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‘The Match’ has been a staple of golf events since it started airing in 2018. It has featured prominent athletes, media personalities, and obviously numerous elite golfers. The 2024 edition of the made-for-TV tournament will be the first of its kind though, featuring a foursome of golfers representing different brands.

Bryson DeChambeau, the 2024 U.S. Open champion, will team up with former rival Brooks Koepka, a five-time major winner, to represent LIV Golf. On the other side, 2024 Masters champion Scottie Scheffler will compete with four-time major champion Rory McIlroy, representing the PGA Tour.

Here’s everything to know about ‘The Showdown’ on Tuesday.

Who is competing in ‘The Showdown’?

The showdown will feature four of golf’s best this Tuesday, pinning two LIV Golf members – Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka – against two PGA Tour members – Rory McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler.

Scheffler, who won the 2022 and 2024 Masters tournament, is the world’s No. 1 ranked golfer and just won PGA Tour Player of the Year in a landslide vote. McIlroy, currently ranked No. 3, won the PGA Champonship in 2012 and 2014, the U.S. Open in 2011 and the British Open in 2014.

DeChambeau won the U.S. Open earlier this year after winning it for the first time in 2020. Koepka has won the PGA Championship three times (2018, 2019 and 2023) and the U.S. Open twice (2017 and 2018). But it could be a large hill to climb for DeChambeau and Koepka to stand a chance. The pair currently rank 10th and 86th, respectively.

Koepka and DeChambeau’s feud

Anyone familiar with golf over the last few years knows about the feud between ‘The Showdown’ teammates Koepka and DeChambeau a few years ago. Emotions between the two started running high after Koepka criticized DeChambeau’s play at the 2019 Dubai Desert Classic.

The pair continued taking subtle jabs at one another throughout the 2020 season, with the most viral moment coming after Koepka appeared visibly annoyed with DeChambeau after the latter walked through the former’s interview and said something that the cameras couldn’t pick up, but Koepka clearly heard. Their feud came to a head in 2021 after DeChambeau was showered with ‘Brooksie’ chants throughout the PGA Tour season. It got so bad that the PGA Tour itself had to get involved, threatening to eject fans who taunted DeChambeau.

Their differences have reportedly been squashed since, and the pair’s decision to each sign with LIV Golf certainly helped them look past their grievances.

When is ‘The Showdown’?

The match will take place at the Shadow Creek Golf Club in Las Vegas on Tuesday, Dec. 17, with coverage starting at 6 p.m. ET. The official tee time for the foursome has not yet been announced.

The golf event will be available for viewing on TNT. It will also stream on MAX.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

In his acceptance speech Saturday night, Colorado Buffaloes two-way star Travis Hunter acknowledged the efforts of all the coaches, family members and supporters who helped him along the way to winning the Heisman Trophy.

But Hunter made special mention of one person who wasn’t there in New York for the glitzy ceremony.

‘I want to say something to my father. He’s not here and wasn’t able to make it but I know you’re watching on TV,’ he said. ‘Dad, I love you. For all the stuff you went through man … Now look at your oldest son. I did it for you, man.’

Hunter Jr.’s emotional words didn’t even begin to convey the struggles his family experienced before his moment of triumph.

Why wasn’t Travis Hunter Jr.’s dad at the Heisman Trophy ceremony?

Travis Hunter Sr. found out his son had won the Heisman the way most of the USA did, on television.

‘I don’t want to go,’ he said in a recent interview with the Palm Beach Post, part of the USA TODAY Network. ‘I want to be there when he gets married and when he gets drafted. I’m going to watch this from home.’

Hunter made his comments to the Post on Dec. 5, the day he was released from the Palm Beach County West Detention Center in Belle Glade, Florida. Travis Sr. was sentenced to 90 days in late September related to a 2023 arrest. He was released about three weeks early.

After seeing his son win college football’s most coveted award, Hunter told the Post it was always part of the plan.

‘I really don’t feel no different because I always know he could win, if he put his mind to win,’ he said. ‘He’s always had that … since he started playing football when he was 4 years old.

‘At the end of the day, I would always tell him he’s the best player anyway so he’s got to go out there and play like it. Every time I’d tell him that he’d go out there and play like he’s the best player in the world.’

Who is Travis Hunter Sr.?

Now 39, Travis Sr. was a football and track star for Boynton Beach High School in Florida in the early 2000s.

As a 15-year-old middle schooler in 2001, he ran the 100 meters in 10.82 seconds. A star football player on offense, defense and special teams, he had dreams of playing in college and perhaps the NFL.

‘I just want to play ball. I was supposed to go to Dodge, Kansas (for junior college after graduation), but I had two kids so I couldn’t leave them,’ he told the South Florida Sun-Sentinel in 2008.

He did star in a semipro league in Florida, but never made it past that level.

In that context, Travis Hunter Jr. making it to play college football at Jackson State and then Colorado became even more special. Travis Sr. often attended his son’s games, but couldn’t the second half of this season. Instead, he watched them on TV at the detention center.

So it was no surprise his son got a little emotional in his acceptance speech.

‘All the times that you didn’t get to see me, or the times you did come to see my games. From not seeing probably two games in high school to seeing me on TV every weekend and coming to see me. That means so much to me,’ Hunter Jr. said.

‘I know you wanted to be here and you can’t, but trust me, I got you. I’m bringing the trophy home. I love you.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

New Orleans Saints running back Alvin Kamara went to the locker room in the third quarter against the Washington Commanders in Week 15.

The star running back exited the game and walked to the medical tent. Upon exiting the tent, he walked to the locker room.

Kamara is in the midst of an outstanding 2024 season. Earlier in the game, he reeled in a 21-yard touchdown catch and became the fourth player in NFL history with 50 rushing touchdowns and 25 receiving scores, joining Lenny Moore, Marshall Faulk and Christian McCaffrey.

Here’s the latest on the Saints running back’s status:

Alvin Kamara injury update

After scoring on the 21-yard touchdown, Kamara was looked at by trainers in the blue tent on the Saints sideline. He was then seen walking into the locker room with a member of the training staff without his helmet.

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Shortly after his exit, the Saints announced that he was dealing with a groin injury and his return is questionable.

Kamara had rushed five times for 12 yards and led the team with four receptions for 58 yards and a touchdown before he left the game.

Saints RB depth chart

The Saints have two running backs behind Kamara on the 53-man roster.

Kendre Miller
Jamaal Williams

Kamara joins a long list of injured Saints players at the skilled positions. The veteran Williams has recently been relegated to special teams, while second-year back Kendre Miller has recently started to take on more work as Kamara’s backup.

If Kamara misses extended time, Miller is a good bet to take on the majority of work, as the Saints may want to see what they have in the 22-year-old back.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Zach Ertz made a terrific catch that led to the Washington Commanders’ second touchdown in their Week 15 game against the New Orleans Saints.

However, Ertz was injured after making the one-handed grab. He hit the ground hard after being tackled and wasn’t able to get up right away. He eventually got to his feet but went back to the ground before medical staff came out to tend to him.

Ertz was able to walk off the field under his own power, but headed straight to the blue medical tent to be evaluated for a concussion.

Here’s what to know about Ertz’s injury and his status moving forward.

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Zach Ertz injury update

Ertz’s injury occurred after he made a nice, one-handed catch over the middle of the field and brought it inside the 10-yard line. He was driven into the ground while being tackled and was slow to get up after the play.

Ertz logged two catches for 25 yards before exiting the game.

Commanders TE depth chart: Who is Zach Ertz’s backup?

John Bates is listed as Ertz’s primary backup on the Commanders’ depth chart. He and rookie Ben Sinnott are the only other tight ends on the 53-man roster.

Below is a full look at the team’s tight end depth chart:

Zach Ertz
John Bates
Ben Sinnott

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Miami Dolphins wide receiver Jaylen Waddle suffered a knee injury in the second quarter against the Houston Texans in Week 15.

The star receiver exited the game and entered the blue medical tent on the Dolphins sideline with an apparent knee injury.

Waddle has had an inconsistent 2024 season, which has correlated with Tua Tagovailoa’s concussion issues and availability, but the duo has shown flashes of reigniting their connection over the last month. An extended absence for Waddle would result in a significant loss for Miami’s offense.

Here’s the latest on the Dolphin’s wide receiver’s status:

Jaylen Waddle injury update

Waddle came out of the locker room out of halftime with a limp, wearing a compression sleeve on his knee. He did not have his helmet.

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Jaylen Waddle left the game midway through the second quarter, with 5:27 on the clock. He was injured with the Miami trailing 10-3. The Dolphins listed him as questionable to return with a right knee injury.

De’Von Achane received a handoff and gained three yards, but Waddle was injured when a player rolled into the back of his legs.

Waddle hopped to the sideline but play was stopped when the receiver hit the turf in pain. Eventually, he was helped to his feet and managed to walk under his own power into the blue medical tent.

Waddle was injured before receiving a catch in the game.

Dolphins WR depth chart

Tyreek Hill
Malik Washington
River Cracraft
Grant DuBose

The Dolphins have four other wide receivers on the active roster in Week 15. Earlier in the week, Miami released Odell Beckham Jr., while three receivers are on injured reserve. Washington will most likely step into action this week if Waddle remains sidelined.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Colorado football two-way star Travis Hunter is the newest Heisman Trophy winner.

The Buffaloes’ cornerback and wide receiver was announced as the 90th winner of the award given to the best player in college football since its inception in 1935. Hunter edged Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty by 214 points in the closest vote since 2009 when Alabama’s Mark Ingram beat Stanford’s Toby Gerhart by 28 points.

Hunter is the first Colorado player since running back Rashaan Salaam in 1994 to win the honors. He is the first non-quarterback since Alabama wide receiver DeVonta Smith (2020) to win the award and the first defensive back since Michigan’s Charles Woodson (1997).

Here’s a full breakdown of how the Heisman voting went, including the top 10 and the vote leaders by region:

Heisman Trophy voting result

1. Travis Hunter, Colorado WR/DB

Total points: 2,231
First-place votes: 552
Second-place votes: 261
Third-place votes: 53

2. Ashton Jeanty, Boise State RB

Total points: 2,017
First-place votes: 309
Second-place votes: 517
Third-place votes: 56

3. Dillon Gabriel, Oregon QB

Total points: 516
First-place votes: 24
Second-place votes: 52
Third-place votes: 340

4. Cam Ward, Miami QB

Total points: 229
First-place votes: 6
Second-place votes: 24
Third-place votes: 163

5. Cam Skattebo, Arizona State RB

Total points: 170
First-place votes: 3
Second-place votes: 18
Third-place votes: 125

6. Bryson Daily, Army QB

Total points: 69
First-place votes: 3
Second-place votes: 7
Third-place votes: 46

7. Tyler Warren, Penn State TE

Total points: 52
First-place votes: 1
Second-place votes: 7
Third-place votes: 35

8. Shedeur Sanders, Colorado QB

Total points: 47
First-place votes: 1
Second-place votes: 7
Third-place votes: 30

9. Kurtis Rourke, Indiana QB

Total points: 22
First-place votes: 2
Second-place votes: 3
Third-place votes: 10

10. Kyle McCord, Syracuse QB

Total points: 9
First-place votes: 0
Second-place votes: 1
Third-place votes: 7

Heisman votes by region

Northeast

First place: Travis Hunter (350 points)
Second place: Ashton Jeanty (327)
Third place: Dillon Gabriel (64)
Fourth place: Cam Ward (43)

Mid-Atlantic

First place: Travis Hunter (361 points)
Second place: Ashton Jeanty (323)
Third place: Dillon Gabriel (73)
Fourth place: Cam Ward (40)

South

First place: Travis Hunter (406 points)
Second place: Ashton Jeanty (348)
Third place: Dillon Gabriel (81)
Fourth place: Cam Ward (66)

Southwest

First place: Travis Hunter (392 points)
Second place: Ashton Jeanty (359)
Third place: Dillon Gabriel (98)
Fourth place: Cam Ward (33)

Midwest

First place: Travis Hunter (368 points)
Second place: Ashton Jeanty (303)
Third place: Dillon Gabriel (89)
Fifth place: Cam Ward (19)

Far West

First place: Ashton Jeanty (357 points)
Second place: Travis Hunter (354)
Third place: Dillon Gabriel (111)
Fifth place: Cam Ward (28)

Who won the Heisman fan vote?

Jeanty did not win the Heisman Trophy on Saturday evening, but he did receive the most fan votes for the honor. Jeanty had 344 carries, 2,497 yards and 29 touchdowns, averaging 7.3 yards per carry. He was seeking to become the first running back to win the award since Alabama’s Derrick Henry in 2015.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Las Vegas Raiders enter Week 15 of the season at 2-11, tied for the worst record in the NFL, ahead of a ‘Monday Night Football’ game against the Atlanta Falcons.

They will be without their best player, defensive end Maxx Crosby, in that game. The three-time Pro Bowler announced on his Instagram page that he will not be playing the rest of the year.

Here’s what to know about the star pass rusher’s injury.

Maxx Crosby injury update

Crosby said in his Instagram post that he ‘truly wasn’t fully healthy all year’ after repeated ankle injuries. After meeting with a specialist, Crosby decided to end his season and focus on rehabilitating his injury.

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Crosby missed only matchup all season: Week 4 against the Cleveland Browns. That was the Raiders’ most recent win this season.

When was Maxx Crosby injured?

Crosby said on Instagram he first suffered a high ankle sprain against the Baltimore Ravens in Week 2.

‘Instead of sitting out for over a month with my first high ankle sprain … I only missed 1 game and came back and fought all year because that’s who I am,’ Crosby said.

He then detailed he injured the ankle further against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers last week on a chop block from the side.

After this latest injury, Crosby decided that surgery and recovery is his best course of action for the rest of the year.

‘I truly believe everything happens for a reason,’ he wrote on Instagram. ‘I will get this surgery [and] be on a war path for greatness everyday and be back the best version of myself.’

Before this season, Crosby had played in every NFL game possible for the Raiders since being selected in the fourth round, No. 106 overall by Las Vegas in the 2019 NFL draft.

Maxx Crosby stats

In 12 games this season, Crosby has 7.5 sacks, five passes defensed and 45 tackles, including a league-high 17 tackles for loss.

Maxx Crosby contract

Crosby signed a four-year, $98.98 million contract extension with the Raiders ahead of the 2022 NFL season.

He is the second-highest-paid player on the Raiders behind defensive lineman Christian Wilkins, per OverTheCap. Here are the numbers for the rest of his current deal:

2024

Base salary: $24.5 million
Total cap number: $30.48 million

2025

The Raiders can cut Crosby before June 1 and free up $7.8 million in cap space.

Base salary: $22.24 million
Total cap number: $28.22 million

2026

The Raiders can cut Crosby before June 1 and free up $12.6 million in cap space.

Base salary: $18.84 million
Total cap number: $24.82 million

All figures via OverTheCap.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Milwaukee Bucks are one of the hottest teams in the NBA, Giannis Antetokounmpo and Damian Lillard form an offensive force and now the Bucks will play for the NBA Cup title.

Now winners of 12 of their past 15 games, the Bucks defeated the Atlanta Hawks 110-102 in an NBA Cup semifinal Saturday and are starting to look like the quality team they thought they could be when they acquired Lillard before the start of the 2023-24 season.

Milwaukee reached the semifinals of last year’s NBA Cup but lost to Indiana. It’s hoping to use this year’s performance as a springboard to a strong season after a 2-8 start. The Bucks are 14-11 and sit in sixth place in the Eastern Conference, two games behind third-place Orlando.

The Bucks will see just how much they’ve improved in the past month when they play the Oklahoma City Thunder in the Cup final. The Thunder defeated the Houston Rockets 111-96 later Saturday and improved to 20-5, good for first place in the Western Conference.

The final will also feature two of the NBA’s best players – Antetokounmpo and Oklahoma City’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

Here are the winners and losers from Saturday’s NBA Cup semifinals:

NBA Cup winners

Giannis Antetokounmpo-Damian Lillard combo

Antetokounmpo and Lillard combined for 57 points – right around their combined league-best 58.5 points per game this season. Antetokounmpo had an efficient 32 points on 10-for-15 shooting from the field and 12-for-18 on free throws and he added 14 rebounds, nine assists and four blocks. Lillard wasn’t as efficient but still produced with 25 points on 8-for-21 shooting, including 5-for-14 on 3-pointers. He also had seven assists, six rebounds and three steals.

Antetokounmpo was stellar in the fourth quarter with 10 points, five rebounds, three assists and one block – a rejection of an alley-oop attempt by Clint Capela. That production from two of the league’s best players makes the Bucks dangerous.

Oklahoma City’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams

When points are at a premium, a team needs its best offensive players to come through. Gilgeous-Alexander and Williams did that for the Thunder. Even though Gilgeous-Alexander and Williams were a combined 2-for-13 shooting in the first quarter, they delivered in the second half. Gilgeous-Alexander scored 20 of his game-high 32 points in the second half and Williams scored 12 of his 20 points in the final two quarters.

Gilgeous-Alexander, who was 14-for-15 on free throws and collected eight rebounds, six assists and five steals, and Williams, an All-Star in the making who also added five rebounds and five assists, scored 11 of 13 Thunder points during a stretch in the fourth quarter that pushed Oklahoma City’s lead from 84-79 to 97-82.

NBA Cup losers

Thunder-Rockets offense

In a game featuring the two best defenses – Oklahoma City No. 1, Houston No. 2 – offense was not easy or pretty. There are several ways to break down the atrocious offensive stats. The teams were a combined 6-for-37 on 3-pointers at halftime (Houston led 42-41, marking the lowest-scoring half for the Thunder this season). Oklahoma City’s top two scorers – Gilgeous-Alexander and Williams – were a combined 1-for-10 from the field at one point in the first quarter.

Houston had its problems, too. The Rockets shot 36.5% from the field, 23.9% on 3-pointers and 60% on free throws. The Rockets’ second-leading scorer, Alperen Sengun, had 13 points on 6-for-16 shooting, and their leading scorer, Jalen Green, had just 12 points on 5-for-14 shooting, including 1-for-8 on 3s. Fred VanVleet missed 10 of his 11 3-point attempts. The Rockets were 2-for-15 on 3s in the fourth quarter.

Atlanta Hawks

The Hawks are losers by default – simply because they lost the game. But they played well enough to win. They shot 41.7% on 3-pointers, their bench outscored Milwaukee’s bench 33-26 and Trae Young had 35 points, 10 assists and seven rebounds. Their biggest issue against the Bucks: points in the paint. They tied the Bucks with 42 points in the paint but shot just 42% on those shots compared to 67.7% for Milwaukee.

The Hawks had a strong NBA Cup with group play victories against Boston and Cleveland and a quarterfinals victory against New York. Atlanta jump-started its season after a slow start, and this was evidence it can be a playoff team in the East.

When is the NBA Cup final?

Milwaukee plays Oklahoma City Tuesday (8:30 p.m. ET, ABC).

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., had two thoughts about President Biden pardoning his son Hunter Biden after previously saying he would not, while talking to NBC’s ‘Meet the Press’ host Kristen Welker on Sunday.

‘When you have his opponents going after his family as a father, as a parent, I think we can all understand Biden trying to protect his, his son and his family,’ Sanders said. ‘On the other hand, I think the precedent being set is kind of a dangerous one. It was a very wide open pardon, which could, under different circumstances, lead to problems in terms of future presidents.’

Despite that, Sanders believes that Biden leaves a ‘strong legacy’ due to being progressive on domestic policies. He also said that ‘the economy today in many ways is in very strong shape.’

Sanders even went as far as to say Biden was the most progressive president since Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Discussing the minimum wage, Sanders told Welker he would work with President-elect Trump to raise it, as it has stood at $7.25 an hour since 2009.

Welker said Trump acknowledged it was too low, but Sanders said the last time he tried to get it raised to $15 an hour was two years ago and no Republicans voted for it. 

‘Look, a $7.25 per hour minimum wage is an absolute disgrace,’ Sanders said. ‘We have millions of people in this country who are working for starvation wages. They cannot afford housing, that cannot afford to adequately feed their kids.’

Sanders now believes the minimum wage should be $17 an hour, and hopes lawmakers ‘can work in a bipartisan way to finally accomplish that goal.’  

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JERUSALEM – President-elect Trump could be the key factor in stopping the reported Turkish destruction of the pro-U.S. Syrian Kurdish community, Fox News senior strategic analyst and retired four-star Gen. Jack Keane told Fox News’ Mark Levin on ‘Life, Liberty & Levin’ on Saturday.

‘Erdoğan is a real problem here. He has a corridor in northern Syria. He backed the radical leader who took over, al-Golani, in deposing Assad because he’s been wanting Assad to go like we all did for years, but now what is he doing? Now he’s attacking the Syrian Kurds, who we support, in eastern Syria.’

Keane said, ‘Biden is not going to do anything about it, but President Trump has a huge opportunity, and I know for a fact that President Trump dealt with Erdoğan once before over the same issue. And it stopped as a result of a phone conversation that he had with President Erdoğan.’

Keane said one of Trump’s first telephone conversations once in office will probably be with Erdoğan, ‘if he hasn’t started talking to him already.’ 

He said the motivation of the Syrian Kurds in eastern Syria is not to seize Turkish territory but to ensure ISIS remains defeated and make sure ‘they do not rise again,’ adding that the U.S. ‘doesn’t need to get involved in any consequential way in Syria other than to protect our own interests and make certain that ISIS doesn’t rise again in eastern Syria which they have the potential to do.’

While world leaders are largely focused on the collapse of Syrian dictator Bashar Assad’s regime, Turkey’s strongman ruler Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has mobilized forces loyal to his government to eradicate Kurdish combatants on his southern border to Syria that helped the U.S. defeat the terrorist movement ISIS. 

Alarm bells are ringing about the dire plight of the Syrian Kurds.

‘Turkey has become too aggressive. If they get a free rein in Syria, they may covertly commit an ethnic cleansing,’ warned Efrat Aviv, a professor in the Department of General History at Bar-Ilan University in Israel and a leading expert on Turkey, in a statement to Fox News Digital.

In an apparent effort to modify his jihadi movement, Ahmad al-Sharaa, the leader of the U.S.-designated terrorist movement, Hayʼat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which played a decisive role in toppling Assad’s regime, said, ‘The Kurds are part of the nation and have suffered great injustices, just as we have. With the regime’s fall, the injustice they faced may also be lifted.’

Ahmad al-Sharaa, who was until recently known by his nom de guerre Abu Mohammad-Golani, is allied with Turkey. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced that the U.S. had made ‘direct contact’ with HTS despite it being an outlawed terrorist entity.

Mazloum Abdi, the head of the U.S.-allied Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), on Saturday urged Kurdish parties in northeast Syria (Rojava) to generate a unified front.

‘Today, Kurdish national unity in Syria has become a historic necessity in response to the challenges of this critical phase. We call on all Kurdish parties to set aside partisan interests and genuinely engage with public calls for dialogue and unity,’ Abdi wrote on X.

Last week, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., posted on X, ‘In the past I have drafted sanctions targeting Turkey if they engage in military operations against the Kurdish forces who helped President Trump destroy ISIS. I stand ready to do this again in a bipartisan way.

‘We should not allow the Kurdish forces – who helped us destroy ISIS on President Trump’s watch – to be threatened by Turkey or the radical Islamists who have taken over Syria.’

The Dutch Parliament also intervened last week to protect the Syrian Kurds, urging its government to advocate for a cessation of Turkish attacks on Kurds. 

The Kurdish-led Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES) announced on Sunday in response to the ongoing attacks by pro-Turkey forces, ‘We are facing significant threats and dangers, and we call on the Global Coalition and the entire world to unite with us to protect Kobani.’

‘The world now owes Kobani and its fighters, and it is time to stand with Kobani,’ the statement continued, ‘calling on the Global Coalition and freedom-loving individuals to unite and safeguard the region’s dignity and humanity.’

Turkey’s Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, who was the former head of the country’s formidable intelligence service, MIT, said on Sunday in Jordan about his country’s view of the Kurdish political and military organizations, Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and The People’s Defense Units (YPG):’We are under threat from Iraq and Syria. Over the past decade, the PKK has sought to exploit the chaos in Syria, attempting to restructure itself within the SDF organization. We continue to combat PKK/YPG terrorism, targeting them wherever they are.’

He added, ‘Our aim is to distinguish the Syrian Kurds from the terrorist organization PKK/YPG. We support the legitimate representatives of Syrian Kurds in their efforts to advocate for their rights in Damascus.’

The YPG is the main U.S.-allied force that contributed to the defeat of ISIS. The U.S. classified the PKK as a foreign terrorist organization. The YPG falls under the rubric of the Syrian Kurdish organization, the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF.)

Turkey’s government has intensified its rhetoric against the Kurds. Turkish Defense Minister Yaşar Güler said on Sunday  ‘Our primary agenda is the dissolution of the PKK/YPG.’

Incoming freshman Rep. Abraham Hamadeh, R-Ariz., whose parents are Syrian immigrants, told Fox News Digital, ‘As we evaluate Turkey’s recent airstrikes on Syrian Kurds and reports of Hamas operatives in Turkey, it’s clear that our alliances must be anchored in mutual respect and shared goals. For decades, Turkey has been a strategic partner, but hosting groups like Hamas without clear steps toward dismantling their operations undermines that relationship. Turkey must seize this opportunity to demonstrate it is committed to fighting terror, not enabling it.’

When asked by Fox News Digital if the U.S. was contemplating sanctioning Turkey, a State Department spokesperson said, ‘As a general matter, we do not preview sanctions.’

The State Department referred Fox News Digital on Friday to comments made earlier on Friday after Blinken’s meeting with Fidan in Turkey. 

The statement said, in part, ‘Secretary Blinken emphasized the importance of U.S.-Turkish cooperation in the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS mission in Syria.’

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