With Russian Backing, Syrian Regime Forces Inch Closer to Israel Border

A screengrab of the meeting between Syrian intelligence chief Husam Louka and Russian officers in Tafas.
A screengrab of the meeting between Syrian intelligence chief Husam Louka and Russian officers in Tafas.
TT

With Russian Backing, Syrian Regime Forces Inch Closer to Israel Border

A screengrab of the meeting between Syrian intelligence chief Husam Louka and Russian officers in Tafas.
A screengrab of the meeting between Syrian intelligence chief Husam Louka and Russian officers in Tafas.

Syrian regime forces entered on Thursday the city of Tafas in western Daraa in Syria’s south, bringing them closer to the border with Israel.

The move is part of a “settlement” sponsored by Russian officers deployed at the Hmeimim base in Syria. The deal was struck between the Fourth Armored Division, led by president Bashar Assad’s brother Maher, and opposition factions.

Witnesses told the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights that regime forces entered some neighborhoods of Tafas on Thursday in line with the Russian agreement.

A video of the meeting, held in Tafas, showed Russian officers and head of Syrian general intelligence Husam Louka. One officer urged the residents of Tafas to “cooperate with the police and state” to ensure that life returns to normal. Louka, for his part, hailed the residents for “welcoming the Syrian Arab army.”

The agreement, struck overnight on Monday, calls for allowing regime and Fourth Armored Division forces to search houses and farms in and around Tafas, starting Tuesday. The operation would be overseen by the locals to ensure that no violations are committed against civilians.

It also called for resuming work at government buildings and institutions that are affiliated with the regime and releasing 58 prisoners held in regime jails. Former opposition fighters, in turn, are required to withdraw from “government” headquarters in the region. Warplanes soon took to the air over the region in a message to the former fighters.

Separately, local sources revealed that investigations are underway with people who were arrested on suspicion of drugs smuggling.

They were detained by the Russian-backed Fifth Corps amid a spike in drugs smuggling in the southern region.

The Eighth Division of the corps announced that suspects were being interrogated over their knowledge of a smuggling network that is affiliated with members in Jordan and other countries.

The division has been cracking down on the phenomenon, uncovering drugs stored at warehouses and farms located near the border and arresting people for their possession of drugs.

In most cases, the smugglers are affiliated with security sides, such as the Fourth Armored Division and intelligence branches. The regime has been pressuring for the release of some detainees.

Preliminary investigations with the detainees revealed that the Lebanese Hezbollah party, an ally of the regime, is the main source of the drugs, said the division. The drugs are brought in from the Hezbollah-controlled al-Qalamoun region and then sent to Daraa, Damascus and Sweida.



Israel Pounds Southern Lebanon and Beirut Outskirts, Killing Five Medics

Fire and smoke erupt from a building just after an Israeli airstrike in Beirut's southern Chiyah neighborhood on November 22, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. (AFP)
Fire and smoke erupt from a building just after an Israeli airstrike in Beirut's southern Chiyah neighborhood on November 22, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. (AFP)
TT

Israel Pounds Southern Lebanon and Beirut Outskirts, Killing Five Medics

Fire and smoke erupt from a building just after an Israeli airstrike in Beirut's southern Chiyah neighborhood on November 22, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. (AFP)
Fire and smoke erupt from a building just after an Israeli airstrike in Beirut's southern Chiyah neighborhood on November 22, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. (AFP)

Israeli forces pounded southern Lebanon and the outskirts of the capital Beirut on Friday, killing at least five medics, and ground troops clashed with Hezbollah fighters in the south.

Israel has pushed on with its intense military campaign against the Iran-backed armed group Hezbollah, tempering hopes that efforts by a US envoy will lead to an imminent ceasefire.

US mediator Amos Hochstein said this week in Beirut that a truce was "within our grasp". He travelled on to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz before returning to Washington, the news outlet Axios said.

His trip was aimed at ending more than a year of hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah along Lebanon's southern border, which escalated when Israel ramped up its strikes in late September and sent ground troops into Lebanon on Oct. 1.

Israeli troops have fought Hezbollah in a strip of towns along the border and this week pushed deeper to the edges of Khiyam, a town some six km (four miles) from the border.

Hezbollah said it had fired rockets at Israeli troops east of Khiyam at least four times on Friday. Lebanese security sources told Reuters Israeli troops had also advanced in a string of villages to the west. They said Israel was most likely trying to isolate Khiyam before attacking the town.

Four Italian soldiers were lightly injured after two rockets exploded at a UNIFIL peacekeeping force base in southern Lebanon, a spokesperson for UNIFIL said on Friday.

Italian sources said an investigation was under way. Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani told Italian media that Hezbollah might be responsible for the attack.

Israeli strikes on two other villages in southern Lebanon killed five medics from a rescue force affiliated with Hezbollah, the Lebanese health ministry said.

The more than 3,500 people killed by Israeli strikes over the last year include more than 200 medics, the health ministry said.

EVACUATION WARNINGS AND STRIKES

Israel says its aim is to secure the return home of tens of thousands of people evacuated from Israel's north because of rocket attacks by Hezbollah, which began firing across the border in support of Hamas at the start of the war in Gaza in October 2023.

Israel also mounted more strikes on Beirut's southern suburbs, a once densely populated stronghold of Hezbollah.

Abeer Darwich, a resident of a building that was hit in Beirut southern suburbs on Friday, had to leave her apartment immediately after an evacuation warning from Israel's military.

She stood watching while an Israeli strike pounded the high rise building into dust.

"Do you know that most of the apartments' owners took credit to buy those houses? Life savings are gone, memories and safety ... which Israel decided to steal from us," Darwich said .

Evacuation orders were issued on X for several buildings in the area on Friday. Reuters footage showed one of the strikes appearing to pierce the center of a multi-storey building, which toppled in a cloud of smoke.