Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Trump on the Kurds in Syria: ‘They’re no angels’

Kurdish scholar Diliman Abdulkader said the Kurds “defeated [the ISIS] caliphate, protected ethnic and religious minorities, brought stability to a third of Syria ... 11,000 angels sacrificed their lives so the rest of the world can be at peace.”

U.S. President Donald Trump, June 20, 2019. Credit: White House Photo.
U.S. President Donald Trump, June 20, 2019. Credit: White House Photo.

U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday defended his decision to withdraw U.S. forces from northern Syria even as criticism points to the United States having betrayed its Kurdish allies in the region.

In talking about the Kurds, who have helped the United States fight the Islamic State (ISIS) and other terror factions, the president said, “The Kurds are safer right now... they are not angels, they are not angels.” He added that they are not strong fighters without U.S. assistance.

Trump said that the United States isn’t “a policing agent. It is time for us to go home.”

It has also been reported that the president falsely stated that “the Kurds actually are pulling back substantially from Turkey, and Syria’s pulling in.”

“Syria probably will have a partner of Russia,” he continued. “Whoever they may have, I wish ’em all a lot of luck.”

Russia has started patrolling territory separating Turkish and Syrian forces in the northeast Syrian town of Manbij, where the flag of the Syrian regime was raised for the first time in years.

“So I view the situation on the Turkish border with Syria to be, for the United States, strategically brilliant,” said Trump. “Our soldiers are totally safe. They’ve got to work it out. Maybe they can do it without fighting. Syria’s protecting the Kurds. That’s good.”

Kurdish scholar Diliman Abdulkader told JNS, “President Trump must understand that Kurds are angels. These angels defeated [the ISIS] caliphate, protected ethnic and religious minorities, brought stability to a third of Syria ... 11,000 angels sacrificed their lives so the rest of the world can be at peace.”

“Oh, my goodness gracious, the Kurds are our friends and our allies ... abandoning them was a very dark moment in American history,” said Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) in response to Trump’s latest remarks.

“They want to make a deal, but I don’t. I’m not satisfied with it, so we’ll see what happens,” the president told reporters.
Since Oct. 7, 2023, the Toronto Police Service has made “over 517 arrests and laid over 1,275 charges in connection with demonstrations, protests and hate‑motivated offenses,” its police chief said.
“What made it easy for the D.C. government to do this is that they already had an existing standing program,” Ron Halber, CEO of the JCRC of Greater Washington, told JNS.
“We won’t support a Democrat who doesn’t represent the views and values of the vast majority of American Jews,” the Jewish Democratic Council of America said.
“For years, the Biden-Harris administration doggedly harassed and targeted Christians simply for living according to their beliefs,” Rep. Tim Walberg said.
Calls are mounting for the University of Portsmouth to act after a history professor posted on social media that “blowback is bad, but it is also inevitable.”