newspaper "Financial Times", a report says that " the caliphate ended , but the ghost of the organization is still alive." 

The newspaper said that after the "brutality of the organization of the preacher on the slaughter and enslavement, which is rejected by the majority of Muslims in the world, the policies and practices that angered Sunni Muslims in Syria and Iraq are still in place," noting that "these tragedies are feeding a supportive organization." 

The people of Paris, Brussels, Nice, Berlin, London, Manchester, Istanbul and Ankara need no one to remind them of the atrocities committed by the organization, "she said.




"Western and neighboring countries have underestimated the impact of a destabilizing regime on the global order," he said, adding that the threat of armed violence is compounded by the tragedy of the wave of refugees heading to Europe in 2015-2016, which has fueled the seeds of populism in Europe. 

The newspaper also dealt with "Trump's decision to withdraw two thousand US special forces deployed in the north-east of Syria, along with French and British forces, to support the Kurdish militia against an advocacy organization." 

"Turkey, which supports the Sunni majority against the regime of Bashar al-Assad, is angry at its NATO allies and they support the US-led Kurdish militias in Syria associated with rebel Kurds," the Financial Times said. 

Ankara threatens to invade northeastern Syria to defeat the Kurds, who will be abandoned by the United States.

The pragmatic alliance between Turkey on the one hand and Russia and Iran on the other has begun to weaken. In September, Russia stopped an attack by Bashar al-Assad on Idlib, the last stronghold of the armed opposition northwest of Syria, in exchange for Turkey blocking the entry of tens of thousands of Islamic extremists linked to al Qaeda, but they continued to infiltrate, according to the newspaper. 

The attack on Idlib threatens the lives of 2.5 million civilians, and another tragedy there will provoke anger among Sunni Muslims across the world.