Aoun’s Visit to Saudi Arabia, Speech at Cairo Summit Revive Arab-Lebanese Relations

Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, welcomes Lebanese President Joseph Aoun in Riyadh on Monday. (SPA)
Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, welcomes Lebanese President Joseph Aoun in Riyadh on Monday. (SPA)
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Aoun’s Visit to Saudi Arabia, Speech at Cairo Summit Revive Arab-Lebanese Relations

Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, welcomes Lebanese President Joseph Aoun in Riyadh on Monday. (SPA)
Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, welcomes Lebanese President Joseph Aoun in Riyadh on Monday. (SPA)

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun’s official visit to Saudi Arabia and participation at the emergency Arab summit in Cairo this week kicked off a new positive phase in relations between Lebanon and the Arab world.

Days after his election as president in January, Aoun declared that Saudi Arabia would be the destination of his first foreign visit. He was accorded a warm welcome in the Kingdom on Monday and in Cairo on Tuesday.

His speech at the Arab summit was widely praised by the majority of participants and in Lebanon. Observers in Lebanon viewed his remarks as a continuation of the pledges he made during his inaugural speech.

Informed sources described Aoun’s meetings since the beginning of his term as “paving the way for a new chapter in relations between Lebanon and the Arab world in general, and Saudi Arabia in particular.”

They underlined the warm and extraordinary welcome he received in the Kingdom, noting that senior Saudi officials were present at Aoun’s reception.

They highlighted the closed-door talks between Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, and Aoun. They described the meeting as friendly and frank, revealing that it tackled the historic relations between their countries. The leaders were keen on issuing a joint statement after their talks, said the sources.

Aoun was accorded a similar warm welcome in Cairo where he met for the first time with a number of Arab heads of state.

“He was among the presidents who held the most bilateral meetings with officials, many of whom hadn’t met him before or only knew him as Lebanon’s army commander,” the sources said.

The Lebanese and Syrian presidents effectively “stole the spotlight” at the summit, each for the developments that had taken place in their countries, they added.

Lebanese former Ambassador to the United States Riad Tabbara said Aoun’s visit to Saudi Arabia opened a new chapter in ties with the Arab world.

His speech in Cairo can be summed up in “resistance through diplomacy,” he told Asharq Al-Awsat.

“Aoun set in his speech his course of action. He stressed resistance through diplomacy, and rejected the idea of establishing peace with Israel before Lebanon reclaims all of its occupied territories. He steered clear of threats and the use of force to achieve goals,” he added.

The speech effectively draws a roadmap for what Lebanon’s policy will be in the next phase given the changes that have taken place in the region, he stated.

At the summit, Aoun declared: “No one can possibly claim to be championing Palestine when Beirut is occupied, Damascus is destroyed, Amman is threatened, Baghdad is weakened and Sanaa falls.”

In Lebanon, sources from parliament Speaker Nabih Berri’s bloc hailed his remarks, while sources from the Lebanese Forces said Aoun “returned Lebanon back to the Arab, regional and Gulf map after it was kept away from it for so long.”

They told Asharq Al-Awsat that Lebanon was kept away “not only because of the vacuum in the presidency, but because it was not one with itself, and did not believe in the state and constitution.”

“By committing to the state building project, Lebanon was able to reclaim its position, role and presence. This alone offers a glimmer of hope that Lebanon has embarked on a new phase that returns it to the table after its voice was usurped by Damascus or Hezbollah,” they stressed.

After their monthly meeting headed by Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi, the Council of Maronite Bishops said Aoun’s visit to Riyadh bolstered Lebanon’s good relations with Saudi Arabia.

“We hope the visit will pave the way for others that will benefit the two countries,” they said in a statement.

On Aoun’s participation at the Cairo summit, they hoped it will help garner Arab support for Lebanon’s “drive to revive itself on all levels and correct course under the new president through state building and the rule of law and the constitution.”

The Kataeb Party echoed these remarks, saying the president’s visits “are a turning point that will return Lebanon to its natural place among its friends in the region so that it can reclaim its historic role and be present at regional discussions about its future and the future of the region.”



Strike on Western Iraq Kills Seven Security Personnel

Members of Iraq's PMF carry the coffin of the PMF operations commander for Al-Anbar, Saad Dawai alongside others during a mass funeral in Baghdad on March 24, 2026. (AFP)
Members of Iraq's PMF carry the coffin of the PMF operations commander for Al-Anbar, Saad Dawai alongside others during a mass funeral in Baghdad on March 24, 2026. (AFP)
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Strike on Western Iraq Kills Seven Security Personnel

Members of Iraq's PMF carry the coffin of the PMF operations commander for Al-Anbar, Saad Dawai alongside others during a mass funeral in Baghdad on March 24, 2026. (AFP)
Members of Iraq's PMF carry the coffin of the PMF operations commander for Al-Anbar, Saad Dawai alongside others during a mass funeral in Baghdad on March 24, 2026. (AFP)

A strike on a base in western Iraq killed seven security personnel, the defense ministry said Wednesday, a day after an attack on the same base targeted the Popular Mobilization Forces.

"This resulted in the death of seven of our heroic fighters and the injury of 13 others," the ministry said of the strike in Anbar province, saying it specifically targeted the base's military healthcare clinic.

Rescue operations were ongoing, it added.

The base hosts Iraqi police, soldiers from the regular army and PMF, a security official told AFP.

It was hit by a deadly strike on Tuesday that the former paramilitaries blamed on the United States.

Iraq said late on Tuesday it would summon the US charge d'affaires and the Iranian ambassador after deadly strikes blamed on their countries, as Iraqi authorities granted the targeted groups the "right to respond".

Iraq has been pulled into the war sparked by US and Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28, and which has since engulfed much of the region.

Iraq has long been a proxy battleground for the United States and Iran, and has struggled to balance diplomatic ties with both countries.

Since the war began, pro-Iran armed groups have claimed responsibility for attacks on US interests in Iraq and across the region, while strikes have also targeted these groups, including state-linked positions.

In the statement from the prime minister's office, however, Iraq granted former paramilitaries within the official armed forces the right to "respond to military attacks" by drones and aircraft that targeted their headquarters.


Spanish PM Says Israel Wants to Inflict on Lebanon ‘Same Destruction’ as in Gaza

A man walks along a street strewn with building debris at the site of an overnight Israeli airstrike that targeted a neighborhood in Beirut's southern suburbs on March 25, 2026. (AFP)
A man walks along a street strewn with building debris at the site of an overnight Israeli airstrike that targeted a neighborhood in Beirut's southern suburbs on March 25, 2026. (AFP)
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Spanish PM Says Israel Wants to Inflict on Lebanon ‘Same Destruction’ as in Gaza

A man walks along a street strewn with building debris at the site of an overnight Israeli airstrike that targeted a neighborhood in Beirut's southern suburbs on March 25, 2026. (AFP)
A man walks along a street strewn with building debris at the site of an overnight Israeli airstrike that targeted a neighborhood in Beirut's southern suburbs on March 25, 2026. (AFP)

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu "seeks to inflict the same level of damage and destruction" on Lebanon as Israeli ‌forces had ‌wrought on ‌the Gaza ⁠Strip, Spanish Prime ⁠Minister Pedro Sanchez told lawmakers on Wednesday.

Sanchez, who appeared before the ⁠lower house ‌to ‌explain his government's stance ‌against the ‌US-Israeli war on Iran, added that Iran's new Supreme ‌Leader was more hardline than his predecessor.

"Mojtaba ⁠Khamenei ⁠is an equally dictatorial and even more bloodthirsty tyrant than his father," Sanchez said.

Sanchez warned that the Middle East war presented a "far worse" scenario than the invasion of Iraq in 2003.

"This is not the same scenario as the illegal war in Iraq. We are facing something far worse. Much worse. With a potential impact that is far broader and far deeper," he added.


Syria on Alert to Protect its Borders with Iraq, Wary of Intervening in Lebanon

 Syria's (L) and Iraq's national flags are pictured near the Iraqi-Syrian border, in Al-Qaim, western Iraq on January 23, 2026. (AFP)
Syria's (L) and Iraq's national flags are pictured near the Iraqi-Syrian border, in Al-Qaim, western Iraq on January 23, 2026. (AFP)
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Syria on Alert to Protect its Borders with Iraq, Wary of Intervening in Lebanon

 Syria's (L) and Iraq's national flags are pictured near the Iraqi-Syrian border, in Al-Qaim, western Iraq on January 23, 2026. (AFP)
Syria's (L) and Iraq's national flags are pictured near the Iraqi-Syrian border, in Al-Qaim, western Iraq on January 23, 2026. (AFP)

The Syrian armed forces said they were on full alert in wake of a rocket attack from Iraq against a Syrian military base in the Hasakeh province.

The army stressed that it will perform its duties in defending Syrian territories and deterring any attack.

Iraq arrested four people in connection with an earlier rocket attack launched against a military base in neighboring Syria, officials said late Tuesday.

Monday's attack targeted a northeastern Syrian military base in Hasakeh that had until recently hosted US forces with an international anti-ISIS coalition.

These are the first arrests announced in Iraq related to the Middle East conflict that broke out on February 28.

Monday’s attack took place hour after the bust of an Iraqi Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) cell in Syria’s eastern Deir Ezzor province.

A Syrian security source told local radio that investigations are ongoing with the detainees to determine what they were planning. He revealed that they were collecting information and smuggling weapons in the area.

Assistant defense minister for the eastern region Sipan Hamo held Iraqi authorities fully and directly responsible for the attack on Hasakeh.

In a post on the X platform, he called on Baghdad to take the necessary measures to prevent a similar attack from taking place in the future.

The attack reflects the Iraqi authorities’ “inability” to impose control over their territories and failure “to prevent them from being used to launch attacks that threaten Syria’s security and safety,” he added.

Border with Lebanon

On the Syrian-Lebanese border, sources close to the Damascus government spoke of signs of an internal Lebanese escalation that is a “source of alarm for Syria.”

The sources told Asharq Al-Awsat: “It will be difficult for Syria to steer clear of any possible internal unrest in Lebanon. It will work on preventing any threat to Syria’s security.”

Hezbollah leaders had warned Lebanese authorities in recent days that the Iran-backed party would adopt a different approach towards them when the war is over.

Hezbollah has been critical of the government for banning its military operations, calling for its disarmament, calling for negotiations with Israel and recently for expelling the Iranian ambassador to Beirut.

Syrian Defense Ministry sources told Asharq Al-Awsat said Damascus was weighing three options. The first favors waiting for the end of the war before acting in Syria’s interests; the second believes in striking Hezbollah during the war because it is hostile to the Syrian people and its illegal weapons are tied to Iran and so, their presence is a threat to Lebanon and Syria; the third calls for coordination with Arab and regional parties, led by Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Türkiye, before any intervention can happen.

The unrest along the borders with Lebanon and Iraq will prompt Damascus to increase its coordination with those countries to prevent the smuggling of weapons and drugs and dry up the sources of support for Hezbollah and Iran-backed militias.

Military expert Abdul Jabbar al-Oqaidi told Asharq Al-Awsat that the possibility of Syria joining the conflict through intervening in Lebanon “is a very great challenge” and will have dire consequences for the security of the region and Syria that Iran can exploit.

Perhaps Iran is trying to lure Syria into the conflict “given that Tehran has been impatiently waiting for a moment to unleash its fury on the new Syria that expelled its forces, which marked the beginning of the end of the Iranian expansionist project in the region,” he added.

Al-Oqaidi said, however, it would be wise for Syria to stay out of the war. It should limit its role to securing borders and security coordination with the relevant parties.

He predicted that Syria would stay on the side and avoid becoming involved in a conflict that does not benefit it.

The Iranian and Zionist projects only have ill intentions towards the region and Syria, he warned.

The Defense Ministry sources noted the Lebanese government’s recent decision to ban Hezbollah’s military and security operations, saying it was a positive sign.

The Syrian state will “strike with force any attempt by the party to cross the border. At the same time, it is avoiding escalation and assuring Lebanese parties,” they added, underlining the importance of stability in Syria and Lebanon and the need to avert sectarian wars.