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REUTERS
BEIRUT
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said US forces in Syria were"invaders" and he had yet to see"anything concrete" emerge from US President Donald Trump's vow to prioritise the fight against Islamic State.
Assad has said he saw promise in Trump's statements emphasising the battle against Islamic State in Syria, where US policy under President Barack Obama had backed some of the rebels fighting Assad and shunned him as an illegitimate leader.
"We haven't seen anything concrete yet regarding this rhetoric," Assad said in an interview with Chinese TV station Phoenix."We have hopes that this administration in the United States is going to implement what we have heard," he said.
The United States is leading a coalition against Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.
In Syria, it is working with an alliance of Kurdish and Arab militias. Their current focus is to encircle and ultimately capture Raqqa - Islamic State's base of operations in Syria.
This week, the US-led coalition announced that around 400 additional US forces had deployed to Syria to help with the Raqqa campaign and to prevent any clash between Turkey and Washington-allied Syrian militias that Ankara sees as a threat.
Asked about a deployment of US forces near the northern city of Manbij, Assad said:"Any foreign troops coming to Syria without our invitation ... are invaders."
"We don't think this is going to help".
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12/03/2017
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