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October 13, 2019 10:14 am
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In Campaign Stop With Evangelical Christians, Trump Defends His Actions on Syria

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avatar by Reuters and Algemeiner Staff

US President Donald Trump prays between Tony Perkins, President of the Family Research Council, and Pastor Andrew Brunson (R) at the Family Research Council’s annual gala in Washington, DC, October 12, 2019. Photo: REUTERS/Yuri Gripas.

US President Donald Trump on Saturday defended his decision to withdraw troops from northeastern Syria, telling conservative Christian activists that the United States should prioritize protecting its own borders.

“Let them have their borders, but I don’t think our soldiers should be there for the next 50 years guarding a border between Turkey and Syria when we can’t guard our own borders at home,” Trump said in a speech to the Value Voters Summit in Washington, an annual conference of religious conservatives.

Trump was elected in 2016 running on a hard-line immigration policy and has sought to make legal and illegal immigration to the United States more difficult during his more than two years in office, pushing for a wall to be built on the US-Mexico border among other measures.

After a phone call between Trump and Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan last Sunday, Trump made an abrupt policy change and ordered out US forces in northeast Syria who had been fighting with the Kurdish YPG militia against Islamic State. Within days Turkey began an offensive against the YPG, which it says is a terrorist group backing Kurdish rebels in Turkey.

Syrian Kurds should fight on their own, Trump said at Saturday’s event.

“Don’t forget: they are fighting for their land. They haven’t helped us fight for our land,” Trump said. “They’re fighting for their land and that’s good, but we’ve helped them.”

The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), in which the YPG comprises the main fighting element, holds most of the northern Syrian territory that once made up Islamic State’s “caliphate” and has been keeping thousands of fighters from the jihadist group in jail.

Some evangelical leaders have criticized Trump over his Syria policy, saying he was endangering tens of thousands of Christians in the Muslim-dominated region.

Trump has also had rare criticism from senior figures in his own Republican Party who accuse him of deserting loyal US allies in the Kurds. Trump has said he does not approve of Turkey’s incursion, but hundreds of Kurds rallied outside the White House on Saturday, blaming Trump for exposing Kurds to a Turkish onslaught.

Evangelicals have been among Trump’s most loyal supporters through scandal and controversy in the White House. Criticism from influential Christian leaders has been a rare crack in their overwhelming support for Trump as he fights an impeachment inquiry by the Democratic-led House of Representatives and pursues his 2020 reelection bid.

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