Syria’s Assad Blames Türkiye’s Erdogan for Violence in Syria, Insists on Pullout of Turkish Troops

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan talks to media as he visits Anitkabir, the mausoleum of modern Türkiye’s founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, ahead of the annual meeting of the Supreme Military Council (YAS) in Ankara, Türkiye August 3, 2023. (Presidential Press Office/Handout via Reuters)
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan talks to media as he visits Anitkabir, the mausoleum of modern Türkiye’s founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, ahead of the annual meeting of the Supreme Military Council (YAS) in Ankara, Türkiye August 3, 2023. (Presidential Press Office/Handout via Reuters)
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Syria’s Assad Blames Türkiye’s Erdogan for Violence in Syria, Insists on Pullout of Turkish Troops

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan talks to media as he visits Anitkabir, the mausoleum of modern Türkiye’s founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, ahead of the annual meeting of the Supreme Military Council (YAS) in Ankara, Türkiye August 3, 2023. (Presidential Press Office/Handout via Reuters)
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan talks to media as he visits Anitkabir, the mausoleum of modern Türkiye’s founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, ahead of the annual meeting of the Supreme Military Council (YAS) in Ankara, Türkiye August 3, 2023. (Presidential Press Office/Handout via Reuters)

Syria’s President Bashar Assad slammed Türkiye in comments published Wednesday, blaming Ankara for the uptick in violence in his war-torn country and insisting on the withdrawal of Turkish forces from Syria.

Assad spoke in an interview with Sky News Arabia, his first interview with a foreign media outlet in months. The interview is to be fully aired later on Wednesday but Sky News Arabia released some excerpts ahead of the broadcast.

Türkiye is a main backer of armed opposition fighters who have been trying to remove Assad from power and has carried out three major incursions into northern Syria since 2016. Turkish forces control parts of northern Syria.

Assad, who is backed by Russia and Iran, has managed over the past few years to retake most of the territory with the help of his allies, and turn the tide of war in his favor. Syrian insurgents and Türkiye-backed opposition forces now only hold a small northwestern corner of Syria, where fighting and violence have persisted.

“Terrorism in Syria is made in Türkiye,” Assad said.

He also denied rumors of an upcoming meeting between him and his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdogan despite meetings between Türkiye and Syria’s defense and foreign ministers under Russian and Iranian mediation to restore strained ties.

Damascus maintains that Ankara must put forward a timetable for the withdrawal of Turkish troops from Syria in order to normalize relations. In May, the ministers agreed to set up a “roadmap” to improve relations.

“Erdogan’s objective in meeting me is to legitimize the Turkish occupation in Syria,” Assad said in Wednesday's interview. “Why should I and Erdogan meet? To have soft drinks?”

In recent months, Syria has also improved relations with some countries that had backed the opposition since the 2011 outbreak of the country's civil war.

For the first time in over a decade, Assad participated in the Arab League summit hosted by Saudi Arabia in May, marking Syria's return to the Arab fold. However, the United States has opposed normalizations with Damascus without a political solution to the conflict.

Some Arab countries have blamed Syria for the flow of drugs into oil-rich Gulf nations since the war began. The drug trade, estimated to be worth billions, has been a priority in regional talks with Damascus.

“The countries that created chaos in Syria are responsible for the drug business,” Assad said.

Assad said that a behind-the-scenes dialogue between Damascus and Washington that started several years ago and went on sporadically “did not lead to any results.” He claimed Damascus has been able “through different means” to overcome US sanctions.

One of the main topics discussed between US and Syrian officials over the past years was the fate of Americans who went missing in Syria, including journalist Austin Tice, who disappeared in 2012.

Two US officials — including Washington's top hostage negotiator, Roger Carstens — made a secret visit to Damascus some years ago to seek information on Tice and other missing Americans. It was the highest-level US talks in years with Assad's government, though Syrian officials offered no meaningful information on Tice.

Syria’s war has killed half a million people, wounded over a million, left large parts of the nation destroyed and displaced half the country’s pre-war population of 23 million. The fighting has mostly stalemated in the past years.

More than 5 million Syrians are refugees mostly in neighboring countries, Türkiye, Lebanon and Jordan.

“We knew since the start of the war that it is going to be long,” Assad said.



Guterres: Vital to Keep a UN Force in Lebanon after Current Peacekeepers Depart

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres speaks during a press conference at Japan National Press Club in Tokyo, Japan, 20 May 2026. EPA/FRANCK ROBICHON
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres speaks during a press conference at Japan National Press Club in Tokyo, Japan, 20 May 2026. EPA/FRANCK ROBICHON
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Guterres: Vital to Keep a UN Force in Lebanon after Current Peacekeepers Depart

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres speaks during a press conference at Japan National Press Club in Tokyo, Japan, 20 May 2026. EPA/FRANCK ROBICHON
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres speaks during a press conference at Japan National Press Club in Tokyo, Japan, 20 May 2026. EPA/FRANCK ROBICHON

UN chief Antonio Guterres said Monday that peacekeepers will be needed in Lebanon after the mandate of the current mission expires at year-end -- an option likely to face opposition from the United States and Israel.

Last August, the UN Security Council, under US pressure, decided to end the mandate of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) on December 31, 2026.

However, it asked Guterres to propose options by June 1 to allow UN peacekeepers to remain in Lebanon, particularly to monitor the Blue Line, which stretches for 120 kilometers (75 miles), marking the de facto border between Lebanon and Israel -- now the middle of the Israel-Hezbollah war.

In a report to the Security Council seen by AFP on Monday, Guterres proposes three options ranging from nearly 2,000 to more than 5,500 UN personnel to monitor the ceasefire and support the Lebanese armed forces.

"Under all proposed options, a uniformed United Nations presence working to facilitate de-escalation, dialogue, liaison and coordination, and support for the Lebanese Armed Forces, would be necessary... towards the overarching objective of a long-term solution to the conflict," the report says.

Concerns over the exit of the UNIFIL come with Israeli troops occupying south Lebanon's border areas, and as Israel and Lebanon hold direct negotiations seeking to end decades of hostilities.

UNIFIL currently counts some 7,500 peacekeepers from nearly 50 countries. They are deployed in south Lebanon near the Blue Line.

The force has been a buffer between Lebanon and Israel since 1978 although its presence has not prevented repeated outbreaks of conflict.

Several Lebanese sources told AFP that Beirut, which has pledged to disarm Hezbollah, supports maintaining a UN presence after the departure of UNIFIL.

"Recent developments have only heightened Lebanon's urgent need for continued UN and international assistance, specifically to facilitate an Israeli withdrawal on the one hand, and to enable the state to extend its authority over its entire territory on the other," said Lebanon's ambassador to the UN, Ahmad Arafa, thanking Guterres for his report.

Several members of the Security Council also support replacing UNIFIL, particularly China and Russia.

"As UNIFIL’s mandate is about to expire, the Security Council must make a responsible decision to ensure the continued UN presence in Lebanon, and to prevent a security vacuum," said Fu Cong, China's UN envoy.

But the US and close ally Israel welcomed the vote in August that ended UNIFIL.

The Trump administration has questioned the effectiveness of UN peacekeeping missions and has withheld part of the US financial contribution to support them, forcing the UN to reduce its troops worldwide.


A US Soldier and a British Soldier Die during Training in Iraq

US Army soldiers from the 5-20 Infantry Division take up positions to provide cover for fellow soldiers as part of the launch of Operation Arrowhead Strike Six in the Shaab neighborhood of northern Baghdad, 06 February 2007. (AFP)
US Army soldiers from the 5-20 Infantry Division take up positions to provide cover for fellow soldiers as part of the launch of Operation Arrowhead Strike Six in the Shaab neighborhood of northern Baghdad, 06 February 2007. (AFP)
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A US Soldier and a British Soldier Die during Training in Iraq

US Army soldiers from the 5-20 Infantry Division take up positions to provide cover for fellow soldiers as part of the launch of Operation Arrowhead Strike Six in the Shaab neighborhood of northern Baghdad, 06 February 2007. (AFP)
US Army soldiers from the 5-20 Infantry Division take up positions to provide cover for fellow soldiers as part of the launch of Operation Arrowhead Strike Six in the Shaab neighborhood of northern Baghdad, 06 February 2007. (AFP)

One American soldier and one British soldier died during a training exercise in Iraq, US and UK officials said Monday without releasing further details.

The deaths occurred Sunday at an air base in Irbil in the semi-autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq, where the US has retained a presence, the US Army said in a post on X. The statement said the soldier’s identity is being withheld until 24 hours after his or her family has been notified.

The UK’s Ministry of Defense said in a separate post that the family of the British soldier has been notified and requested a “period of grace” before more details are released, The Associated Press reported.

The US has been reducing the number of troops countering the ISIS militant group in Iraq. But American forces have retained a presence in the Kurdish region as the US seeks to strengthen ties with the Kurds.

The US inaugurated a large new consulate compound in December in Irbil, the capital of the Kurdish region, highlighting Washington’s diplomatic and strategic engagement in the area.

The deaths occurred nearly a month after two American soldiers fell off a cliff and died during an off-duty recreational hike in Morocco. They were reported missing May 2 after participating in African Lion, an annual multinational military exercise.


Israel Imposes 'Undeclared Buffer Zone' in Southern Syria

UNDOF soldiers in Saidah village in the southern Quneitra countryside. (SANA)
UNDOF soldiers in Saidah village in the southern Quneitra countryside. (SANA)
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Israel Imposes 'Undeclared Buffer Zone' in Southern Syria

UNDOF soldiers in Saidah village in the southern Quneitra countryside. (SANA)
UNDOF soldiers in Saidah village in the southern Quneitra countryside. (SANA)

Israeli forces continued their nearly daily violations of Syria territory on Monday when an Israeli artillery shell landed near the village of al-Musayritiyah in the western Daraa countryside, sparking a fire in a wheat field before residents managed to extinguish it, reported Syria’s state news agency SANA.

The village is located in the Yarmouk Basin area close to the border with the occupied Syrian Golan. It has witnessed repeated Israeli incursions, including home and farm searches and the detention of young men.

On Sunday, four Israeli military vehicles reached the entrance of the town of Maariya in the Yarmouk Basin, while two others seized the road connecting the village of Saidah in the Golan to al-Basali in the eastern Quneitra countryside.

SANA reported the Israeli forces set up two checkpoints and searched pedestrians and vehicles before withdrawing from the area.

All the measures are seen as efforts to impose an unofficial buffer zone, said sources in Damascus.

Israel continues to violate the 1974 Disengagement Agreement through shelling, ground incursions, attacks on civilians, raids, detentions and land leveling.

Syria consistently demands the end of the Israeli occupation of its territory, stating that all Israeli measures in southern Syria are null and void under international law. Damascus also calls on the international community to assume its responsibilities, deter the Israeli practices and compel a full withdrawal from southern Syria.

Since the ouster of Bashar al-Assad's regime in December 2024, Israeli forces have seized 665 kilometers of Syrian territory, set up nine military positions and continue to carry out land incursions into Syria, notably in the eastern and northern Quneitra countryside and Yarmouk Basin.

Syrian and international reports said Israel has set up a security zone, similar to the “yellow line” in Gaza, to bar military activity in the area and strip the Quneitra and Daraa regions of heavy weapons. It aims to control areas leading to southern Damascus with the aim of creating “strategic depth” to protect Galilee and the Golan.

Researcher at the Jusoor Center for Studies Rashid Hourani said Israel wants to create the buffer zone through razing agricultural areas in Quneitra, western Daraa countryside, and Yarmouk Basin especially.

It wants to destroy infrastructure and military positions by repeatedly targeting them, thereby preventing citizens from accessing their agricultural lands, he told Asharq Al-Awsat.

It also wants to impose restrictions on their movement as Israeli forces have carried out frequent interrogations of the locals and set up temporary checkpoints in the areas, he added.

Israeli forces have destroyed civilian facilities and historic sites, including 15 houses in the village of al-Hamidiye. They blew up a historic mosque, a museum building, and other heritage sites.

Israel has increased its incursions into Syria as it escalated its operations in Lebanon and as Lebanese and Israeli official prepare to hold a third round of negotiations in Washington to end the war.

The Syrian-Israeli negotiations have meanwhile stalled after a series of intense talks last year that “have yet to reach tangible results on the ground,” said Foreign Minister Asaad al-Shaibani in previous remarks.

Hourani told Asharq Al-Awsat Israel’s failure to achieve its objectives in the war on Iran has reflected in the stalling of negotiations with Syria, which he said is because of Israel’s “erratic position on how to handle the Syrian file.”

He also noted the pressure it is coming under due to its involvement in Lebanon and Gaza.

Observers have speculated that Israel will impose military and security measures in southern Syrian similar to the ones it has in place in Gaza and southern Lebanon where it is expanding its field control and weakening the local authorities by imposing long-term changes on the ground.

At the same time, Israel is expanding its settlement projects in the Golan.