Anti-Daesh fight is far from over: US commander

The battle against the Daesh group
is “far from over” and the militants remain unbroken and prepared for a
resurgence despite the elimination of their physical base in Syria, a top US
commander said on Thursday.
“Reduction of the physical caliphate
is a monumental military accomplishment − but the fight against ISIS and
violent extremism is far from over and our mission remains the same,” US
Central Command head General Joseph Votel told Congress, using an alternative
name for the movement.
“The Daesh population being
evacuated from the remaining vestiges of the caliphate largely remains
unrepentant, unbroken and radicalised. We will need to maintain a vigilant
offensive against this now widely dispersed and disaggregated organisation,” he
said.
Votel told the House Armed Services
Committee the hundreds of foreign Daesh fighters and their families captured in
Syria are a latent threat and called on their home countries to deal with them.
“In my view this is a serious
generational problem that if not handled properly will sow the seeds of future
violent extremism,” he said.
Votel spelled out his warnings
nearly three months after President Donald Trump unexpectedly announced a full
pullout of US forces from Syria, declaring a victory over Daesh.
Under pressure from Congress and the
Pentagon, Trump has since moderated his preference to a drawdown of forces
though insisting last month that the plan was to ultimately to leave a
bare-bones force of only 200 “peace-keeping” troops in Syria.
“I am not reversing course,” Trump
said at the White House on Feb.22, noting that 200 soldiers was only a “very
small, tiny fraction” of the overall presence.