Macron: War against IS in Syria will be won by February

Macron: War against IS in Syria will be won by February
French President Emmanuel Macron says he expects the Islamic State group to be defeated in Syria within two months.
2 min read
17 December, 2017
Macron described Syria's Bashar al-Assad as the "enemy of the people" [Getty]
French President Emmanuel Macron on Sunday predicted the Islamic State group would be crushed in Syria by February, pushing for the Syrian government and opposition to come together for fresh peace talks early next year.

"We have just won the war in Iraq with the coalition," Macron said in an interview with France 2 television.

"And I think that by the middle to the end of February, we will have won the war in Syria."

Macron described President Bashar al-Assad as "an enemy of the Syrian people", but insisted: "We have to speak to Assad and his representatives."

And despite this week's failure of the latest UN-brokered peace talks in Geneva, he wants to see "a process emerge at the start of next year with Assad's representatives, but I hope also representatives of all of the opposition."

He underlined that France's top priority as part of the US-led coalition pounding IS is "the extermination" of the extremist group rather than ousting Assad, which has been the country's official stance since June.

The Syrian president, Macron added, will not be leaving any time soon after the defeat of IS.

"Bashar al-Assad will be there," he said. "He will be there because he is protected by those who have won the war on the ground, whether it's Iran or Russia."

However, at some point, Assad "will have to respond to his crimes before his people, before the international courts."

"France's plan is to win peace, de-mine the country, to de-militarise it and build a political solution that will allow a durable peace - which means all minorities being protected, Christians, Shiites and Sunnis," Macron said.

As fighting continues in a multi-faceted war that has killed more than 340,000 people since 2011, IS, which once controlled swathes of land, now holds just a few patches of Syrian territory.

In Iraq, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi declared victory against IS on December 9, after three years of war against the group that once held as much as a third of the countr's territory.