Saudi Arabia on Friday announced a $100 million (Dh367m) contribution towards $300 million pledged for US-backed campaign to stabilise north-eastern Syria, once a bastion of ISIS. The Saudi contribution is the biggest single cash injection yet for reconstruction efforts in areas formerly controlled by the extremist group, which seized large areas of Iraq and Syria in 2014, including the Syrian city of Raqqa, its former de facto capital. The UAE last month <a href="https://www.thenational.ae/world/mena/uae-pledges-50m-for-stabilisation-efforts-in-raqqa-1.749906">pledged $50m</a> for the rebuilding of Raqqa. Saudi Arabia, the United States' most powerful Arab ally, is a member of the US-led Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS. Riyadh's contribution aims to support "stabilisation projects" and "will play a critical role in the coalition's efforts to revitalise communities, such as Raqqa, that have been devastated by ISIS terrorists," the Saudi embassy in Washington said. It said the money would "save lives, help facilitate the return of displaced Syrians, and help ensure that ISIS cannot re-emerge to threaten Syria, its neighbours, or plan attacks against the international community". The US State Department welcomed the contribution and said it was "critical to stabilisation and early recovery efforts and comes at an important time in the campaign". <strong>_______________</strong> <strong>Read more:</strong> <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/world/mena/isis-fighters-encircled-in-southern-syrian-volcanic-field-1.760038">ISIS fighters encircled in southern Syrian volcanic field</a></strong> <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/uae/government/uae-donates-dh220-million-to-alleviate-suffering-of-syrian-people-1.725026">UAE donates Dh220 million to 'alleviate suffering of Syrian people'</a></strong> <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/world/mena/bombing-idlib-would-be-catastrophic-says-turkey-foreign-minister-1.760400">Bombing Idlib would be 'catastrophic' says Turkish Foreign Minister</a></strong> <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/world/the-americas/us-says-kidnapped-journalist-austin-tice-believed-to-be-alive-in-syria-1.760347">US says kidnapped journalist Austin Tice believed to be alive in Syria</a></strong> <strong>_______________</strong> The US said on Friday it had secured $300 million from coalition partners to help stabilize parts of Syria retaken from ISIS, after President Donald Trump demanded that allies help carry the costs of the war. This includes Saudi Arabia's contribution of $100 million and the United Arab Emirates' pledged $50 million. The State Department said it would redirect $230 million in frozen funding for Syria to other unspecified foreign policy priorities while emphasizing that the move did not signal a retreat by Washington from the Syrian conflict. Trump froze the $230 million in March, threatening to withdraw United States forces from Syria, subject to a review to reassess Washington's role in the brutal seven-year-old conflict. Whether or not the coalition money will convince him to stay is unclear. The State Department named veteran US diplomat and former ambassador to Iraq, Jim Jeffrey, as US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's adviser for Syria, a role that will include overseeing the US role in talks aimed at a political transition in Syria. While Washington has long insisted that Syrian President Bashar Al Assad should go, the Trump administration appears to have accepted that Assad could remain until the end of his current seven-year presidential term in 2021. Brett McGurk, the US special envoy to the coalition fighting against Islamic State, will remain in his role as the US-coalition prepares to clean up the last remaining militants in an area around the town of Hajin in eastern Syria. "We still have not launched the final phase to defeat the physical Caliphate. That is actually being prepared now and will come at a time of our choosing, but it's coming," McGurk, the US special presidential envoy overseeing the fight against Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, told reporters. The US believes that ISIS has lost about 98 per cent of the territory it held in Iraq and Syria. Acting US Assistant Secretary David Satterfield said the United States and other countries would not contribute to Syria's full reconstruction until there was a "credible and irreversible" political process underway to end the conflict. "There is not going to be by international agreement reconstruction assistance to Syria unless the UN ... validates that a credible and irreversible political process is underway," Satterfield told a conference call. Both the Russian and Syrian governments want international funding to rebuild Syria, he said. Russia joined the war on Assad's behalf in 2015, turning the momentum in his favour. Assad also enjoys robust support from Iran and Lebanon’s Hezbollah. As well as the UAE and Saudi Arabia, Mr McGurk said Australia, Denmark, European Union, Taiwan, Kuwait, Germany and France also participated, he said. "We are remaining in Syria. The focus is on the enduring fight against ISIS," said McGurk. In its early stages, the war-shattered Syria into a patchwork of areas held by different forces. The fighting has killed hundreds of thousands of people and forced more than half the pre-war population from their homes. A report by the UN's Arab countries agency ESCWA has cited experts as saying the volume of destruction of Syria’s physical capital and its sectoral distribution exceeded $388 billion.