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Israel lobbies US to keep Russian bases in a ‘weak’ Syria, sources say

Israel lobbies US to keep Russian bases in a ‘weak’ Syria, sources say
Israel is lobbying the US to keep Syria weak and decentralised, including by letting Russia keep its military bases there to counter Turkiye's growing influence in the country, four sources familiar with the efforts said. (AFP/File)
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Updated 28 February 2025

Israel lobbies US to keep Russian bases in a ‘weak’ Syria, sources say

Israel lobbies US to keep Russian bases in a ‘weak’ Syria, sources say
  • “Israel’s big fear is that Turkiye comes in and protects this new Syrian Islamist order,” said Aron Lund, a fellow at US-based think-tank Century International
  • Syria’s leader Ahmed Al-Sharaa told a group of foreign journalists in December that Damascus did not want conflict with Israel or other countries

BEIRUT/WASHINGTON: Israel is lobbying the United States to keep the Syrian Arab Republic weak and decentralized, including by letting Russia keep its military bases there to counter Turkiye’s growing influence in the country, four sources familiar with the efforts said.
Turkiye’s often fraught ties with Israel have come under severe strain during the Gaza war and Israeli officials have told Washington that Syria’s new Islamist rulers, who are backed by Ankara, pose a threat to Israel’s borders, the sources said.
The lobbying points to a concerted Israeli campaign to influence US policy at a critical juncture for Syria, as the Islamists who ousted Bashar Assad try to stabilize the fractured state and get Washington to lift punishing sanctions.
Israel communicated its views to top US officials during meetings in Washington in February and subsequent meetings in Israel with US Congressional representatives, three US sources and another person familiar with the contacts said.
The main points were also circulated to some senior US officials in an Israeli “white paper,” two of the sources said.
All the sources spoke on condition of anonymity due to diplomatic sensitivities.
“Israel’s big fear is that Turkiye comes in and protects this new Syrian Islamist order, which then ends up being a base for Hamas and other militants,” said Aron Lund, a fellow at US-based think-tank Century International.
The US State Department and National Security Council did not provide a response to questions for this story. The office of Israel’s prime minister and the foreign ministries in Syria and Turkiye did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
It was not clear to what extent US President Donald Trump’s administration is considering adopting Israel’s proposals, the sources said. It has said little about Syria, leaving uncertainty over both the future of the sanctions and whether US forces deployed in the northeast will remain.
Lund said Israel had a good chance of influencing US thinking, describing the new administration as wildly pro-Israeli. “Syria is barely even on Trump’s radar now. It’s low priority, and there’s a policy void to fill,” he said.

ISRAELI ATTACKS
Israel has publicly declared its mistrust of Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS), the Islamist faction that led the campaign that toppled Assad and which emerged from a group that was affiliated to Al-Qaeda until it cut ties in 2016.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that Israel will not tolerate the presence in southern Syria of HTS, or any other forces affiliated with the new rulers, and demanded the territory be demilitarised.
Following Assad’s ouster, Israel carried out extensive airstrikes on Syrian military bases and moved forces into a UN-monitored demilitarised zone within Syria. Earlier this week, Israel struck military sites south of Damascus.
Now, Israel is deeply concerned about Turkiye’s role as a close ally of Syria’s new rulers, three US sources said, describing the messages delivered by Israeli officials.
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, who leads the Islamist-rooted AK Party, said last year that Islamic countries should form an alliance against what he called “the growing threat of expansionism” from Israel.
Earlier this month, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said Israel was concerned Turkiye was supporting efforts by Iran to rebuild Hezbollah and that Islamist groups in Syria were creating another front against Israel.
Turkiye has said it wants Syria to become stable and pose no threat to its neighbors. It has repeatedly said Israel’s actions in southern Syria were part of its expansionist and invasive policy, and showed Israel did not want regional peace.
To contain Turkiye, Israeli officials have sought to persuade US officials that Russia should keep its Mediterranean naval base in Syria’s Tartus province and its Hmeimim air base in Latakia province, the sources said.
When Israeli officials presented Russia’s continued presence in a positive light in a meeting with US officials, some attendees were surprised, arguing that Turkiye — a NATO member — would be a better guarantor of Israel’s security, two of the US sources said.
Israeli officials were “adamant” that was not the case, the sources said.
Syria’s new leadership is in talks with Russia over the fate of the military bases.

SERIOUS THREAT
Syria’s Islamist-led government has sought to reassure Western and Arab states about its intentions, promising an inclusive Syria and seeking to restore diplomatic ties with governments that shunned Assad.
Syria’s leader Ahmed Al-Sharaa told a group of foreign journalists in December that Damascus did not want conflict with Israel or other countries.
Israeli officials, however, voiced concern to US officials that the new government could pose a serious threat and that Syria’s new armed forces might one day attack, the sources said.
Assad kept the frontier with the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights quiet for years despite his alliance with Israel’s arch-foe Iran, which had a dominant role in Syria until his downfall upended the Middle East’s power balance.
Two sources said that in the final weeks of US President Joe Biden’s term, his administration considered offering sanctions relief to Syria’s new leaders in exchange for closing Russia’s two military bases.
Two former US officials under the Biden administration did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The sources said Biden’s team failed to secure a deal before Trump took office on January 20 and that they expected the new US president, who has drawn closer to Russian President Vladimir Putin, to be more open to Russia staying.
Israel’s lobbying to keep Syria weak points to a starkly different approach to other US-allied states in the region, notably Ƶ, which said last month it was talking to Washington and Brussels to help lift Western sanctions.
A source in Erdogan’s AK party said Ankara hosted Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Tuesday in part as a hedge against the uncertainty of the new US policy in Syria, and to balance any Israeli measures there — including with the US — that threaten Turkish interests.


UAE joins global anti-drug campaign, $2.9bn worth of illegal drugs seized

UAE joins global anti-drug campaign, $2.9bn worth of illegal drugs seized
Updated 29 August 2025

UAE joins global anti-drug campaign, $2.9bn worth of illegal drugs seized

UAE joins global anti-drug campaign, $2.9bn worth of illegal drugs seized
  • The operation saw 12,564 suspects arrested around the world

DUBAI: The UAE joined a multi-nation, two-month anti-drug campaign that seized 822 tons of illegal drugs worth $2.9 billion, state news agency WAM reported.

Running from June 10 to Aug. 7, the operation saw 12,564 suspects arrested around the world, WAM reported.

It was the second time members of the International Security Alliance have carried out such an operation targeting international criminal groups.

Other member states of the International Security Alliance taking part in the operation included Bahrain, Morocco, Spain and France.

There were also members of the American Police Organization and the European Union Agency for Law Enforcement Cooperation, as well as personnel from Jordan, involved in the operation.

The cross-border cooperation enabled the gathering of information on new criminal networks, exchange of expertise on drug smuggling methods and the unifying of efforts in combating narcotics, which enhanced joint preparedness and developed proactive mechanisms to counter and control the movement of illegal drugs, WAM reported.

The ISA framework was established in 2017 by the UAE and France to enhance cooperation and build partnerships to address issues of global significance, particularly combating transnational organized crime.


Lebanon says 2 soldiers killed in Israeli drone strike

Lebanon says 2 soldiers killed in Israeli drone strike
Updated 29 August 2025

Lebanon says 2 soldiers killed in Israeli drone strike

Lebanon says 2 soldiers killed in Israeli drone strike
  • The Lebanese army said on Thursday that two military personnel were killed and two wounded when an Israeli drone crashed and then exploded in the Ras Al-Naqoura area of southern Lebanon

BEIRUT: The Lebanese army said on Thursday that two military personnel were killed and two wounded when an Israeli drone crashed and then exploded in the Ras Al-Naqoura area of southern Lebanon.
The Israeli military expressed its regret for the “injury” of the soldiers due to what it said was a “technical malfunction” during a strike in southern Lebanon that it claimed targeted Hezbollah infrastructure.


UN Security Council renews Lebanon peacekeeping mission ‘for a final time’

UN Security Council renews Lebanon peacekeeping mission ‘for a final time’
Updated 45 min 35 sec ago

UN Security Council renews Lebanon peacekeeping mission ‘for a final time’

UN Security Council renews Lebanon peacekeeping mission ‘for a final time’
  • Peacekeeping operation in Lebanon extended until the end of 2026, and will then begin a year-long ‘orderly and safe drawdown and withdrawal’
  • The 15-member council unanimously adopted a French-drafted resolution after a compromise was reached with the US, a veto-wielding council member

UNITED NATIONS: The United Nations Security Council on Thursday unanimously extended “for a final time” a long-running peacekeeping mission in Lebanon until the end of 2026, when the operation will then begin a year-long “orderly and safe drawdown and withdrawal.”

The UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), established in 1978, patrols Lebanon’s southern border with Israel.

The 15-member council unanimously adopted a French-drafted resolution after a compromise was reached with the United States, a veto-wielding council member. The Security Council decided “to extend for a final time the mandate of UNIFIL.”

The resolution “requests UNIFIL to cease its operations on 31 December 2026 and to start from this date and within one year its orderly and safe drawdown and withdrawal of its personnel, in close consultation with the Government of Lebanon with the aim of making Lebanon Government the sole provider of security in southern Lebanon.” This will be the last time the United States will support an extension of UNIFIL, said acting US Ambassador to the UN Dorothy Shea.

“The security environment in Lebanon is radically different than just one year ago, creating the space for Lebanon to assume greater responsibility,” she told the council. UNIFIL’s mandate was expanded in 2006, following a month-long war between Israel and Hezbollah, to allow peacekeepers to help the Lebanese army keep parts of the south free of weapons or armed personnel other than those of the Lebanese state.

That has sparked friction with Hezbollah, which effectively controls southern Lebanon despite the presence of the Lebanese army. Hezbollah is a heavily armed party that is Lebanon’s most powerful political force.

“Decades since UNIFIL’s mandate was extended, it is time to dispel the illusion. UNIFIL has failed in its mission and allowed Hezbollah to become a dangerous regional threat,” Israel’s UN Ambassador Danny Danon said after the vote. The United States brokered a truce in November between Lebanon and Israel following more than a year of conflict sparked by the war in Gaza.

The US is now seeking to promote a plan for Hezbollah’s disarmament. Washington is linking the plan to a phased Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon, while also promoting a US- and Gulf-backed economic development zone in Lebanon’s south aimed at reducing Hezbollah’s reliance on Iranian funding.

Lebanon’s Prime Minister Nawaf Salam welcomed the extension, noting that it “reiterates the call for Israel to withdraw its forces from the five sites it continues to occupy, and affirms the necessity of extending state authority over all its territory.”


Extremist minister Smotrich calls for Israel to annex Gaza

Extremist minister Smotrich calls for Israel to annex Gaza
Updated 28 August 2025

Extremist minister Smotrich calls for Israel to annex Gaza

Extremist minister Smotrich calls for Israel to annex Gaza
  • Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich says if Hamas doesn't surrender Israel should annex a section of the territory each week

JERUSALEM: Israel’s Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich on Thursday called on the government to begin annexing parts of the Gaza Strip if Palestinian militant group Hamas stands by its refusal to lay down its weapons.
The far-right minister, who has vocally opposed striking a deal with Hamas to end the nearly two-year war, presented his plan to “win in Gaza by the end of the year” at a press conference in Jerusalem.
Under Smotrich’s proposal, Hamas would be given an ultimatum to surrender, disarm and release the hostages still held in Gaza since the group’s October 2023 attack that triggered the war.
If Hamas refuses, Smotrich said Israel should annex a section of the territory each week for four weeks, bringing most of the Gaza Strip under full Israeli control.
According to Smotrich, Palestinians would first be told to move south in Gaza, followed by Israel imposing a siege on the territory’s north and center to defeat any remaining Hamas militants there, and ending with annexation.
“This can be achieved in three to four months,” he said.
His remarks come as Israeli forces press a major offensive aimed at seizing control of Gaza City — the territory’s largest — despite mounting concern for the fate of Palestinian civilians there.
The vast majority of Gaza’s more than two million people have been displaced at least once during the war.
Smotrich in his remarks called on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “to adopt this plan in full immediately.”
The Palestinian militant group condemned the proposal, saying in a statement that it constituted an “open endorsement of the policy of forced displacement and ethnic cleansing against our people.”
Smotrich is one of several far-right members of Israel’s ruling coalition to have expressed support for re-establishing settlements in the Gaza Strip, from which Israel withdrew troops and settlers in 2005.
A staunch supporter of the settler movement who himself lives in a settlement in the occupied West Bank, Smotrich authorized last week a major project in that territory which critics say threatens the territorial integrity of any future Palestinian state.
Smotrich has said that the settlement project in the area known as E1, east of Jerusalem, was intended to “bury the idea of a Palestinian state.”


Once Africa’s breadbasket, Sudan faces a hunger crisis ‘unprecedented in scale and severity’

Once Africa’s breadbasket, Sudan faces a hunger crisis ‘unprecedented in scale and severity’
Updated 29 August 2025

Once Africa’s breadbasket, Sudan faces a hunger crisis ‘unprecedented in scale and severity’

Once Africa’s breadbasket, Sudan faces a hunger crisis ‘unprecedented in scale and severity’
  • Top UN official says over 638,000 people are experiencing catastrophic food insecurity, and more than half of world’s acute malnutrition cases are concentrated in Sudan
  • She praises humanitarian groups for their determination and efforts to reach vulnerable people under increasingly difficult conditions, calls for more funding and media attention

NEW YORK CITY: Sudan is enduring one of the world’s biggest humanitarian crises, with 30 million people requiring emergency aid and more than 4 million displaced internally or as refugees.

The figures were given by Edem Wosornu, director of operations and advocacy at the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, who recently returned to New York following her third visit to Sudan since the civil war in the country erupted more than two years ago. She also visited neighboring Chad, which is hosting hundreds of thousands of refugees from Sudan.

She detailed the devastating effects of the ongoing violence and the unprecedented hunger crisis that are ravaging the country. Key cities including Khartoum, El-Fasher and El-Geneina have suffered extensive damage amid the persistent fighting between rival military factions that has displaced millions and shattered basic infrastructure.

“Sudan, once known as the breadbasket of the Horn of Africa, is now facing a hunger crisis unprecedented in scale and severity,” Wosornu said, citing recent World Food Programme reports that estimated more than 638,000 people were living with the highest level of food insecurity, phase 5 on the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, which is characterized by famine-like conditions.

“More than half of the global acute malnutrition cases are here,” she added.

The conflict, now in its 860th day, has been marked by repeated violations of international humanitarian law, including drone strikes, shelling and ground attacks targeting civilian areas.

Wosornu warned that areas such as El-Fasher in North Darfur have been under siege for more than 500 days, severely restricting the delivery of lifesaving aid.

“Access remains the greatest challenge,” she said. “Despite ongoing negotiations, tens of trucks carrying food and medical supplies remain stranded at border crossings such as Nyala, unable to reach those trapped in conflict zones.”

Despite the obstacles, some progress has been made. UNICEF recently succeeded in delivering aid to hundreds of thousands of people in South Kordofan, Wosornu noted, a rare bright spot amid the widespread devastation. She praised humanitarian organizations for their determination and ongoing efforts to reach vulnerable populations under increasingly difficult conditions.

Describing the situation in the capital Khartoum, Wosornu said: “The city, once vibrant and bustling, is now a ghost town.

“Streets are littered with remnants of war — explosive ordnance, destroyed buildings — and basic services are largely absent. The trauma is palpable among residents, aid workers and officials alike.”

Yet, amid the ruins, she said she had observed signs of resilience: “I saw people sweeping streets and trying to restore normalcy.

“There is hope, but rebuilding will take many years and depends on a sustained ceasefire and peace.”

The crisis has also placed severe strain on neighboring countries, particularly Chad, which hosts more than 850,000 Sudanese refugees. Wosornu commended the Chadian government for keeping its borders open despite the overwhelming burden on local resources and security forces.

“One in every three people in eastern Chad’s provinces is Sudanese,” she said, adding that alarming levels of malnutrition and a cholera outbreak threaten both the refugees and their host communities.

Responding to concerns about international apathy and a perceived funding shortfall, Wosornu told Arab News: “While it may feel like the world has turned a blind eye, Sudan’s crisis funding is at 25 percent, which is higher than the global average of around 17 percent. Considering the scale and complexity of this emergency, that is not too bad.”

However, she stressed that the immense scale of the crisis demands increased funding and greater media attention.

“We urgently need more access for journalists and aid workers to tell the story and reach those in desperate need,” she said.

Wosornu called on all parties involved in the conflict to guarantee humanitarian access across the front lines, and urged the international community to press for an immediate end to hostilities.

“Sudan cannot continue like this. The war must stop. Only then can recovery and rebuilding begin,” she said.

In a direct appeal to donors and the international community, she added: “Providing life-saving assistance costs just 55 cents per person per day — that’s less than a cup of coffee at Starbucks. This small investment can save millions of lives.”