Biden Administration Remains Silent over Talks on American Hostages in Syria

President Joe Biden speaks in Warren, Michigan, US, on September 9, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis
President Joe Biden speaks in Warren, Michigan, US, on September 9, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis
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Biden Administration Remains Silent over Talks on American Hostages in Syria

President Joe Biden speaks in Warren, Michigan, US, on September 9, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis
President Joe Biden speaks in Warren, Michigan, US, on September 9, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis

A number of US officials have remained silent on negotiations with the Syrian regime to release American hostages arrested in Syria.

Commenting on a report published by The Associated Press on a visit carried out by two US officials last summer to Syria, a source from the Syrian opposition said that this might bring the issue back to the surface.

Yet, a diplomatic source from the opposition said that progress is unlikely at a time when American officials are publicly criticizing the Syrian regime.

Yet the trip was ultimately fruitless, with the Syrians raising a series of demands that would have fundamentally reshaped Washington’s policy toward Damascus, including the removal of sanctions, the withdrawal of troops from the country and the restoration of normal diplomatic ties.

Equally as problematic for the American negotiators: Syrian officials offered no meaningful information on the fate and whereabouts of American hostage Austin Tice and others.

“Success would have been bringing the Americans home and we never got there,” Kash Patel, who attended the meeting as a senior White House aide, said in his first public comments about the effort.

The White House acknowledged the meeting in October but said little about it.

The AP has also learned about the US attempts to build goodwill with Syria well before the talks took place, with Patel describing how an unidentified US ally in the region offered assistance with cancer treatment for the wife of President Bashar Assad.

The details shed light on the sensitive and often secretive efforts to free hostages held by the US adversaries, a process that yielded high-profile successes for former President Donald Trump but also dead ends. It’s unclear how aggressively the new Biden administration will advance the efforts to free Tice and other Americans held around the world, particularly when demands at a negotiating table clash with the White House’s broader foreign policy goals.

The August meeting in Damascus represented the highest-level talks in years between the US and the Assad government.



US Ambassador to Lebanon 'Very Happy' over Aoun's Election as President

People carry national flags as they hold a moment of silence marking the one-year anniversary of Beirut's port blast, near the site of the explosion in Beirut, Lebanon August 4, 2021. REUTERS/Emilie Madi Purchase Licensing Rights
People carry national flags as they hold a moment of silence marking the one-year anniversary of Beirut's port blast, near the site of the explosion in Beirut, Lebanon August 4, 2021. REUTERS/Emilie Madi Purchase Licensing Rights
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US Ambassador to Lebanon 'Very Happy' over Aoun's Election as President

People carry national flags as they hold a moment of silence marking the one-year anniversary of Beirut's port blast, near the site of the explosion in Beirut, Lebanon August 4, 2021. REUTERS/Emilie Madi Purchase Licensing Rights
People carry national flags as they hold a moment of silence marking the one-year anniversary of Beirut's port blast, near the site of the explosion in Beirut, Lebanon August 4, 2021. REUTERS/Emilie Madi Purchase Licensing Rights

US ambassador to Lebanon Lisa Johnson said she was "very happy" over Lebanese army commander Joseph Aoun's election as president on Thursday, ending a more than two-year vacuum in the post.

Johnson and other foreign envoys had attended Thursday's session at the Lebanese parliament in which Aoun was elected.

For its part, France's Foreign Ministry said on Thursday said the election of a new Lebanese president turns a new page for the country and must now be followed by the appointment of a new government capable of carrying out reforms.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Christophe Lemoine said that a new government will have carry out reforms necessary for Lebanon's economic recovery, stability, security and sovereignty, and added that France calls on all Lebanese political leaders and authorities to work towards those goals.