term in office, and he said, he tweeted back in 2018, we're leaving, it's time to get out. Now, that didn't happen, but those US troops have been there for a decade now. There's about 900 American forces, most in the northeast, and their mission there is to prevent the resurgence of the Islamic State. The remnants are still there, and just on Sunday, the U.S. carried out a huge airstrike.
Starting point is 00:06:12 They hit 75 targets. U.S. officials said that they saw Islamic State fighters gathering to train and perhaps trying to take advantage of this turmoil in Syria. The U.S. called in this major airstrike against Islamic State. And so that's why those US forces are there. President Biden says they will remain for now. Danielle Pletka Yeah. And, you know, the National Security Council did brief reporters today. And what was interesting is they said that at least for now, the rebel groups are saying the right things about how they want to govern Syria and that it would be a sovereign
Starting point is 00:06:46 nation and the Syrian people could decide the kind of government they want. But they said we're going to have to watch to see what they actually do. So, Greg, what is the objective for the US at this point? You mentioned some of those strikes in Syria. Is it just about securing chemical weapons stores, keeping them from getting into the wrong hands, or is it something else, something bigger? Well, I think there's multiple priorities. I think, first and foremost, it's preventing the resurgence of the Islamic State. That's why those troops are there. The U.S. is obviously very concerned about chemical weapons, but Shah Rukhsad used those
Starting point is 00:07:20 weapons against his own people back in 2013 and killed certainly hundreds and perhaps over a thousand. So that remains a critical issue. Now, a U.S. official has said they believe those weapons are very well contained. They're not really worried about them. Now, they haven't explained where they are, who's in control of them, or how they can be secured. There have been reports that Israeli airstrikes in Syria the past few days have targeted chemical weapons facilities related to the weapons program, if not the weapons themselves. And then of course there's the humanitarian issue that so many people in Syria have been killed, so many have been displaced internally, millions
Starting point is 00:08:03 have gone across the border into Turkey and other countries. So all of these issues, the military issue, the political issue of putting Syria back together, the economic and humanitarian issue, the US is involved in all of these things right now. You know, quickly, Greg, you mentioned ISIS. You've mentioned ISIS a couple of times. Trump, when he was in office, I think in 2018, said that the U.S. had defeated ISIS in Syria. To what extent is the Islamic State still a threat there? Well, they have camps. They're not large as they were. They've been deeply degraded by
Starting point is 00:08:38 the U.S. fighting in the previous decade, and the U.S. has kept them under wraps and has not allowed them to expand. But they are there. They do want to reemerge if possible, and they're a potential threat to Syria, of course, but also in neighboring Iraq, and they have factions in other countries as well. So that remains a concern. I think the assessment would be that if the U.S. or others left and did not keep an eye on them, that they could reemerge, especially in a country as shattered as Syria, where the central government may not have much, if any, security control. Okay. Let's take a quick break. We'll have more in just a moment. This message comes from WISE, the app for doing things in other currencies.
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Starting point is 00:11:35 Go to plus.npr.org to learn more. And thank you. And we're back. Mara, how could policy toward Syria specifically and toward the humanitarian aid concerns that Greg mentioned more broadly, how could all of this change when Trump comes back in office next month? Well there's no area where Trump is more different from Joe Biden than foreign policy. He is an isolationist. His first reaction to the overthrow of Assad was a tweet on Truth Social, his social media
Starting point is 00:12:10 platform that said, the United States should have nothing to do with it. This is not our fight. Let it play out. Do not get involved. It's possible that that will be his operating approach to this, but we don't know because a unstable Middle East is bad for America and he might change his mind. We also have the question of the fact that Russia is weakened.
Starting point is 00:12:31 He wrote another post where he said Russia was weakened in Syria because of Ukraine, where he says close to 600,000 Russian soldiers have been wounded or dead. And he's very interested in getting Russia and Ukraine to the bargaining table, to the negotiating table, to get that war stopped. A lot of people, especially Democrats, are worried that he wants to stop it on Putin's terms. So this is one of the things we're just gonna have to wait and see what happens when Trump gets into office, but it is very possible that the US will pull back dramatically from
Starting point is 00:13:02 providing humanitarian aid around the world. Right. You talk about these non-interventionist, isolationist tendencies, I think more than tendencies that have been a hallmark of Trump's, at least his foreign policy positioning. At the same time, trying to achieve greater peace and cooperation in the Middle East was a major part of his foreign policy during his first term. He was very proud of his role in the Abraham Accords. How do these developments in Syria affect the way Trump may operate in that part of the world, you know, particularly with this desire, as we've mentioned, to sort
Starting point is 00:13:35 of be a player in the Middle East and perhaps expand the Abraham Accords? Well, one of the big things he has to do is get Saudi Arabia to actually sign them. And Saudi Arabia has always said they would only sign them if Israel agreed to some kind of a path to a two-state solution, which Benjamin Netanyahu is adamantly against. But he mentioned again that the only way he could get good press coverage was if he came out for a two-state solution, and that would never happen. So if Trump wants to move forward with those accords, he's going to have to figure out how to make some kind of peace in the Middle East. Danielle Pletka Greg, how do you see this playing out?
Starting point is 00:14:09 Greg Foss Yeah, I would just add that I think that Trump will feel this sort of push-pull. There are things he wants to do in the Middle East. He would love to increase the diplomatic relationships between now the US, but also Israel and some of these countries. If he wants to do that, he's also going to have to deal with the security parts of it. You know, Israel has been bombing Syria the past few days. If that contributes to an unstable region, well, then he's not going to be able to do some of the diplomatic or economic things that he wants to do. So I think that's one of the issues he will run into very quickly. S1C1 Before we go, I also want to talk about Austin Tice. He is an American freelance journalist who was detained by the Syrian government
Starting point is 00:14:51 more than a decade ago, believed to have been imprisoned there. US intelligence has said he is believed to still be alive. What do we know? What's the latest? S2C1 National Security Council spokesman John Kirby talked about this today. He said that their operating assumption is that Tice is alive. He has says we have no information to the contrary, but they don't have any information about where he is or what his condition is. Michael O'Brien Yeah. And just a reminder, Austin Tice was a journalist.
Starting point is 00:15:19 He was writing for a number of American publications, including the Washington Post, when he disappeared in 2012, shortly after, or about a year after the Syrian Civil War broke out. There was video of him that appeared shortly after his capture, so he was taken and was still alive. However, it's been more than a decade now before there's been any proof of life that we're aware of publicly. And also what we're hearing privately is, as Mara noted, they believe he's alive, but they don't have concrete proof. Will this have any effect on the Trump administration or the Biden administration for the next month, how they move forward in regard to Syria?
Starting point is 00:15:58 I think it's a very big deal for the Biden administration. In fact, the person who deals with hostages, Roger Carstens in the Biden administration, is in Lebanon trying to see if there's anything more he can learn or anything we can figure out. We've seen these images of thousands, literally thousands of prisoners in Syria come out of the many prisons in Syria. As the gates are open, certainly there was the hope
Starting point is 00:16:23 that when this mass opening of the prisons took place that we might hear something about him very soon. It hasn't happened yet. All right, we will leave it there for today. I'm Sarah McCammon. I cover politics. I'm Greg Myrie. I cover national security. And I'm Mara Liason, senior national political correspondent. Thank you for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.

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