Erdogan Proceeding with Efforts to Normalize Ties with Assad, Prioritizes Refugee Return

Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar speaks during a news conference in Istanbul, Türkiye August 20, 2022. (Reuters)
Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar speaks during a news conference in Istanbul, Türkiye August 20, 2022. (Reuters)
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Erdogan Proceeding with Efforts to Normalize Ties with Assad, Prioritizes Refugee Return

Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar speaks during a news conference in Istanbul, Türkiye August 20, 2022. (Reuters)
Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar speaks during a news conference in Istanbul, Türkiye August 20, 2022. (Reuters)

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is ready to meet with head of the Syrian regime Bashar al-Assad if the appropriate conditions are met.  

Sources indicated that the recent meeting in Moscow between the defense ministers and heads of the intelligence services of Türkiye, Syria and Russia discussed a roadmap for normalizing relations between Ankara and Damascus.  

Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar said if the appropriate conditions were met, high-level officials would also meet, and there may be another at the presidential level.  

In an interview with the Turkish NTV news channel, Akar added that the Moscow meeting was "positive" and addressed Russian and Syrian views. 

"We expressed our security concerns regarding terrorist organizations in Syria."  

Akar stressed that combating terrorism was the main goal, reiterating that Türkiye has no issues with any ethnic, religious, or sectarian group.  

Meanwhile, Haberturk reported that the Moscow meeting tackled four main issues. 

They addressed the safe and dignified return of refugees, the return of property to their owners upon arrival, ensuring fair trials, and completing constitutional amendments to hold free and fair elections, it quoted sources as saying. 

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu stressed the need to ensure a safe return of Syrian refugees, noting that the Syrian regime wanted them to go back. 

Cavusoglu also stressed the importance of communicating with the Syrian regime to achieve lasting peace and stability. 

Speaking from the foreign ministry, he added it was also essential to involve the international community and the United Nations in the process of returning the refugees back to their homeland.  

The minister said the next step in the roadmap would be a meeting of the foreign ministers, but the timing has yet to be determined. 

Reactions 

The United States emphasized that it does not support any efforts to normalize relations with the Assad regime given its brutal and repressive history against the Syrian people.  

The regional spokesman for the US State Department, Samuel Werberg, said Washington was aware of the ongoing talks between the regime, Türkiye, and Russia and that US policy has not changed in this regard.  

Werberg stressed that the US continues to work with the United Nations and the international community to achieve a political solution in Syria under UN Security Council resolution 2254. 

Cavusoglu indicated that some countries welcomed the rapprochement between Türkiye and the Assad regime, while some supporters of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), such as the US and European countries, do not welcome dialogue between Ankara and Damascus.  

Meanwhile, the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) called for confronting what it described as the "trilateral alliance" and taking it down. 

The Salvation Government in northwestern Syria rejected and denounced the meeting, stressing that Türkiye’s conferences and consultations with the Damascus regime threatened the lives of millions of Syrian people.  

The government said the Turkish talks with the regime aimed to achieve progress in the refugee file ahead of upcoming elections in Türkiye and to pressure the SDF. 



Larijani Set to Arrive in Beirut amid Wave of Lebanese Objections against Iranian Meddling

Lebanese parliament Speaker Nabih Berri (R) and Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council Ali Larijani in Beirut in November. (AP)
Lebanese parliament Speaker Nabih Berri (R) and Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council Ali Larijani in Beirut in November. (AP)
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Larijani Set to Arrive in Beirut amid Wave of Lebanese Objections against Iranian Meddling

Lebanese parliament Speaker Nabih Berri (R) and Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council Ali Larijani in Beirut in November. (AP)
Lebanese parliament Speaker Nabih Berri (R) and Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council Ali Larijani in Beirut in November. (AP)

Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council Ali Larijani is scheduled to arrive in Beirut on Wednesday amid a wave of objections by Lebanese officials over Tehran’s continued “meddling” in their country’s internal affairs.

Iranian officials recently rejected the Lebanese government’s decision last week to disarm Tehran-backed Hezbollah in what Lebanese officials viewed as foreign interference.

Larijani, flying in from Iraq, is set to meet with President Joseph Aoun, parliament Speaker Nabih Berri and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam.

No meeting has been scheduled with Foreign Minister Youssef Raggi, revealed sources from the Foreign Ministry.

They told Asharq Al-Awsat that Larijani did not ask for a meeting with Raggi and had he done so, his request would have been rejected in wake of the “unacceptable” statements by Iranian officials over the government’s disarmament decision.

Last week, Ali Akbar Velayati, a senior advisor to Iran's supreme leader, said the government’s move to disarm the group “will fail”.

“Iran rejects the disarmament of Hezbollah and it has long supported the Lebanese people and their resistance. It continues to do so today,” he added.

“This is not the first time that such ideas are floated in Lebanon, but they have failed and they will fail again,” he stressed. “The resistance [Hezbollah] will withstand these conspiracies.”

Raggi, a vocal critic of Iran’s meddling in Lebanon, was quick to condemn his remarks. “Some Iranian officials have gone too far in making suspicious comments about Lebanon’s internal decisions. We will not accept these Iranian practices,” he said.

“No party has the right to speak on behalf of the Lebanese people or claim to have authority over their sovereign decisions,” he stated.

It remains to be seen what Larijani’s visit holds, said sources close to the president. They told Asharq Al-Awsat that Aoun will likely repeat to his guest the “firm principled positions” he continues to uphold.

In February, Aoun met with an Iranian delegation, informing them that “Lebanon has grown weary of others waging their wars on its territory.”

Meanwhile, Lebanese officials have criticized Larijani’s visit, with some demanding that he be turned away.

Democratic Gathering MP Bilal Abdullah said of some foreign visitors: “They should give Lebanon a break.”

“We have had enough of others’ wars on our country,” he told local radio.

In an indirect reference to US envoy Tom Barrack’s visit to Lebanon next week, he hoped that he would urge Israel to stop its violations of Lebanese sovereignty and end its daily assassinations.

Democratic Gathering MP Akram Chehayeb condemned in a post on X the visits by Iranian officials and “their decision to again meddle in Lebanon after everything that has happened.”

He dismissed their remarks as “delusions” and “unrealistic”, adding: “They don’t know when to quit.”

On Monday, Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea said the government “must seriously consider calling the Arab League and Gulf Cooperation Council to hold emergency meetings to address the Iranian threat against Lebanon.”

In a statement, he also suggested that it file a complaint to the United Nations Security Council over “Iran’s threats to Lebanon.”

Also on Monday, Kataeb leader MP Sami Gemayel expressed his party's “categorical rejection” of remarks by Iranian officials “because they are a violation of Lebanon’s sovereignty and its state decisions.”

Hezbollah, meanwhile, continues to defy the government by refusing to disarm.

Party MP Ihab Hamadeh said on Tuesday: “No one should worry about the resistance and its future. Even if they try to remove the legitimacy of the weapons, these weapons have preserved Lebanon. The resistance is the party that gives legitimacy to others and doesn’t need legitimacy from anyone.”

“Along with the army, we have formed the golden equation, while the equation of the army, people and resistance will remain,” he vowed.