Syrian army takes control of camp holding thousands linked to ISIL

After Kurdish forces, who had been in charge for years, withdrew, Syrian government forces entered the vast Al-Hol camp, which houses thousands of ISIL (ISIS).

On Wednesday, troops-carrying armored vehicles made their way into the camp in Hasakeh province’s desert region. The government’s four-day ceasefire with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), which was announced the day before, appears to be proceeding smoothly, given the peaceful transfer of control.

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After two weeks of fighting between the army and the SDF, which was halted by Tuesday’s truce, the camp’s control was given to the group, which includes about 24, 000 people, most of whom are women and children connected to ISIL.

North and east Syria have seen significant losses for the SDF, which played a significant role in the defeat of ISIL in collaboration with an international coalition led by the United States.

During the frantic civil war in Syria, which ended in December 2024 with the fall of the regime under former President Bashar al-Assad, the Kurdish forces had ruled the regions.

The Syrian government under President Ahmed al-Sharaa, who replaced the SDF as the US’s key partner in the fight against ISIL, wants the Kurdish fighters to reintegrate in the country. Should the ceasefire not be reached, that process may now be in motion.

The US envoy to Syria, Tom Barrack, stated in a statement on Tuesday that Damascus’ government is “both willing and positioned to take over security responsibilities” and that the SDF’s role as the main counter-ISIL force had “largely expired.”

President al-Sharaa and SDF leader Mazloum Abdi and President al-Sharaa both earlier this week had reached a deal involving the Syrian state’s handling of ISIL prisoners.

Abdi urged the US-led coalition on Tuesday to “bear its responsibilities in protecting facilities” that house ISIL members.

largest ISIL concentration camp

The largest concentration camp for those connected to ISIL, which was overthrown in Syria in 2019, is Al-Hol.

Kurdish forces established the camp after they gained coalition support for sweeping areas of Syria.

About 14,500 Syrians and nearly 3,500 Iraqis are among the captives at al-Hol.

In a camp with high levels of security, approximately 6,500 people are held separately, many of whom are devoted ISIL supporters who have enlisted from around the world.

According to The Associated Press, the SDF still holds control of the majority of the more than a dozen prisons, where roughly 9, 000 ISIL members have been detained for years.

The Gweiran Prison, which is located in the city of Hasakeh and is still under the SDF’s purview, is the largest facility, which holds about 4,500 ISIL-linked detainees.

The Hasakeh province’s Shaddadi prison was evacuated on Tuesday, according to the Syrian Interior Ministry. 120 ISIL members were among those who escaped.

The SDF was accused of releasing ISIL detainees from the facility, but Kurdish residents claimed they lost control of it as a result of a Damascus attack.

Can Europe break with Trump? A tale of energy, defence, economic dependence

Transatlantic tensions over Greenland have ratcheted up between the United States and European nations as President Donald Trump doubles down on his ambitions to acquire the self-governing island, which is part of the Kingdom of Denmark.

In a social media post following a phone call with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte on Tuesday, Trump said there is “no going back” on Washington’s plans. Trump added that he would meet “the various parties” in Davos, Switzerland, during this week’s annual summit of the World Economic Forum (WEF).

Last weekend, Trump threatened to increase trade tariffs for European countries which oppose his attempt to acquire Greenland. Since the tariff threats, the European Union has been contemplating its response, with some members calling for the implementation of the bloc’s never-before-used “trade bazooka” option of retaliatory tariffs and restrictions.

Given Europe’s decades-long dependence on Washington, which has only deepened in recent years, could the EU take action against the US, and could that risk a serious transatlantic rift?

What has Trump said about Greenland this week?

Trump made a series of posts on his Truth Social platform on Tuesday, reiterating his ambition to acquire Greenland and stating that he would meet European leaders in Davos to discuss the issue.

In one post, Trump wrote that he had a “very good telephone call” with Rutte about Greenland. “I agreed to a meeting of the various parties in Davos, Switzerland. As I expressed to everyone, very plainly, Greenland is imperative for National and World Security. There can be no going back – On that, everyone agrees!” he added.

In a separate post, Trump shared a screenshot showing messages, presumably from Rutte, in which he wrote, “I am committed to finding a way forward on Greenland.”

In another post, he shared screenshots of messages from French President Emmanuel Macron, who wrote, “I do not understand what you are doing in Greenland.” In the messages, Macron also offered to set up a Group of Seven meeting in Paris on Thursday.

Trump also posted mockup images created using artificial intelligence (AI) tools on Tuesday, showing himself holding the US flag in Greenland with a sign stating “US territory”. Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are depicted in the image, standing behind him.

Another image Trump shared shows him in an Oval Office meeting with European leaders. It includes a map on an easel showing the US flag spanning Canada, Greenland and Venezuela.

Why does Trump want Greenland?

The sparsely populated Arctic island of 56,000 people – mostly Indigenous Inuit – is geographically in North America but politically part of Denmark, making it part of Europe. Greenland withdrew from the European Community (EC/EU) in 1985 after it gained home rule, but maintains a special association with the EU as an Overseas Country and Territory (OCT), which grants limited internal market access and EU citizenship to Greenland’s residents through Denmark.

Trump has long coveted Greenland because of its strategic location and plentiful mineral deposits, including highly sought-after rare-earth metals required for the manufacture of a wide range of technology from smartphones to fighter planes. The island has therefore drawn increasing interest from leading powers as climate change opens up new shipping lanes in the Arctic.

Currently, Greenland’s economy relies mainly on fishing; locals oppose large-scale mining, and there is no oil or gas extraction.

The island’s geographical position between the Arctic and North Atlantic oceans provides the shortest air and sea routes between North America and Europe, making it crucial for US military operations and early-warning systems, especially around the Greenland-Iceland-United Kingdom gap, according to the Trump administration.

What trade tariffs is Trump threatening?

On January 17, Trump said, starting February 1, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands and Finland would be charged a 10 percent tariff on their exports to the US.

On June 1, the tariff would be increased to 25 percent, he said. “This Tariff will be due and payable until such time as a Deal is reached for the Complete and Total purchase of Greenland,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

A day after Trump posted this threat to social media, the 27 EU members convened for an emergency meeting.

In a joint statement, the eight countries targeted by Trump with new tariffs said they “stand in full solidarity” with Denmark and the people of Greenland, a semi-autonomous Danish territory.

“Building on the process begun last week, we stand ready to engage in a dialogue based on the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity that we stand firmly behind,” the statement said.

“Tariff threats undermine transatlantic relations and risk a dangerous downward spiral. We will continue to stand united and coordinated in our response. We are committed to upholding our sovereignty.”

What action could Europe take against Trump over Greenland?

European leaders are contemplating several responses to Trump’s threat, ranging from diplomacy to retaliatory tariffs to the extreme, last-ditch “trade bazooka” – the Anti-Coercion Instrument (ACI) – which could target specific goods and services the US has a trade surplus in with the EU.

However, the never-before-used ACI, which was adopted by the EU in 2023 following restrictions placed on Lithuanian exports by China, would likely take months to implement. It requires the agreement of a minimum of 15 EU countries, representing at least 65 percent of the bloc’s population. It also requires a months-long investigation process.

How much does Europe depend on the US?

Europe has a growing dependence on Washington in various sectors.

Defence

In recent years, Europe has become increasingly dependent on the US for military and intelligence support, especially since the start of Russia’s war in Ukraine in February 2022.

Even before that, the US was providing Ukraine with significant intelligence support, which has not been detailed publicly. However, reports and officials highlight two crucial roles it has played – first, satellite and signals intelligence help Ukraine anticipate and prepare for Russian attacks, and second, it helps locate enemy troops and bases so Ukrainians can target them with missiles, including long-range systems which can reach inside Russian territory.

European NATO states received 64 percent of their arms imports from the US between 2020 and 2024, up from 52 percent during 2015-19, according to a report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) published in March 2025.

The US contributed about 16 percent of NATO’s common budgets, the joint largest contribution, matched only by Germany’s, according to a NATO breakdown published last year.

“Militarily, nearly half of Europe’s recent procurement comes from the US, especially in critical backbone capabilities such as combat aircraft, missiles, air defence, software-driven systems and sustainment,” Christine Nissen, chief analyst at the Copenhagen-based Think Tank Europa, told Al Jazeera.

“These dependencies are deeply locked in through platforms, upgrades, spare parts, data and interoperability.”

Europe is also highly dependent on the US for the provision of technology services and economic infrastructure, such as cloud services, semiconductors, digital platforms, satellite services, cybersecurity, energy technologies and parts of the financial system, Nissen said.

“In many of these domains, Europe relies on US firms, standards and regulatory reach, which amplifies Washington’s leverage in a confrontation.”

Investors in European countries hold more than $10 trillion of US Treasury bonds.

Bonds are investments through which investors lend money to a government or a company for a set time in exchange for regular interest payments and the original capital back at maturity to whoever is holding the bond at the time. Bonds can be bought and sold on financial markets, so the issuer of the bond may ultimately pay back a different investor from the one who first bought it.

Bonds usually offer lower returns than stock market shares but are seen as low-risk, especially government bonds.

US Treasury bonds are particularly popular as they are viewed as “safe-haven” assets. If US-Europe relations turn hostile, however, that safe haven would become highly politicised as there could be a perceived danger that the US might not repay the initial capital brought to buy the bonds.

Furthermore, if there is a rift in transatlantic relations, investors could panic and start selling off US Treasury bonds en masse. When lots of people sell at the same time, the price of bonds drops. This would mean that the value of the bonds EU members own would decline, and they would lose money on their huge pile of US bonds.

While this would be bad for the US economically, it would also mean that European holders of the bonds would no longer be able to fully rely on this stash of “safe” assets and might have difficulty finding other places big and stable enough to move that money to.

“The [economic] dependency is mutual but asymmetric. For the US, Europe is mainly a major market and industrial partner, a commercial dependence. For Europe, the reliance is operational, technological and security-critical,” Nissen said.

“That asymmetry gives Washington durable structural influence, regardless of who occupies the White House.”

Energy

Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Europe has imposed sanctions on Russian oil and has gradually reduced its energy dependence on Russia.

Europe’s imports of Russian gas fell by 75 percent between 2021 and 2025, according to a report by the US-based Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA), published on Monday.

Instead, Europe increased energy imports from the US, especially liquefied natural gas (LNG).

Europe’s imports of US LNG jumped from 21 billion cubic metres (bcm) in 2021 to 81bcm in 2025 – almost a fourfold increase. “This means that EU countries sourced 57 percent of their LNG imports from the US in 2025,” the IEEFA report states.

The report also states that if the EU takes all the US LNG it has signed up for, and does not cut its gas use, by 2030, the US could be supplying almost 75 to 80 percent of its imports.

What happens if Europe-US relations break down?

Europe has a lot to lose.

“A serious rupture with the US would likely reduce Europe’s access to critical military support, technology, intelligence, energy flows and parts of the financial and digital ecosystem,” Nissen said.

That dependence is why Europe has usually tried hard so far not to clash with the US, she said.

“In the short term, Europe cannot meaningfully decouple without real capability and economic costs,” Nissen said.

Therefore, she added, Europe is unlikely to abruptly break from the US, but rather gradually shift away from it by building new trading partnerships and developing its production capabilities for essential goods and services.

“Over the past weeks, Europe has started to move more explicitly toward diversification as a strategic hedge: reducing single-supplier exposure, widening partnerships and strengthening internal resilience,” Nissen said.

‘Rupture in the world order’: Speeches by Carney, world leaders in Davos

US President Donald Trump’s attacks on the current global order have been at the forefront of international leaders’ minds, including American allies, with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney calling the US-led global system “a rupture” in Davos, Switzerland, where the world’s leaders, including US allies, are scheduled to gather for the World Economic Forum (WEF).

Trump’s threat to impose himself in Greenland has angered his European allies, who have pressed back against the US president’s policy of using brute force to achieve his foreign policy objectives. Nicolas Maduro, president of Venezuela, was taken by US forces on January 3 and transported there as part of a military operation that shocked the world.

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Trump has threatened to impose new tariffs on European countries if they oppose him in Greenland.

The Canadian prime minister warned that middle powers could be undermined if they don’t work together, while the top official of the European Union called the proposed tariffs a “mistake.”

What were the main conclusions from WEF meetings on Tuesday?

Carney urged that traditional notions of global order no longer apply to the world’s middle powers, urging them to band together to stop aggressive superpowers from coercing them.

The gains from transactionalism will become more difficult to replicate if great powers abandon even the pretence of rules and values in favor of the unhindered pursuit of their power and interests.

He said, “So&nbsp, we’re engaging&nbsp, broadly, &nbsp, strategically&nbsp, with&nbsp, open&nbsp, eyes,” and that’s how we’re doing. We actively accept the world as it is rather than wait for it to change.

The Canadian leader argued that multilateralism is waning as institutions like the World Trade Organization and the UN are “greatly depleted,” and that the idea of a global system based on “American hegemony” is “fiction.”

Our outdated, well-established notion that our geography and alliance memberships automatically gave us prosperity and security is no longer true, according to Carney. “Be direct, please. Not a transition, but a rupture is occurring right now.

When integration becomes the source of your subordination, Carney continued, “You cannot live within the lie” of mutual benefit through integration.

He argued that “middle powers,” including Canada, must cooperate because “you are on the menu if you are not at the table.”

Nostalgia is not a strategy, they say. However, we think we can create something bigger, better, stronger, and more just by fracturing it.

Carney referred to Greenland as:

“Canada calls for focused discussions to achieve our shared goals of security and prosperity in the Arctic, and it strongly opposes tariffs over Greenland.”

Macron, France’s president, declared, “We prefer respect to bullies.”

Emmanuel Macron, the president of France, attacked Trump’s threat to impose tariffs on European nations in his speech at Davos.

Macron said the “endless accumulation” of new tariffs was fundamentally unacceptable, “especially more so when they are used as leverage against territorial sovereignty.”

Macron joked about wearing aviator sunglasses to his address, which the Elysee Palace claimed were meant to shield his eyes from a sprained blood vessel.

The audience chuckled as the phrase “It’s a time of peace, stability, and predictability.”

Then he spoke in a more serious way.

The French president continued, “It’s obvious we are approaching a time of instability and imbalances.” An absolute record, even though I’m aware that some of the wars were resolved, is “more than 60 wars in 2024.”

At the World Economic Forum, French President Emmanuel Macron warned of a “world without rules” where international law is violated and where the only laws that seem to matter are those that are the most powerful.

In his final statement, Macron outlined his vision for Europe’s contribution to global challenges:

In 2026, he declared, “We will be committed to trying to deliver this global agenda in order to fix global imbalances through more cooperations, and we will do our best to have a stronger Europe.”

We do believe that this world needs more stability and growth, as described in the epicentre of the continent.

He demanded investment from China, the second-largest economy in the world, while urging Europe to strengthen its trade defense mechanism.

China is welcome, but he said, “We need more Chinese foreign direct investments in some key sectors to support our growth and to transfer some technologies to Europe rather than just to export to Europe.”

He stated in a statement about Greenland that he had decided to support a friend and another European nation, Denmark, in a mutual exercise in Greenland without making threats to anyone.

We do prefer bullies to be treated like people do, he said as he finished his speech. We do not support the rule of law or the rule of law, but rather science and plotism. You are welcome in France and Europe, respectively.

Ursula von der Leyen, EU representative, said that “Nostalgia will not restore the old order.”

Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, predicted that the EU will become more independent as a result of a number of recent geopolitical shocks.

The good news is that we immediately took action. We’re moving quickly, whether it’s about energy or raw materials, defense or technology.

She did, however, warn that “we will only be able to capitalize on this opportunity if we acknowledge that this change is permanent.”

Nostalgia is a part of our human story, of course, but it won’t bring the old order back.

Von der Leyen added that despite needing more work to finalize the deal, the EU was close to ratifying a free trade agreement with India.

She said, “We are about to reach a historic trade agreement.”

Some refer to it as the “mother of all deals,” which would create a 2 billion population market and account for almost a quarter of global GDP.

Von der Leyen is scheduled to travel to India in the first week of May.

The president of the European Commission added that Denmark and Greenland’s territorial integrity are unquestionable.

She continued, “We are working on a package to support Arctic security,” adding that the EU is also working on a “massive European investment surge in Greenland” to support the local economy and infrastructure.

He from China: “China’s development presents an opportunity.

Beijing is prepared to use its market advantages to grow with other nations, according to Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng, who stated at the World Economic Forum. China’s development is a chance rather than a threat.

He continued, “China’s development presents an opportunity to the global economy, not a threat,” and that “equal consultation” should be used to resolve differences and disputes in international trade to foster trust, bridge differences, and resolve issues.

He added that China would keep its economy open.

He declared that China would “open its door to the world a wider” and that it would follow international economic and trade standards.

He claimed that China would promote a market-oriented, law-based, and international business environment and promote equal treatment for both domestic and foreign businesses.

He urged other governments to provide a fair, nondiscriminatory, transparent, and predictable investment environment for Chinese businesses while urging them to continue investing in China and sharing in its opportunities.

Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng
He Lifeng, the vice premier of China, said in Davos, Switzerland, that “cooperation” is key to the world’s future.