Trump's foreign policy in spotlight
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Erdogan vows to clear Syria of Kurd militants, IS
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Iran says US troop presence in Syria 'wrong' from start
After President Donald Trump's stunning decision to withdraw from Syria and slash troop numbers in Afghanistan, Washington's allies and US lawmakers scrambled Friday to figure out what America's foreign policy now is.
Trump's historic moves run counter to years of US doctrine in the Middle East and Afghanistan, and set the stage for a cascading series of events that could well result in yet more bloodshed across a scarred region.
While many Americans -- and not just his supporters -- lauded Trump's decision, fed up after years of costly and spiraling conflicts, politicians of every stripe were tripping over each other to get in their condemnation.
"Reducing the American presence in Afghanistan and removing our presence in Syria will reverse... progress, encourage our adversaries, and make America less safe," said Republican Congressman Mac Thornberry, a Trump ally who heads the House Armed Services Committee.
In the Pentagon, no one seemed to know what comes next.
"We are referring all questions to the White House," one spokeswoman said, when asked about the momentous Afghanistan withdrawal.
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis resigned Thursday after telling Trump he could not abide the Syria decision, which leaves vulnerable to a Turkish attack thousands of Kurdish fighters the Pentagon has spent years training and arming to fight the Islamic State group.
In Afghanistan, the Taliban welcomed Trump's partial pull out, with a spokesman saying the group was "more than happy."
Bill Roggio, an Afghanistan expert and senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told AFP the Trump administration's Middle East policy is in disarray.
"I do not know what its policy is, specifically with respect to what was known as the War on Terror," he said.
Trump campaigned on a pledge of "America First" and vowed to limit US engagement overseas, so his action on Afghanistan and Syria aren't bolts from the blue, and many observers were pleased with his actions.
His withdrawal from Syria abruptly ends American influence in the war-ravaged country and gives the Turks an opening to attack US-backed Kurds.
Trump reportedly made the decision during a phone call last week with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
After continuous persuasion from Erdogan, Trump was convinced.
"You know what? It's yours," Trump said of Syria according to The Washington Post. "I'm leaving."
Erdogan on Friday vowed to drive out Kurdish militia and jihadists from Syria in an operation in 'coming months.
By cedingSyria, Trump is also yanking a keystone of his own administration's foreign policy: to push back against Iran, which supports President Bashar al-Assad and is seeking to expand regional influence.
Iran yesterday pounced on the withdrawal decision saying the US presence in Syria had been "wrong and illogical" from the start.
"This is a huge strategic mistake that I hope the president will reconsider," Jack Keane, a retired general, told Fox News. Keane has been one of the names in the Washington rumor mill to replace Mattis.
He went on to warn that Trump was repeating the "mistakes" of president Barack Obama, who for years drew withering criticism from Republicans for pulling US troops out of Iraq, only to see the emergence of IS.
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