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US troops remain in Syrian region to counter ISIS
Fox News’ chief national security correspondent, Jennifer Griffin, provided an update on ‘Special Report’ concerning former President Donald Trump’s reaction to the deadly attack on two National Guardsmen in Syria.
Following the chaos that erupted on January 19 in northeastern Syria, some ISIS prisoners who managed to escape from a detention facility are still missing, according to an analyst with insight into the situation. The turmoil has rendered it challenging to track certain fighters, making their capture “impossible,” as per the analyst’s observations.
As U.S. military forces work to relocate thousands of male ISIS militants from Syria to Iraq, their spouses are left behind in what has been described as “fragile” detention camps.
“According to Damascus, most of the escapees have been brought back into custody, but a few remain on the run,” Syria analyst Nanar Hawach shared with Fox News Digital.
Hawach, who is part of the International Crisis Group, also noted, “The exact number of those still unaccounted for is uncertain due to the chaos making comprehensive tracking an impossible task.”

Syrian security forces increased security measures at Al-Hawl refugee camp. (Santiago Montag/Anadolu via Getty Images)
“The U.S. transfer to Iraq covers male detainees from prisons, but those detained in camps remain in Syria under Damascus’ control.”
The instability also came ahead of reports that the U.S. is considering a complete withdrawal of troops from Syria.Â
Charles Lister, director of the Syria program at the Middle East Institute, told the Wall Street Journal Thursday that “the main thing that has been holding the U.S. force presence in Syria over the last year is the detention facilities and the camps.”
U.S. Central Command confirmed Jan. 21 that it had begun transferring ISIS prisoners to Iraqi-controlled centers as an emergency effort to prevent a resurgence of the terror group amid deteriorating security conditions.
The move followed the prison escape at a detention center in Hasakah province during clashes between Syrian government forces and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces.
Militants broke out during the unrest, and while many were later recaptured, the full scope of the escape remains unclear.
U.S. forces have already transported roughly 150 ISIS fighters from a detention center in Hasakah to secure locations in Iraq, according to CENTCOM, which said as many as 7,000 detainees could be transferred.
ISIS wives and children remain in “fragile” Syrian detention camps under Damascus’ control while male fighters are transferred to Iraq, leaving the detention crisis unresolved. (Â Santiago Montag/Anadolu via Getty Image)
An Iraqi intelligence general told The Associated Press Jan. 21 that Iraqi authorities received an initial batch of 144 detainees, with additional transfers planned by aircraft.
“The U.S. is facilitating transfers to Iraqi custody as an emergency measure because of the unstable security situation in northeast Syria,” Hawach said, noting that Iraq’s secure prisons “reduce the risk of further mass breakouts.”
“Human rights organizations have raised concerns about trial procedures in Iraq, but the priority right now is preventing escapes, and Iraq can deliver that.”
Hawach emphasized that the transfers apply only to male fighters held in prisons, not to women and children confined in camps such as the notorious al-Hawl.

ISIS wives and children remain in “fragile” Syrian detention camps under Damascus’ control while male fighters transfer to Iraq, leaving the detention crisis unresolved. (Â Santiago Montag/Anadolu via Getty Image)
Al-Hawl camp has held tens of thousands of ISIS-affiliated women and children since the group’s territorial defeat in 2019.
“Women and children are held in camps, not prisons, and are processed differently than male fighters,” Hawach said.
“The long-term solution for women and children is repatriation to their home countries, but most governments have been reluctant.
“Some women are ideologically committed; some are not. Distinguishing between them requires case-by-case assessments that haven’t happened at scale.”Â
Still, Hawach warned, the deeper problem remains unresolved.
“The detention system was always fragile, always underfunded, always a temporary solution waiting for permanent answers,” he said.
“The transfers to Iraq address the immediate crisis but don’t solve the underlying problem of what to do with this population long-term.”
U.S. special envoy for Syria Tom Barrack said this week that “the original purpose of the SDF as the primary anti-ISIS force on the ground has largely expired, as Damascus is now both willing and positioned to take over security responsibilities, including control of ISIS detention facilities and camps.”