“Take Down IS Fighters” Trump Tells European Countries
President Trump has told the UK and other European allies to
take back and put on trial more than 800 Islamic State (IS) group fighters
captured in the final battle against the group.
His tweet comes as US-backed Kurdish forces continue an
assault on the last pocket of IS territory on the Syrian side of the Iraqi
border.
The IS fighters are being held by the Kurdish-led forces.
Mr Trump added that the IS caliphate was "ready to
fall."
"The US does not want to watch as these ISIS fighters
permeate Europe, which is where they are expected to go. We do so much, and
spend so much - Time for others to step up and do the job that they are so
capable of doing," he said in a tweet.
Otherwise, he said, the US would be forced to release them.
Trump administration officials have also told the Sunday
Telegraph newspaper that they fear some of the detained fighters would put
European countries at risk unless they are brought to justice.
Mr Trump's remarks echo those made by the UK's foreign
intelligence chief on Friday, who warned that the Islamic State group is
reorganising for more attacks despite its military defeat in Syria.
Alex Younger also told of his concern about jihadists
returning to Europe with "dangerous" skills and connections.
The president's tweets come amid a controversy in the
UK over the case of Shamima Begum, one of three schoolgirls who left London in
2015 to join IS.
She has said she wants to return, and her family in the UK
have asked authorities to allow her to do so, but the government is making no
attempt to bring her back to the UK.
On Sunday, Ms Begum's family said they had been told
she had given birth.
US President Donald Trump said on Friday the defeat of IS
would be announced "over the next 24 hours".
But those 24 hours passed on Saturday with no further
announcement from the White House on the subject.
Instead, Kurdish fighters said the news was likely to emerge
"in the coming few days" as civilians continued to flee.
Jiya Furat, the leader of the battle for Baghuz for the
Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), said IS fighters were now trapped in a section
of the town that was 700 metres long and wide.
"Thousands of civilians are still trapped there as
human shields," he said on Saturday.
"In the coming few days, in a very short time, we will
spread the good tidings to the world of the military end of Daesh [IS]."
IS has suffered substantial losses, but the UN has said it
still reportedly controls between 14,000 and 18,000 militants in Iraq and
Syria.
Approximately 5,904 nationals from countries in Western
Europe like France, Germany and the UK have travelled to Iraq and Syria to join
the Islamic State, according to a report by the International Centre for the
Study of Radicalisation (ICSR), at King's College London.
Western European countries have seen a total of 1,765
nationals return, according to the study.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-middle-east
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