kurds

Two women in Southern California are mobilizing America's small Kurdish community to fight an existential danger back home.
Sen. John Cornyn of Texas defended President Trump's widely panned decision to abandon U.S.-allied Kurdish forces in northern Syria.
The Kremlin also said the United States had been the closest ally of the Kurdish fighters but had now betrayed them.
The agreement shows how Trump's abandonment of the Kurds is making the U.S. less relevant in a key region.
Sen. Mitt Romney’s recently unearthed secret Twitter account highlights his shift away from Republican ideals.
Both sides have accused each other of repeatedly violating the U.S.-brokered cease-fire.
Pulling out of Syria is a "grave strategic mistake," the Senate majority leader warned in an op-ed.
"It's the responsibility of the people that show up at those rallies to not be stupid, to not be so stupid that they should be kept away from blenders."
Vice President Mike Pence trumpeted the deal as a "cease-fire," but Turkey disputed that characterization.
In seeming defense of his decision to pave the way for Turkey to enter Syria and attack Kurdish U.S. allies, President Trump said the Kurds “are no angels.”