Finian Cunningham 
Kurdish
 fighters have been used by the US to ostensibly defeat the remaining 
Islamic State holdouts in eastern Syria. But what is emerging is not a 
final defeat of the terrorists, more a redeployment to further 
destabilize the Arab country.
Potentially,
 the Kurds could wind up not with the regional autonomy they desire, but
 as part of a rebranded American dirty war army whose ranks include the 
very terrorist the Kurdish militias have been successfully battling 
against.
President
 Donald Trump has been lately crowing about how US-backed Kurdish forces
 have wiped out the IS self-proclaimed caliphate around Baghouz in 
eastern Syria. “They’re losers… they’re gone tonight,” he boasted about 
supposedly vanquishing the jihadists.
However,
 things are not that clear-cut. Syria’s envoy to the United Nations 
Bashar al Jaafari dismissed Trump’s victory celebrations as a “bluff”. 
He said that IS was not defeated in areas under US control, but rather 
were being shunted off to various camps for retraining.
There are credible reports that
 thousands of jihadists who surrendered or were captured in the fighting
 around Baghouz have since been relocated by US forces to its military 
base at al Tanf near the border with Iraq and Jordan, as well as to 
nearby refugee camps such as Rukban, where some 40,000 detainees are 
held. Suspiciously, the Americans are refusing international access to 
these camps, even for UN humanitarian relief agencies. As Russia’s 
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov pointed out recently, the detention 
centers are being used by the Americans as a pretext for illegally 
occupying Syrian territory.
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