President Trump lifts US sanctions on Turkey
US President Donald Trump announced that recent US
sanctions on Turkey will be lifted in an address from the White House on
Wednesday.
“I have directed the Secretary of the Treasury to
lift all sanctions imposed on October 14 in response to Turkey’s original
offensive moves against the Kurds in Syria’s northeast border region,” said
Trump.
Trump said the government of Turkey contacted him
Wednesday morning to say that Ankara would be stopping combat and its operation
in Syria to make the US-brokered ceasefire permanent.
The US Treasury website reflected the removal of
sanctions on Turkey's ministries of defense and energy, including sanctions
placed on Turkey's interior, defense, and energy ministers.
Trump said last week's US-brokered ceasefire between
Turkey and Syrian Kurdish forces has held.
“It has held very well, beyond most expectations,”
said Trump.
The state of captured ISIS prisoners in Syria
Trump said that General Mazloum Abdi, the
commander-in-chief of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), reassured
him that captured ISIS fighters being held in northeastern Syria are secured in
detention centers.
“The detention facilities are being strongly
maintained. There were a few [ISIS prisoners] that got out…they have been
largely recaptured,” said Trump.
The remarks come as a senior US official claimed
that more than 100 imprisoned ISIS fighters had escaped in Syria since Turkey’s
incursion.
“We would say the number is now over 100. We do not
know where they are,” James Jeffrey, the State Department pointman on Syria,
told the House Foreign Affairs Committee on Wednesday.
Jeffrey said that “almost all” the prisons being
guarded by Kurdish forces are secured.
Limited US military presence will remain in Syria
Trump said that a small number of US troops will
remain in Syria to secure the oil in the country.
“We’re going to be protecting [the oil] and deciding
what we’re going to do with it in the future,” said Trump.
Trump announced on October 7 the withdrawal of US
troops from northern Syria ahead of the Turkish incursion in the region.
Thanking US Vice President Mike Pence and US
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo for their roles in brokering the ceasefire,
Trump said that the credit for the outcome in northeastern Syria goes to the
US, adding that he welcomes other countries' involvement if they would like to
help.
Turkey and Russia reached an agreement on Tuesday to
install their forces along the border in northeastern Syria, filling the void
left by the withdrawal of US troops.
Trump hailed the agreement, which creates a “safe
zone” inside Syria about 20 miles deep, as a “big success.”