Lindsey Graham says 'strong consensus' to protect Kurds as Syrian forces advance on territory
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Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo have both sounded the alarm over the urgent need to safeguard the at-risk Syrian Kurdish community, currently facing assaults from government forces in the strife-ridden country.

Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa recently instructed his military—allegedly including a significant jihadist faction—to seize areas that have been under the control of the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) for over ten years.

In a recent post on the social media platform X, Graham emphasized, “There is a notable and increasing bipartisan concern within the U.S. Senate about the worsening conditions in Syria. We share a strong consensus on the necessity to protect the Kurds, who stood by us in dismantling the ISIS caliphate, alongside many other groups.”

Pompeo echoed Graham’s sentiments by commenting on the post, asserting, “Abandoning our Kurdish allies would be both a moral and strategic catastrophe.”

The Trump administration has drawn criticism from the Syrian Kurds, its steadfast allies who were instrumental in defeating the Islamic State in the Middle East. This follows a recent announcement on U.S. government social media, which implied a potential end to the partnership with the Kurdish-led SDF in northern Syria.

The SDF formed as a bulwark against the rapid spread of the Islamic State’s terrorist movement in 2013. ISIS created a caliphate covering significant territory in Syria and Iraq. Al-Sharaa was a former member of the Islamic State and al Qaeda.

SDF forces in Syria

Kurdish civilians gather with their weapons in the city of Qamishli on Jan. 20, 2026 as the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) called for “young Kurds, men and women” both within and outside Syria to “join the ranks of the resistance”. Negotiations had collapsed between the Syrian president and the chief of the country’s Kurdish-led forces, as the army deployed reinforcements to flashpoint areas in the north.  (Delil Souleiman / AFP via Getty Images)

Fox News Digital reached out to the State Department regarding U.S. Ambassador to Turkey, Tom Barrack, who also serves as the Special Envoy for Syria, for a response to his recent statement on X wrote that indicated the U.S. partnership with the SDF was over.

Barrack wrote, “The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), led by Kurds, proved the most effective ground partner in defeating ISIS’s territorial caliphate by 2019, detaining thousands of ISIS fighters and family members in prisons and camps like al-Hol and al-Shaddadi. At that time, there was no functioning central Syrian state to partner with — the Assad regime was weakened, contested, and not a viable partner against ISIS due to its alliances with Iran and Russia.”

He added, “Today, the situation has fundamentally changed. Syria now has an acknowledged central government that has joined the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS (as its 90th member in late 2025), signaling a westward pivot and cooperation with the U.S. on counterterrorism.”

SDF defeat ISIS

Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) fighters pose for a photo with the American flag on stage after a SDF victory ceremony announcing the defeat of ISIL in Baghouz was held at Omer Oil Field on March 23, 2019 in Baghouz, Syria. The Kurdish-led and American-backed Syrian Defense Forces (SDF) declared on Saturday the “100% territorial defeat” of the so-called Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL. The group once controlled vast areas across Syria and Iraq and a population of up to 12 million, an aspired “caliphate” that drew tens of thousands of foreign nationals to join its ranks.  (Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

Iham Ahmed, a prominent Syrian Kurdish politician, told Fox News Digital that, “We really wished to see a firm position from the U.S. The Kurdish people are at the risk of extermination. The U.S. does not give any solid or tangible guarantees.”

Ahmed cast doubt on statements like Barrack’s, warning the “Syrian army is still consisting of radical factions that no one can trust. Alawites, Christians, Sunnis and Druze cannot trust these factions. We could face massacres, which happened in other Syrian cities.”

When asked by Fox News Digital if the SDF wants Israel to intervene to aid the Kurds as it did to help the Syrian Druze and other minorities last year, Ahmed said, “Whoever wants to help us should do so – today is the day.” She said that “the Islamic State is showing itself in the image of an official army. Everyone is threatened now.”

She urged a “special status for the Kurdish region” in northeastern Syria.

Syrian armed forces fight Kurds in northern Syria

Syrian government forces load rockets which will be launched towards Kurdish forces near Dibsi Faraj in the northern Syrian Tabqa area, Raqa province on Jan. 17, 2026. Syria’s army took control of swathes of northern Syria and threatened to bomb parts of Raqa province on January 17, after Kurdish forces pulled back from territory they had held for over a decade. The government appeared to be seeking to extend its grip on parts of the country under Kurdish control a day after President Ahmed al-Sharaa issued a decree declaring Kurdish a “national language” and granting the minority official recognition.  (Omar Haj Kadour/AFP via Getty Images.)

Ahmed accused the ErdoÄźan government of nefarious involvement. “Turkey stands behind the attacks on our region. Turkish intelligence and small groups are leading attacks. Statements from Turkey are encouraging the extermination of our people,” she claimed.

Fox News Digital sent a press query to the Turkish embassy spokesman in Washington D.C.

The influential president of the Family Research Council, Tony Perkins, wrote on X that, “Sen. Graham is right. I’ve been discussing the situation in NE Syria with Republican House leaders.  It is not in America’s interest for Islamist forces to seize territory once governed by trusted U.S. allies who protected minorities and advanced religious freedom. Yet this is happening as Syrian leader Ahmed al-Sharaa’s forces move into northeast Syria, displacing the Syrian Democratic Forces — our partners in the fight against ISIS, who lost thousands of fighters, guarded U.S. bases, and detained ISIS prisoners.”

He continued, “Before we place trust in al-Sharaa, a former al Qaeda insurgent who fought U.S. forces in Iraq and was held at Abu Ghraib, he has to show he is trustworthy.  So far, he is failing the test.”

Islamic State militant holds ISIS flag in a desert setting

A masked Islamic State terrorist poses holding the ISIS flag in 2015.  (Pictures from History/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

Sinam Mohamad, the representative of the Syrian Democratic Council to the U.S., had harsh words for the administration, telling Fox News Digital, “American officials continue to describe the SDF as a reliable partner in that narrow mission. Washington avoids framing the relationship as a political alliance. The U.S. never intended a long-term political commitment to the Syrian Kurds. It was a military partnership without political guarantees. From Washington’s view, that’s consistency. From the Kurdish view, that’s betrayal.”

She added there has been an announcement of a 15-day extension of a ceasefire, “But both the SDF and outside observers noted continued [Syrian] government troop buildups near Kurdish-held areas, signaling that conflict could resume.” She added, “The Kurds want to have peace and stability through negotiations.”

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