After strike on American troops, what next for US in Syria?

The United States military lost two Iowa National Guard soldiers and a civilian interpreter in Syria, and saw three more of its troops injured, in a shooting last week by an Islamic State supporter there. The violence threw a spotlight on the U.S. military’s mission in a country newly emerging from civil war.

Syrian officials had reportedly warned their American counterparts that an ISIS attack on U.S. forces could be in the offing. (Those officials said the warning went unheeded.) Though recently flagged for possible ISIS sympathies, the shooter was a member of the Syrian security forces, now a U.S. ally.

The U.S. has had soldiers on the ground in Syria for more than a decade now, with roughly 1,000 U.S. troops there today, according to the Pentagon.

Why We Wrote This

Following a recent Islamic State attack on its soldiers, the U.S. must weigh whether a return strike creates more problems for itself and a war-torn country than it solves.

Last month, Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, who had ties to Al Qaeda and a $10 million bounty on his head 10 years ago, became the first Syrian head of state to visit the White House. The rebel forces he once led – which, though Islamist, routinely clashed with ISIS – overthrew Bashar al-Assad last December.

After their November meeting, President Donald Trump called Mr. al-Sharaa “a tough guy – I like him” and hailed a “new era” of cooperation. Since then, and in the wake of the shooting, there has been talk of expanding the U.S. mission in the country.

What are U.S. troops doing in Syria?

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