Tehran Announces from Damascus its Support to Turkish-Syrian Rapprochement

Syrian Foreign Minister Faisal Al-Miqdad received Ali Asghar Khaji and his accompanying delegation on Monday (SANA)
Syrian Foreign Minister Faisal Al-Miqdad received Ali Asghar Khaji and his accompanying delegation on Monday (SANA)
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Tehran Announces from Damascus its Support to Turkish-Syrian Rapprochement

Syrian Foreign Minister Faisal Al-Miqdad received Ali Asghar Khaji and his accompanying delegation on Monday (SANA)
Syrian Foreign Minister Faisal Al-Miqdad received Ali Asghar Khaji and his accompanying delegation on Monday (SANA)

Tehran announced its support for the resumption of rapprochement talks between Ankara and Damascus.
Following a meeting on Monday in Damascus with Syrian Foreign Minister Faisal al-Miqdad, Iranian Foreign Minister’s senior advisor for special political affairs, Ali Asghar Khaji, said that his country is “pleased” with the resumption of Turkish-Syrian discussions.

He noted that Tehran supports this path to resolve problems through “political dialogue, away from military methods.”
The Iranian official stressed that the first meetings between Syria and Türkiye were held in Tehran, and then continued in a quadripartite manner. He pointed to the need to hold more talks, “so that we can witness further development in relations between the two countries.”
Asghar Khaji, whose statements were broadcast on Syrian state television, indicated that his meeting with Al-Miqdad touched on the latest developments in Syria and the region.
He also revealed that Monday’s meeting discussed economic affairs, the return of refugees to Syria, and the fight against terrorism.
The visit of the Iranian official and his delegation came without prior announcement. It came a day after Russian President Vladimir Putin confirmed his determination to continue his steadfast support for Syria in its endeavor “to defend its sovereignty, unity, and territorial integrity and to ensure its national security and stability”.
Putin’s confirmation came in response to a telegram from Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on the occasion of the 80th anniversary of Russian-Syrian relations.
Sources in Damascus said that Putin’s remarks came after statements exchanged between the Turkish and Syrian sides “cooled” regarding the rapprochement. This suggested that Damascus and Ankara’s sitting at the negotiating table, mediated by Baghdad and pushed by Moscow and Arab countries, had become “imminent.”
The sources added that these developments prompted Washington, which had ignored the accelerating diplomatic normalization pace between Ankara and Damascus, to hint to its objection to any rapprochement that would strengthen Iran’s influence in Syria and work to remove the US forces from the country.
On Sunday, media websites quoted US officials as saying that the administration of President Joe Biden is “indifferent” to the rapprochement between Ankara and Damascus. The former US ambassador to Syria, Robert Ford, also considered that it was impossible to separate Iraq’s mediation between Ankara and Damascus from Tehran’s goal of removing US forces from Syria.

 

 



Israel's Netanyahu Says Deal Could Be Near for Hostages in Gaza

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends a memorial ceremony for Israeli soldiers who fell in battle during the 2014 Gaza War, in the Hall of Remembrance at Mount Herzl Military Cemetery in Jerusalem on Tuesday, July 16, 2024.  (Abir Sultan/Pool Photo via AP)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends a memorial ceremony for Israeli soldiers who fell in battle during the 2014 Gaza War, in the Hall of Remembrance at Mount Herzl Military Cemetery in Jerusalem on Tuesday, July 16, 2024. (Abir Sultan/Pool Photo via AP)
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Israel's Netanyahu Says Deal Could Be Near for Hostages in Gaza

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends a memorial ceremony for Israeli soldiers who fell in battle during the 2014 Gaza War, in the Hall of Remembrance at Mount Herzl Military Cemetery in Jerusalem on Tuesday, July 16, 2024.  (Abir Sultan/Pool Photo via AP)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends a memorial ceremony for Israeli soldiers who fell in battle during the 2014 Gaza War, in the Hall of Remembrance at Mount Herzl Military Cemetery in Jerusalem on Tuesday, July 16, 2024. (Abir Sultan/Pool Photo via AP)

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told families of hostages held in Gaza that a deal that would secure their release could be near, his office said on Tuesday, as fighting raged in the battered Palestinian enclave.
Israeli forces pressed on with a new raid into Gaza's southern area of Khan Younis after ordering civilians to evacuate some districts they said had been used for renewed attacks by Palestinian militants, Reuters said.
Thousands of people were fleeing for safer areas as Israeli airstrikes hit, UN officials said.
Netanyahu is currently in Washington and is expected to meet US President Joe Biden later this week after making an address to Congress.
Speaking in the US capital on Monday to families of hostages, he said: "The conditions (for a deal) are undoubtedly ripening. This is a good sign."
Efforts to reach a ceasefire in the war between Israel and Hamas, outlined by Biden in May and mediated by Egypt and Qatar, have gained momentum over the past month.
"Unfortunately, it will not take place all at once; there will be stages. However, I believe that we can advance the deal and leave us in possession of the leverage to bring about the release of the others (hostages not freed in first stage)," Netanyahu said.
A Palestinian official close to the mediation effort accused Netanyahu of stalling.
"Hamas has shown the flexibility needed for an agreement to be reached and the ball is in his court," the official said.
An Israeli negotiation team was due on Thursday to resume talks that would include hostages being released in return for Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. In a week-long truce in November, 105 hostages were freed in return for 240 Palestinian prisoners.
The hostages were seized in the Hamas raid into southern Israel on Oct. 7 in which about 1,200 people were killed and around and 250 taken captive, according to Israeli tallies.
Hamas and other militants are still holding 120 hostages, around a third of whom have been declared dead in absentia by Israeli authorities.
The death toll among Palestinians in Israel's retaliatory offensive since then has reached more than 39,000, according to Gaza health authorities in the Hamas-run enclave. Hundreds of thousands of people have been displaced and much of the enclave laid to waste by airstrikes and artillery bombardments.
FEAR AND DISPLACEMENT
In Gaza on Tuesday, Israeli air raids hit the southern city of Khan Younis as Israeli troops and Palestinian militants fought in its shattered streets, forcing civilians to flee.
The Israeli military said dozens of militants had been killed in Khan Younis by its tanks and warplanes or in close-quarter combat. Weapon caches and tunnels used by the militants had been destroyed, it said.
Palestinian medics said one person was killed in an Israeli airstrike in the area on Tuesday, after dozens were reported killed by Israeli attacks there on Monday. Gaza's health ministry does not distinguish between combatants and non-combatants. Health officials have said most of those killed have been civilians.
Further north, in Gaza City, Israeli bombing killed 16 people, medics said.
In Rafah, next to the border with Egypt where Israel has said it was stamping out Hamas' last units, an Israeli airstrike killed two Palestinians.
Hamas said its fighters were combating Israeli soldiers in Rafah. Residents said tanks have operated in most of the city, but have yet to gain full control of the northern and western areas.