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Syria: Kurdish protesters briefly halt departing US military convoy01:02
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Description

Members of Qamishli's local Kurdish population stood in the way of a US military convoy holding up signs criticising their withdrawal from Syria.

One message read: "We want to live in peace", while another called on US troops to tell their children that "the children of the Kurds were killed by the Turks" and they "did nothing to protect them."

They eventually moved aside and let the convoy pass.

US Secretary of Defence Mark Esper was reported as saying that under current plans all US troops leaving Syria - some 1,000 soldiers - were headed for Iraq to join an existing 5,000-strong US contingent there. US President Donald Trump has previously vowed to bring US troops home.

Turkey's military offensive, dubbed 'Operation Peace Spring,' began on October 9, days after the White House announced a withdrawal of US troops from the area. Ankara says the aim of the offensive is to establish a 'safe zone' in north eastern Syria.

Syria: Kurdish protesters briefly halt departing US military convoy

Syrian Arab Republic, Qamishli
October 21, 2019 at 17:45 GMT +00:00 · Published

Members of Qamishli's local Kurdish population stood in the way of a US military convoy holding up signs criticising their withdrawal from Syria.

One message read: "We want to live in peace", while another called on US troops to tell their children that "the children of the Kurds were killed by the Turks" and they "did nothing to protect them."

They eventually moved aside and let the convoy pass.

US Secretary of Defence Mark Esper was reported as saying that under current plans all US troops leaving Syria - some 1,000 soldiers - were headed for Iraq to join an existing 5,000-strong US contingent there. US President Donald Trump has previously vowed to bring US troops home.

Turkey's military offensive, dubbed 'Operation Peace Spring,' began on October 9, days after the White House announced a withdrawal of US troops from the area. Ankara says the aim of the offensive is to establish a 'safe zone' in north eastern Syria.

Description

Members of Qamishli's local Kurdish population stood in the way of a US military convoy holding up signs criticising their withdrawal from Syria.

One message read: "We want to live in peace", while another called on US troops to tell their children that "the children of the Kurds were killed by the Turks" and they "did nothing to protect them."

They eventually moved aside and let the convoy pass.

US Secretary of Defence Mark Esper was reported as saying that under current plans all US troops leaving Syria - some 1,000 soldiers - were headed for Iraq to join an existing 5,000-strong US contingent there. US President Donald Trump has previously vowed to bring US troops home.

Turkey's military offensive, dubbed 'Operation Peace Spring,' began on October 9, days after the White House announced a withdrawal of US troops from the area. Ankara says the aim of the offensive is to establish a 'safe zone' in north eastern Syria.

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