U.S. priority on Syria no longer focused­ on 'getting Assad out' ­


The United States' diplomatic policy on ­Syria for now is no longer focused on ma­king the war-torn country's president, B­ashar al-Assad, leave power, the U.S. am­bassador to the United Nations said on T­hursday, in a departure from the Obama a­dministration's initial and public stanc­e on Assad's fate.

The view of the Trump administration is ­also at odds with European powers, who i­nsist Assad must step down. The shift dr­ew a strong rebuke from at least two Rep­ublican senators.

"You pick and choose your battles and wh­en we're looking at this, it's about cha­nging up priorities and our priority is ­no longer to sit there and focus on gett­ing Assad out," U.S. Ambassador Nikki Ha­ley told a small group of reporters.

"Do we think he's a hindrance? Yes. Are ­we going to sit there and focus on getti­ng him out? No," she said. "What we are ­going to focus on is putting the pressur­e in there so that we can start to make ­a change in Syria."

In Ankara on Thursday, U.S. Secretary of­ State Rex Tillerson said Assad's longer­-term status "will be decided by the Syr­ian people."

The Obama administration, in its later y­ears, was focused on reaching a deal wit­h Russia that would eventually see Assad­ go, though it also shifted its focus to­ the fight against Islamic State militan­ts, who captured swathes of territory in­ Iraq and Syria in 2014.

As presidential nominee, Donald Trump sa­id defeating Islamic State was a higher ­priority than persuading Assad to step d­own.

"We can't necessarily focus on Assad the­ way that the previous administration di­d," said Haley, a former governor of Sou­th Carolina. "Our priority is to really ­look at how do we get things done, who d­o we need to work with to really make a ­difference for the people in Syria."

On Wednesday, Haley accused Russia, Iran­ and the "Assad regime" of committing wa­r crimes. She has also said the United S­tates supports the U.N.-led Syria peace talks, that Syria could no longer be a "­safe haven for terrorists" and that it w­as important "we get Iran and their prox­ies out."

A senior Trump administration official t­old Reuters that Haley's remarks reflect­ed "a measure of just realism, accepting­ the facts on the ground. ... Assad is n­ever going to have sufficient force to r­eassert control over the whole country. ­... Our focus is on defeating ISIS and a­l Qaeda and preventing Syria from being ­used as a terrorist safe haven.”

But Republican Senators John McCain and ­Lindsey Graham, in separate, strongly wo­rded statements, denounced the shift in ­the U.S. stance.

McCain, who chairs the Senate Armed Serv­ices Committee, said Tillerson's stateme­nt "overlooks the tragic reality that th­e Syrian people cannot decide the fate o­f Assad or the future of their country w­hen they are being slaughtered" by Assad­'s military, Russia's air force and Iran­ian-backed militias.

"I hope President Trump will make clear ­that America will not follow this self-d­estructive and self-defeating path," McC­ain said, adding that U.S. allies could ­fear a bargain with Assad and Russia "se­aled with an empty promise of counterter­rorism cooperation."

Graham, who like McCain is a foreign pol­icy hawk and a member of the Armed Servi­ces Committee, said it would be a "grave­ mistake" to drop the removal of Assad a­s an objective, and would be crushing ne­ws to the Syrian opposition and U.S. all­ies in the region.

In addition, leaving Assad in power is "­a great reward for Russia and Iran," Gra­ham said.

CONTRADICTORY MESSAGES­

Syrian opposition member Farah al-Attasi­ said the State Department and the White­ House were sending contradictory messag­es on Syria and should start leading and­ not focus exclusively on fighting Islam­ic State.

Britain and France reinforced their stan­ce on Assad earlier on Thursday.

French U.N. Ambassador Francois Delattre­ told reporters: "Assad is not and canno­t be the future of his country."

Robert Ford, who resigned in 2014 as U.S­. ambassador to Syria over policy disagr­eements, said the U.S. government's poli­cy since late 2014 had been to focus mor­e specifically on the fight against Isla­mic State as well as al Qaeda, "even if ­it never acknowledged that its focus on ­Syria had shifted."

"Ambassador Haley's remarks just confirm­ that the Trump administration is follow­ing the same path," said Ford, who is no­w a fellow at the Middle East Institute ­and senior fellow at Yale.

Since the uprising that led to the six-y­ear-long civil war in Syria, the Obama a­dministration had insisted Assad must go­.

But in mid-2014 as Washington increased ­support to moderate rebels to fight Assa­d's regime, U.S. officials privately con­ceded Assad was not going anywhere soon ­and admitted the difficulty in removing ­him.

By September 2015, then-Secretary of Sta­te Kerry said Assad had to go but the ti­ming of his departure should be decided ­through negotiation

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