The remarks by Army Lieutenant General Paul LaCamera, who is the commander of the US-led coalition battling ISIS in Iraq and Syria, underscore the tough decisions facing the SDF as the United States prepares to withdraw its troops from Syria.
Syrian Kurdish leaders have sought talks with Assad regime, hoping to safeguard their autonomous region after the withdrawal of US troops currently backing them.
But LaCamera warned that US law prohibits cooperation with Russia as well as Assad.
"We will continue to train and arm them as long as they remain our partners," LaCamera said, praising their hard-won victories against ISIS.
When asked if that support would continue if they aligned themselves with Assad, LaCamera said: "No."
"Once that relationship is severed, because they go back to the regime, which we don't have a relationship with, (or) the Russians when that happens then we will no longer be partners with them," LaCamera told a small group of reporters.
President Donald Trump's surprise December decision to withdraw all of the more than 2,000 US troops from Syria has triggered deep concern among US allies about the risk of a resurgence of ISIS.
التعليقات (0)