President Barack Obama will announce on Monday he plans to send as
many as 250 additional U.S. troops to Syria, a sharp increase in the
American presence working with local Syrian forces fighting Islamic
State militants, U.S. officials said.
The deployment, which will increase U.S. forces in Syria to about
300, aims to accelerate recent gains against Islamic State and appears
to reflect growing confidence in the ability of U.S.-backed forces
inside Syria and Iraq to claw back territory from the hardline Sunni
Islamist group.
Obama will explain his decision in a speech at 11.25 a.m. local
time in Hanover, where he discussed the Syria crisis with German
Chancellor Angela Merkel on Sunday. They will meet with other major
European leaders after his remarks.
Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, controls the cities of
Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria and is proving a potent threat abroad,
claiming credit for major attacks in Paris in November and Brussels in
March.
While Obama has resisted putting U.S. troops into Syria, where a
five-year civil war has killed at least 250,000 people, he sent 50 U.S.
special operations forces to Syria last year in what U.S. officials
described as a "counterterrorism" mission rather than an effort to tip
the scales in the war.
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