Trump is Abandoning the Kurds again!

Syria civil war came to an end.
Countries housing Syrian refugees want a stable Syria, so that refugees can return. There are millions of Syrian refugees all over the world.
Not all can be sent back at once, so Syria needs to rebuilt and absorb the refugees gradually. Syria will be assisted.

In paralell, USA withdraws troops from Iraq


The 40 trillion $ debt Americans, who make their founding fathers roll in their graves, have no business in Muslim lands.
The only reason hindering you to focus on your "hemisphere" or your prime challenger (China) is Israel with its pedophile extortion crime syndicate.
 
NATO, & The EU, are two separate bodies.

And Turkey is no longer ruled by a Secular Leader, as it was when Turkey sent troops to assist in the "Korean Police Action".

Turkey, ruled by Erdogan, absolutely upholds the Quran, & Sharia, & at the "Right Time", he would turn on America & The "Christian West"

Turkey is 5th most visited country in the world


Istanbul receives more tourists than London, Paris, New York.

Maybe you can wank each other in your Zionist "propagandize the American redneck"-Sharia group chat with Sharia boogey stories.
 
No david corridor and no delusional promised lands.

Some devil tricked the happy white Christian American (who could afford a house with one salary) into believing that adopting multi-trilluon $ Abu-Graib concept in distant lands is better concept than JFKs space exploration
 
The Kurds are serial stupid, time after time they have collaborated with the US and their allies, instead of defending their Country on the side of Assad, he offered them autonomy, well now they are paying for their stupidity and treachery, the Regime now in Syria which the US and their paid terrorists put in power are slaughtering the Kurds and they have been thrown under the Bus as was always going to happen, Julani Trumps Golden boy with his band of head hacking savages is on a blood drenched orgy of beheadings and mutilation, the Kurds can't say they were not warned.
 

I posted yesterday how the US have transferred 7000 Isis thugs from prisons in Syria to Iraq, Iraq has a large open border with Iran, that is the next job the Americans have given the head choppers invade Iran to try and finish the job they and Mossad started last month.
 
I posted yesterday how the US have transferred 7000 Isis thugs from prisons in Syria to Iraq, Iraq has a large open border with Iran, that is the next job the Americans have given the head choppers invade Iran to try and finish the job they and Mossad started last month.
 

Well that girl like the other foreign ISIS were fighting on our side against the Syrian Government of Assad so what are they complaining about? there is no way Begum and other British terrorists could have even left the UK for that area without being flagged up one even left the Country on a false passport, they should have been prevented from leaving at immigration, the fact is the authorities wanted them to go there.
 

Kurds in Syria 'sacrificed' says head of Kurdish Institute of Paris​

Syrian government forces have seized swathes of territory from Kurdish forces in the north of the country, effectively dismantling more than a decade of self-rule by the Kurds. The head of the Kurdish Institute of Paris tells RFI that the Kurdish-dominated Syrian Democratic Forces, who fought alongside the United States to combat Islamic State, have been not only abandoned, but sacrificed.

Issued on: 22/01/2026 - 16:08

6 minReading time
Kurds rallied in Qamishli on 20 January 2026 against a Syrian government advance, before the announcement of a truce deal that many now see as a betrayal.
Kurds rallied in Qamishli on 20 January 2026 against a Syrian government advance, before the announcement of a truce deal that many now see as a betrayal. © AFP - DELIL SOULEIMAN

By:RFIFollow
Advertising

On Tuesday, the Syrian Defence Ministry announced a ceasefire with Kurdish forces and gave them four days to agree to integrate into the forces of President Ahmed al-Sharaa – the Islamist military strongman who came to power in December 2024.

The United States, the main ally of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), has urged them to accept.

The SDF has so far resisted joining the central state, and ceasefire negotiations have collapsed.

Syrian government forces have seized swathes of territory from Kurdish forces in northern Syria, driving them out from Aleppo, Raqqa and Deir ez-Zor – effectively dismantling more than a decade of self-rule by the Kurds.

RFI spoke to Kendal Nézan, the president of the Kurdish Institute of Paris, about the latest developments.

Kendal Nezan: Obviously, we are very worried. The offensive began on 6 January, after a deal between President Trump and Turkish President Erdoğan, so with an American green light.

We saw nearly 40,000 militiamen from the Syrian Arab Army mobilised against two Kurdish neighbourhoods where there were around 450,000 displaced refugees. The neighbourhoods have been defended since 2011 by just a few hundred local police. That gives you a sense of the disproportion.

The neighbourhoods were encircled and, after six days of fighting, the Kurds withdrew. Afterwards, under American pressure, they decided to pull out of towns with an Arab majority, which they did. The Syrian army then retook these cities, which had been liberated by Kurdish forces from the grip of Islamic State.

Kendal Nezan at RFI, 21 January, 2026.
Kendal Nezan at RFI, 21 January, 2026. © RFI

RFI: A four-day ceasefire came into effect on Tuesday night. Could this help bring the current confrontation to a peaceful resolution?

KN:
The issue obviously goes far beyond the fate of the Kurds alone. The fate of the Kurds matters because they defended not only their country and their territory, but also Europe, and humanity, against the Islamist scourge. More than 15,000 young Kurds were killed in that fight. They defeated Islamic State and captured tens of thousands of its members, who were held in camps. They have been doing this since 2014.

And how are they thanked? By being handed over to the Syrian regime and told 'listen, your mission is over, find an arrangement with the new Syrian regime', which is Islamist in nature, given that the current leader is a former jihadist.

So what will happen? The Kurds are faced with a dilemma. They are now confined to areas with a Kurdish majority. Either they come to terms with the regime by individually integrating into the new Syrian army, case by case, or they shift into resistance against this regime.

Syria says Sharaa, Trump discuss Kurdish rights as forces deploy in country's north, east

RFI: What is President Ahmad al-Sharaa trying to achieve?

KN:
His intention is to establish his authority across the entire territory, with the logistical, diplomatic and political backing of Turkey, his sponsor. That's very important to point out.

And to establish an Islamic Syrian republic that is already in conflict internally. We saw the massacres of Alawites in March and of Druze in July. The Christian community is very worried. Now it is the Kurds.

So after the dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad, we are moving rapidly towards a new dictatorship – this time Islamist. And I say this for Europeans who think the regime will stabilise: such a regime, with so much power concentrated in the hands of one man, will generate a new influx of refugees and will become an Islamist hub.

RFI: So what is happening in Syria will have consequences for Europe and elsewhere?

KN:
It will certainly have consequences in the region, and in Europe. It could tip over and become a centre of jihadism, because within the current Syrian Arab Army you have a heterogeneous mix of various Islamist militias – including between 6,000 and 8,000 foreign jihadists.

RFI: Do the events of recent weeks definitively mark the end of the Kurdish dream of autonomy in Syria?

KN:
The Kurds are a resilient people. Over the course of their turbulent history, they have experienced setbacks, betrayals and shifting alliances. Definitive end? No.

But for the moment there is an autonomous zone in northern and north-eastern Syria. That zone has now shrunk to almost nothing and will probably no longer exist. The Kurds had in fact established an alternative system that was ecological and feminist, in which all components of the population – Arabs, Assyrian Chaldeans, women, everyone – took part. And we are heading towards an authoritarian regime where there is only the voice of the leader, who has appointed a parliament and rules the country with an iron fist.

Syrian government forces in armoured vehicles enter the al-Hol camp in northeastern Syria's Hasakeh province on 21 January, after the withdrawal of the Syrian Democratic Forces.
Syrian government forces in armoured vehicles enter the al-Hol camp in northeastern Syria's Hasakeh province on 21 January, after the withdrawal of the Syrian Democratic Forces. AP - Ghaith Alsayed

What's driving France's sudden deportation of Kurdish activists?

RFI: There was also talk of a repressive Kurdish authority installed in Arab regions. It was not an ideal, democratic system either.

KN:
Repressive? Certainly not. But conservative Arab tribes did not agree with the model that was put in place, because women were involved, because there were local councils and democracy, so there was irritation. Now they feel liberated.

One of the symbols of the Kurdish resistance was a female fighter, a statue of a Kurdish woman fighter who had liberated Raqqa. The first thing the current Syrian army did was to pull down that statue of a woman. For them, it's heresy. And they opened prison doors to free Kurdish detainees.

RFI: The issue of controlling the region’s prisons, where jihadists or people close to Islamic State are held, is one of the big questions. The Syrian army accuses the SDF of having opened the doors, notably at Shahdad prison, where 120 Islamic State terrorists were held. Does this mean the Kurdish forces are now playing a dangerous game, using the prisons as their last card, at the expense of security?

KN:
The Syrian government is coached and briefed by Turkey, which has an extraordinary mastery of black, negative and deceitful propaganda. If the Kurds had wanted to open the prison doors, they would have done so. They have guarded these prisons for around 10 years.

But on Tuesday, for example, the Kurds withdrew from al-Hol, the largest detention camp in the area, where there are 24,000 relatives of jihadists. The camp was attacked from all sides by drones, by the Syrian army and by the Americans. The international coalition was informed and did nothing. They said 'listen, we cannot, we must first defend our own territories, and then it is up to you'. They no longer have the means to act.

Turkey warns Kurdish-led fighters in Syria to join new regime or face attack

RFI: Do you feel that you've been abandoned by the West, by the Americans?

KN:
Yes, we've been abandoned. Ingratitude is, of course, a constant in human and political history. I would even say we've been sacrificed by the allies of the international coalition, the Americans of course. But the others remained silent.

RFI: Would you include the French in that?

KN:
The voice of France is inaudible. I may be a little hard of hearing, but France’s voice is inaudible. Have you seen any statements of support for our 'brothers in arms'? That was the expression used by a French minister only recently.



This interview, adapted from the original version in French, has been lightly edited for clarity
 

Kurds in Syria 'sacrificed' says head of Kurdish Institute of Paris​

Syrian government forces have seized swathes of territory from Kurdish forces in the north of the country, effectively dismantling more than a decade of self-rule by the Kurds. The head of the Kurdish Institute of Paris tells RFI that the Kurdish-dominated Syrian Democratic Forces, who fought alongside the United States to combat Islamic State, have been not only abandoned, but sacrificed.

Issued on: 22/01/2026 - 16:08

6 minReading time
Kurds rallied in Qamishli on 20 January 2026 against a Syrian government advance, before the announcement of a truce deal that many now see as a betrayal.
Kurds rallied in Qamishli on 20 January 2026 against a Syrian government advance, before the announcement of a truce deal that many now see as a betrayal. © AFP - DELIL SOULEIMAN

By:RFIFollow
Advertising

On Tuesday, the Syrian Defence Ministry announced a ceasefire with Kurdish forces and gave them four days to agree to integrate into the forces of President Ahmed al-Sharaa – the Islamist military strongman who came to power in December 2024.

The United States, the main ally of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), has urged them to accept.

The SDF has so far resisted joining the central state, and ceasefire negotiations have collapsed.

Syrian government forces have seized swathes of territory from Kurdish forces in northern Syria, driving them out from Aleppo, Raqqa and Deir ez-Zor – effectively dismantling more than a decade of self-rule by the Kurds.

RFI spoke to Kendal Nézan, the president of the Kurdish Institute of Paris, about the latest developments.

Kendal Nezan: Obviously, we are very worried. The offensive began on 6 January, after a deal between President Trump and Turkish President Erdoğan, so with an American green light.

We saw nearly 40,000 militiamen from the Syrian Arab Army mobilised against two Kurdish neighbourhoods where there were around 450,000 displaced refugees. The neighbourhoods have been defended since 2011 by just a few hundred local police. That gives you a sense of the disproportion.

The neighbourhoods were encircled and, after six days of fighting, the Kurds withdrew. Afterwards, under American pressure, they decided to pull out of towns with an Arab majority, which they did. The Syrian army then retook these cities, which had been liberated by Kurdish forces from the grip of Islamic State.

Kendal Nezan at RFI, 21 January, 2026.
Kendal Nezan at RFI, 21 January, 2026. © RFI

RFI: A four-day ceasefire came into effect on Tuesday night. Could this help bring the current confrontation to a peaceful resolution?

KN:
The issue obviously goes far beyond the fate of the Kurds alone. The fate of the Kurds matters because they defended not only their country and their territory, but also Europe, and humanity, against the Islamist scourge. More than 15,000 young Kurds were killed in that fight. They defeated Islamic State and captured tens of thousands of its members, who were held in camps. They have been doing this since 2014.

And how are they thanked? By being handed over to the Syrian regime and told 'listen, your mission is over, find an arrangement with the new Syrian regime', which is Islamist in nature, given that the current leader is a former jihadist.

So what will happen? The Kurds are faced with a dilemma. They are now confined to areas with a Kurdish majority. Either they come to terms with the regime by individually integrating into the new Syrian army, case by case, or they shift into resistance against this regime.

Syria says Sharaa, Trump discuss Kurdish rights as forces deploy in country's north, east

RFI: What is President Ahmad al-Sharaa trying to achieve?

KN:
His intention is to establish his authority across the entire territory, with the logistical, diplomatic and political backing of Turkey, his sponsor. That's very important to point out.

And to establish an Islamic Syrian republic that is already in conflict internally. We saw the massacres of Alawites in March and of Druze in July. The Christian community is very worried. Now it is the Kurds.

So after the dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad, we are moving rapidly towards a new dictatorship – this time Islamist. And I say this for Europeans who think the regime will stabilise: such a regime, with so much power concentrated in the hands of one man, will generate a new influx of refugees and will become an Islamist hub.

RFI: So what is happening in Syria will have consequences for Europe and elsewhere?

KN:
It will certainly have consequences in the region, and in Europe. It could tip over and become a centre of jihadism, because within the current Syrian Arab Army you have a heterogeneous mix of various Islamist militias – including between 6,000 and 8,000 foreign jihadists.

RFI: Do the events of recent weeks definitively mark the end of the Kurdish dream of autonomy in Syria?

KN:
The Kurds are a resilient people. Over the course of their turbulent history, they have experienced setbacks, betrayals and shifting alliances. Definitive end? No.

But for the moment there is an autonomous zone in northern and north-eastern Syria. That zone has now shrunk to almost nothing and will probably no longer exist. The Kurds had in fact established an alternative system that was ecological and feminist, in which all components of the population – Arabs, Assyrian Chaldeans, women, everyone – took part. And we are heading towards an authoritarian regime where there is only the voice of the leader, who has appointed a parliament and rules the country with an iron fist.

Syrian government forces in armoured vehicles enter the al-Hol camp in northeastern Syria's Hasakeh province on 21 January, after the withdrawal of the Syrian Democratic Forces.'s Hasakeh province on 21 January, after the withdrawal of the Syrian Democratic Forces.
Syrian government forces in armoured vehicles enter the al-Hol camp in northeastern Syria's Hasakeh province on 21 January, after the withdrawal of the Syrian Democratic Forces. AP - Ghaith Alsayed

What's driving France's sudden deportation of Kurdish activists?

RFI: There was also talk of a repressive Kurdish authority installed in Arab regions. It was not an ideal, democratic system either.

KN:
Repressive? Certainly not. But conservative Arab tribes did not agree with the model that was put in place, because women were involved, because there were local councils and democracy, so there was irritation. Now they feel liberated.

One of the symbols of the Kurdish resistance was a female fighter, a statue of a Kurdish woman fighter who had liberated Raqqa. The first thing the current Syrian army did was to pull down that statue of a woman. For them, it's heresy. And they opened prison doors to free Kurdish detainees.

RFI: The issue of controlling the region’s prisons, where jihadists or people close to Islamic State are held, is one of the big questions. The Syrian army accuses the SDF of having opened the doors, notably at Shahdad prison, where 120 Islamic State terrorists were held. Does this mean the Kurdish forces are now playing a dangerous game, using the prisons as their last card, at the expense of security?

KN:
The Syrian government is coached and briefed by Turkey, which has an extraordinary mastery of black, negative and deceitful propaganda. If the Kurds had wanted to open the prison doors, they would have done so. They have guarded these prisons for around 10 years.

But on Tuesday, for example, the Kurds withdrew from al-Hol, the largest detention camp in the area, where there are 24,000 relatives of jihadists. The camp was attacked from all sides by drones, by the Syrian army and by the Americans. The international coalition was informed and did nothing. They said 'listen, we cannot, we must first defend our own territories, and then it is up to you'. They no longer have the means to act.

Turkey warns Kurdish-led fighters in Syria to join new regime or face attack

RFI: Do you feel that you've been abandoned by the West, by the Americans?

KN:
Yes, we've been abandoned. Ingratitude is, of course, a constant in human and political history. I would even say we've been sacrificed by the allies of the international coalition, the Americans of course. But the others remained silent.

RFI: Would you include the French in that?

KN:
The voice of France is inaudible. I may be a little hard of hearing, but France’s voice is inaudible. Have you seen any statements of support for our 'brothers in arms'? That was the expression used by a French minister only recently.



This interview, adapted from the original version in French, has been lightly edited for clarity
There is no Syrian Government just Al Qaeda and Isis type thugs, and the Kurds have asked for what they are getting.
 
There is no Syrian Government just Al Qaeda and Isis type thugs, and the Kurds have asked for what they are getting.
I Disagree.

Trump was all about the Kurds, as he used them to fight ISIS in Syria, which despite his claim, they were not destroyed.

And he used them to help protect the oilfields, as he stole Syrian oil, but he also flip flopped, about being Allied with them whenever Erdogan sent Turkish troops in to Syria to fight the Kurds.

Trump is abandoning the Kurds, so that he can suck up to this "Repackaged Al Queda Leader", as he seeks to broaden his "Abraham Accords", & this so called "Board of Peace".

In "My World",... One maintains strong relations with their Allies, and does not Use & Abuse them for Political /Economic Gain, & then drop them.
 
The Kurds are serial stupid, time after time they have collaborated with the US and their allies, instead of defending their Country on the side of Assad, he offered them autonomy, well now they are paying for their stupidity and treachery, the Regime now in Syria which the US and their paid terrorists put in power are slaughtering the Kurds and they have been thrown under the Bus as was always going to happen, Julani Trumps Golden boy with his band of head hacking savages is on a blood drenched orgy of beheadings and mutilation, the Kurds can't say they were not warned.

Please do not take this guy seriously.
He's from Britain and therefore guilty of a massive bullshitting-campaign targeting the US audience.
You see the Brits have mastered the art of bullshitting the American audience, as masterful as Israel.
US Army babysitted so-called British figthers in areas like Afghanistan, and the Brits got cocky claiming to be VIP-ally of USA whilst they did nothing on the front-line, doing Trumpesque BBC fake-news heroic stories.

Total wannabe-posers. Fabricating fake hero-stories like Brit Army soldier having lost limbs although nowhere seen near the frontlines, probably wanking each others dicks in the barracks until limbs got sore. Don't you have any shame ?
You have to be a special low-life to do such fake-news stories.
Same wankers who defy USA on Greenland, tariff their asses.

You ever thought about spitting in someone's face, like Jerusalem-Jews do with Christians, those BBC fake-news Brits are prime candidates.

Finally, Trump is telling the truth:


 
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Please do not take this guy seriously.
He's from Britain and therefore guilty of a massive bullshitting-campaign targeting the US audience.
You see the Brits have mastered the art of bullshitting the American audience, as masterful as Israel.
US Army babysitted so-called British figthers in areas like Afghanistan, and the Brits got cocky claiming to be VIP-ally of USA whilst they did nothing on the front-line, doing Trumpesque BBC fake-news heroic stories.
Britain joined us in Afghanistan in solidaridy with us after 9/11, you little puke.

The UK suffered the second highest number of casualties, after the US.

For us.

So you can shove your head right back up your c*nt from whence it came.

You're a c*nt and Trump is an even bigger c*nt.
 
Britain joined us in Afghanistan in solidaridy with us after 9/11, you little puke.

The UK suffered the second highest number of casualties, after the US.

For us.

So you can shove your head right back up your c*nt from whence it came.

You're a c*nt and Trump is an even bigger c*nt.


You are fake news.

You know better than emperor Trump ?

Those so-called 158 Canadian casualuties are people dying in Fentanyl-laboratories, sending drugs into USA in full collobaration with communist China.
Sniffed one time too many in those fentanyl Laboratories.

 
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Please do not take this guy seriously.
He's from Britain and therefore guilty of a massive bullshitting-campaign targeting the US audience.
You see the Brits have mastered the art of bullshitting the American audience, as masterful as Israel.
US Army babysitted so-called British figthers in areas like Afghanistan, and the Brits got cocky claiming to be VIP-ally of USA whilst they did nothing on the front-line, doing Trumpesque BBC fake-news heroic stories.

Total wannabe-posers. Fabricating fake hero-stories like Brit Army soldier having lost limbs although nowhere seen near the frontlines, probably wanking each others dicks in the barracks until limbs got sore. Don't you have any shame ?
You have to be a special low-life to do such fake-news stories.
Same wankers who defy USA on Greenland, tariff their asses.

You ever thought about spitting in someone's face, like Jerusalem-Jews do with Christians, those BBC fake-news Brits are prime candidates.

Finally, Trump is telling the truth:



Try telling the families of the 457 British troops killed in Afghanistan fighting your war or the 2000 who came home injured, some of them when you clowns bombed their own side, you sound as insane as the Orange Babboon.
 
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