France's President Emmanuel Macron has said he deeply regrets US President Donald Trump's controversial decision to withdrawal all US troops from Syria.
"An ally must be dependable," said Macron, who reportedly called Trump to warn him against the plan, the BBC reported on Sunday.
The US said the Islamic State (IS) group had been defeated, a claim disputed by allies and US politicians.
France, a key part of the US-led coalition against IS in Syria and Iraq, said its troops would remain in Syria.
Some 2,000 US troops have helped rid much of Syria's north-east of the jihadist group, but pockets of fighters remain.
Critics of Trump's decision say it could lead to a resurgence of the group, and Defence Secretary Jim Mattis resigned over the issue.
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Speaking on a visit to French troops in Chad, Macron said: "To be allies is to fight shoulder to shoulder. It's the most important thing for a head of state and head of the military."
Trump's sudden announcement on Wednesday and Mattis' resignation sparked concern even among Republican supporters of the President.
The US special presidential envoy for the Global Coalition to Defeat IS, Brett McGurk, also quit over the decision.
Meanwhile, the French president paid tribute to Gen Mattis, calling him a "reliable partner".
Macron's remarks are the latest in a series of recent tense exchanges between the two leaders who are often described as close allies with a good personal and working relationship.
He also stressed the importance of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), an alliance of Syrian Kurdish and Arab fighters credited with playing a major role in the virtual elimination of IS after it overran large swathes of Syria four years ago.
"I call on everyone... not to forget what we owe them," he said.
The President, who has long pledged to pull troops out of Syria, continued to insist that his decision was the right one and that, now that IS was defeated on the ground, other players could take care of the situation.
The US troops have largely been stationed in the Kurdish region in northern Syria and the Pentagon said it was transitioning to the "next phase of the campaign", without giving details.
A recent US report said there were still as many as 14,000 IS militants in Syria and even more in neighbouring Iraq. There is a fear they will shift to guerrilla tactics in an attempt to rebuild their network.
But the partnership between the US and the Kurds has enraged neighbouring Turkey, which views the Kurdish YPG militia -- the main fighting force in the SDF -- as an extension of a banned Kurdish group fighting for autonomy in Turkey.
--IANS
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