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Iran rejects removing forces from Syria

Iranian officials have rejected the idea of pulling forces from Syria.
A Syrian boy holds the Iranian flag as a truck carrying aid provided by Iran arrives in the eastern city of Deir Ezzor on September 20, 2017 while Syrian government forces continue to press forward with Russian air cover in the offensive against Islamic State group jihadists across the province.
Two separate offensives are under way against the jihadists in the area -- one by the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces, the other by Russian-backed government forces. The Syrian army now controls around 70 percent

On May 22, one day after US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo presented 12 demands for Iran that would result in a top-down change of the Islamic Republic or potentially be a starting point to potential war, Iranian media and officials responded harshly to the list of demands. One particular US demand, that Iran withdraw all of its forces “from the entirety of Syria,” has caused a number of reactions, particularly since the same sentiment was echoed by Iran’s ally Russia just days prior.

On May 17, in a meeting with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that with “significant victories and successes” of the Syrian army, “foreign armed forces will be withdrawn.” Alexander Lavrentiev, Putin’s envoy to Syria, clarified that Putin meant not just the United States and Turkey should withdraw their forces from Syria, but also Iran and Hezbollah. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov later added that Putin’s comments were only aimed at forces that were in Syria “illegally.” Entekhab website, which covered Peskov’s comments, asked whether Russia was “retreating from its previous position regarding the withdrawal of Iranian forces?”

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