‘Secret Channel’ between US, Russia in Vienna on Syria: Military Understandings, Political Disappointments

In this July 16, 2018, file photo, then US President Donald Trump, left, and Russian President Vladimir Putin meet at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki, Finland. (AP)
In this July 16, 2018, file photo, then US President Donald Trump, left, and Russian President Vladimir Putin meet at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki, Finland. (AP)
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‘Secret Channel’ between US, Russia in Vienna on Syria: Military Understandings, Political Disappointments

In this July 16, 2018, file photo, then US President Donald Trump, left, and Russian President Vladimir Putin meet at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki, Finland. (AP)
In this July 16, 2018, file photo, then US President Donald Trump, left, and Russian President Vladimir Putin meet at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki, Finland. (AP)

The United States only gave Russia four- or five-minutes advance warning before it carried out raids against Iranian positions on the Syrian-Iraqi border on February 26. In the past, this interval was longer, extending to hours before Washington struck locations in Syria in April 2017 and 2018.

A new chapter in relations between Washington and Moscow began with the election of Joe Biden as president. He openly declared it during his inauguration: “American leadership must meet this new moment of advancing authoritarianism, including the growing ambitions of China to rival the United States and the determination of Russia to damage and disrupt our democracy.

“I made it clear to President Putin, in a manner very different from my predecessor, that the days of the United States rolling over in the face of Russia’s aggressive actions (…) are over,” he added.

Biden was referring to meetings over the years between American and Russian officials, starting with former US President Donald Trump, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his successive American counterparts: Hillary Clinton, John Kerry, Rex Tillerson and Mike Pompeo. Meetings between military leaders took place as part of the “Vienna path” where undeclared negotiations were held between the two sides, notably between former Russian official in charge of the Syrian file Sergey Vershinin and ex-US envoy to Syria James Jeffrey in 2019 and 2020.

Asharq Al-Awsat is publishing on Sunday the summary of the rocky official and unofficial negotiations that have been held between the US and Russia in recent years:

Since the term of Barack Obama, the United States was constantly hounded by the “Iraq predicament.” It invaded the country under dubious claims over weapons of mass destruction. It embarked on an adventure in Iraq, inheriting its problems and tragedies and failing to “spread democracy” in the Middle East. Another American misstep took place in Libya.

The errors in Iraq and Libya continue to torment the US as it addresses the conflict in Syria. Added to the equation is the Obama team’s “obsession” with the Iranian nuclear file, failure to address Tehran’s regional expansion and hesitation to use force after the Ghouta massacres in August 2013 and to agree to proposals to set up a safe zone. Obama was then approached by Putin – following the chemical attacks – with a perfect offer and the US and Russia consequently reached an agreement related to the nuclear program in September 2013.

Prior to that, Lavrov, Clinton and others were focused on the Geneva declaration of June 2013. The agreement had called for the formation of a transitional governing body that would exercise full executive powers, but Washington and Moscow eventually disagreed on how to implement it. In May 2013, Lavrov and Kerry agreed to speed up the political process to implement the Geneva declaration and they tasked former envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, who had assumed his duties in 2012, to hold the Geneva 1 conference in Montreux in early 2014.

Kerry and Lavrov agreed to get rid of Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal in September 2013. The implementation of the deal would coincide with Syrian presidential elections in 2014. The agreement was underlined in UN Security Council 2118 and was reached during a critical time of the conflict: ISIS was expanding its influence, the Free Syrian Army was suffering losses and the US was maintaining a regionally-backed secret program to support the armament of the Syrian opposition in Jordan and Turkey. Iran’s support could not save the regime’s losses, which were dealt heavy blows in spring 2015 with the losses of Idlib and the Daraa countryside. At that point, it was only controlling 15 percent of Syrian territories.

In mid-2015, Iran, which had dedicated all of its means to support the regime, turned for help from the Russian army as Putin was awaiting the right moment to pounce on his “prey”. And so it was. Russia intervened in Syria in September 2015, extending its reach in the Middle East. Soon after, Russia would become the “sole representative” of the political process, paving the way for the launch of the “Vienna political process”. That process saw the participation of all parties involved in the conflict and led to the drafting of resolution 2254 in late 2015.

Through the resolution, Russia received a number of “concessions” and made several “breakthroughs”: it shifted the political authority from the transitional body to “governance” due in part to the “convoluted wording” of then UN envoy Stefan de Mistura; it expanded the representation of the Syrian opposition to include the Cairo and Moscow platforms, not just the negotiations committee; and it introduced the notion of “combating terrorism”, which formed the basis for the widescale military operations against the “moderate opposition” even though terrorist groups had been identified.

By 2016, beleaguered Syria had been worn down by strikes and displacement. Kerry was still eager to reach “understandings” with Lavrov, reaching a ceasefire deal after marathon negotiations. The agreement included many thorny points, such as delivering aid to besieged eastern Aleppo, forming a joint cell between the American and Russian armies that would oversee the ceasefire, exchange maps and intelligence ahead of launching an assault against the al-Nusra Front and coordinating efforts in the war against ISIS. Significantly absent was a mechanism to oversee the implementation. Consequently, the strikes and battles continued. By the end of 2016 the most prominent agreement was now one struck between Moscow and Ankara that saw the abandonment of eastern Aleppo in exchange for Turkey’s infiltration into northern Syria.

Damascus’ recapture of Aleppo was another turning point in the conflict. Moscow, Ankara and Tehran would then begin to play a more prominent role and this was no more evident than during the launch of the Astana process in early 2017. The guarantors, as they would come to be known, would be in control of “des-escalation” zones in Damascus’ Ghouta, the Homs countryside, Idlib and Daraa and their surrounding regions. This course offered room to maneuver in recapturing vast territories from the opposition that was coming under constant sieges and strikes. Russia was able to conceal this military aspect behind political and humanitarian statements.

Collision avoidance
America’s attention was focused on the region east of the Euphrates River, where it was carrying out international coalition strikes against ISIS, and Syria’s southwest by the Israeli and Jordanian borders. Washington sought “treatments” to both regions. It held declared meetings between its secretary of state and Lavrov or undisclosed ones that were often held in Vienna, and sometimes in New York and Geneva. These meetings formed the basis for the greater understandings that would be reached between them over Syria. Among these agreements was one on collision avoidance, reached in mid-2017.

In July 2017, Trump and Putin would declare a ceasefire between the Syrian government and opposition forces. Prior to the agreement, Trump had halted all CIA financing of the opposition, which was interpreted as an implicit acquiescence to allow Russia to maintain an upper hand in Syria.

In May 2017, American forces struck Iranian factions at the al-Tanf base. In February 2018, they struck Russian Wagner mercenaries in eastern Syria. Military contacts between Washington and Moscow at the time were aimed at averting any escalation in line with the collision avoidance deal. That same channel would be used by the Americans ahead of their strike on February 26.

Moreover, the agreement on southern Syria, reached in mid-2018, was the product of the Vienna path. The deal called for the return of regime forces to the Daraa countryside in return for expelling Iranian militias and resumption of the work of the United Nations Disengagement Observer Force in the Golan Heights.

Then Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs David Satterfield, former Special Presidential Envoy for the Global Coalition to Counter ISIS Brett McGurk and various Russian officials were part of the Vienna talks.

In 2019, Trump ordered the withdrawal of American forces from the Syrian border with Turkey, giving Ankara the green light to infiltrate Tal Abyad and Ras al-Ain in October late that year. Many changes were also introduced to the deployment of forces east of the Euphrates. This prompted further military agreements between the concerned parties. The US eventually deployed its Bradley Fighting Vehicles to protect oilfields and avert any Russian provocations. In December 2019, Russian and American military commanders met in Switzerland to prevent any clashes between their forces during operations in Syria.

Letdown
Changes in the American approach towards Syria were made after Jeffrey and his successor Joel Rayburn took over. These changes included a shift in politics and the anti-ISIS coalition. Both sides resumed the unofficial negotiations in Vienna. This time around, talks tackled political and humanitarian issues based on a “step-by-step” approach or “a lot in exchange for a lot and a few in exchange for a lot”.

During one session between Jeffrey and Vershinin in Vienna in mid-2019, the Americans, for the first time, offered written proposals on freezing sanctions, providing aid to regime regions, financing the mine removal process in Syria and convincing Jordan to provide southern Syria with electricity. In exchange, they demanded the adoption of an international resolution on cross-border humanitarian aid, the activation of the political process and formation of the Constitutional Committee, which indeed happened in October 2019. It also demanded the implementation of the agreement on southern Syria and commitment to the 2013 agreement between Kerry and Lavrov on Syria’s chemical weapons.

This 2019 meeting was a precursor to a meeting between Putin and Trump on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Japan later that June.

Eventually, both sides would be let down. The Vienna path would end in late 2019 as the economy in Syria took a plunge and violations of the Idlib truce took place in 2020. The Russians appeared eager to resume this path and two meetings were held between Jeffrey and Vershinin in Vienna in July 2020 and Geneva in August 2020. Moscow had pushed for the resumption of the Vienna path after Lavrov’s visit to Washington in late 2019 ended in disappointment after he failed to persuade the Americans to abandon the Caesar Act and end Damascus’ isolation.

During the July talks, it was clear that the Russian delegation was aware of how severe the economic crisis was and it was disappointed that the Caesar Act had taken effect. It was also upset with Washington’s obstruction of its attempts to persuade several Arab and western countries to normalize ties with Damascus.

In August, the Americans were informed of Russia’s rejection of the “step-by-step” approach on Syria. Moscow also believed that the Constitutional Committee would continue to work for years and that it did not need a timeframe to reach its desired results.

The Russians believe that the Syrian presidential elections in mid-2021 are an opportunity for Arab and western countries to recognize Bashar Assad’s legitimacy.

The US has, meanwhile, maintained its agenda by keeping its military presence east of the Euphrates to “deter” Russia and Iran, proposing initiatives to the Kurds to organize their ranks, maintaining the anti-ISISI international coalition and issuing new sanctions, according to the Caesar Act, to increase Damascus’ isolation.

The Vienna path is unlikely to convene again before the Syrian elections. Trump is no longer in office and Syria does not appear to be a priority for Biden. He has yet to name an envoy to the war-torn country, but he has named figures from the Obama administration. McGurk has returned and is playing a central role in reviewing the Syria policy, raising questions as to whether the focus will lie on American interests, such as fighting ISIS, catering to Israel’s concerns and expelling Iran, or whether focus will turn to the political path, implementation of resolution 2254 and addressing the root causes of the crisis.



Ethiopia Builds Secret Camp to Train Sudan RSF Fighters 

Satellite imagery shows new construction and drone support infrastructure at Asosa airport in Benishangul-Gumuz, Ethiopia, January 28, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)
Satellite imagery shows new construction and drone support infrastructure at Asosa airport in Benishangul-Gumuz, Ethiopia, January 28, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)
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Ethiopia Builds Secret Camp to Train Sudan RSF Fighters 

Satellite imagery shows new construction and drone support infrastructure at Asosa airport in Benishangul-Gumuz, Ethiopia, January 28, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)
Satellite imagery shows new construction and drone support infrastructure at Asosa airport in Benishangul-Gumuz, Ethiopia, January 28, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)

Ethiopia is hosting a secret camp to train thousands of fighters for the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces in neighboring Sudan, Reuters reporting has found, in the latest sign that one of the world’s deadliest conflicts is sucking in regional powers from Africa and the Middle East.

The camp is the first direct evidence of Ethiopia’s involvement in Sudan’s civil war, marking a potentially dangerous development that provides the RSF a substantial supply of fresh soldiers as fighting escalates in Sudan’s south.

Eight sources, including a senior Ethiopian government official, said the United Arab Emirates financed the camp’s construction and provided military trainers and logistical support to the site, a view also shared in an internal note by Ethiopia’s security services and in a diplomatic cable, reviewed by Reuters.

The news agency could not independently verify UAE involvement in the project or the purpose of the camp. In response to a request for comment, the UAE foreign ministry said it was not a party to the conflict or “in any way” involved in the hostilities.

Reuters spoke to 15 sources familiar with the camp's construction and operations, including Ethiopian officials and diplomats, and analyzed satellite imagery of the area. Two Ethiopian intelligence officials and the satellite images provided information that corroborated details contained in the security memo and cable.

The location and scale of the camp and the detailed allegations of the UAE’s involvement have not been previously reported. The images show the extent of the new development, as recently as in the past few weeks, along with construction for a drone ground control station at a nearby airport.

Satellite imagery shows a camp with hundreds of tents in Benishangul-Gumuz, Ethiopia, January 22, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)

Activity picked up in October at the camp, which is located in the remote western region of Benishangul-Gumuz, near the border with Sudan, satellite images show.

Ethiopia’s government spokesperson, its army and the RSF did not respond to detailed requests for comment about the findings of this story.

On January 6, UAE and Ethiopia issued a joint statement that included a call for a ceasefire in Sudan, as well as celebrating ties they said served the defense of each other’s security.

The Sudanese Armed Forces did not respond to a request for comment.

As of early January, 4,300 RSF fighters were undergoing military training at the site and “their logistical and military supplies are being provided by the UAE,” the note by Ethiopia’s security services seen by Reuters read.

Sudan's army has previously accused the UAE of supplying the RSF with weapons, a claim UN experts and US lawmakers have found credible.

The camp’s recruits are mainly Ethiopians, but citizens from South Sudan and Sudan, including from the SPLM-N, a Sudanese rebel group that controls territory in Sudan’s neighboring Blue Nile state, are also present, six officials said.

Reuters was unable to independently establish who was at the camp or the terms or conditions of recruitment.

A senior leader of the SPLM-N, who declined to be named, denied his forces had a presence in Ethiopia.

The six officials said the recruits are expected to join the RSF battling Sudanese soldiers in Blue Nile, which has emerged as a front in the struggle for control of Sudan. Two of the officials said hundreds had already crossed in recent weeks to support the paramilitaries in Blue Nile.

The internal security note said General Getachew Gudina, the Chief of the Defense Intelligence Department of the Ethiopian National Defense Force, was responsible for setting up the camp. A senior Ethiopian government official as well as four diplomatic and security sources confirmed Getachew’s role in launching the project.

Getachew did not respond to a request for comment.

The camp was carved out of forested land in a district called Menge, about 32 km from the border and strategically located at the intersection of the two countries and South Sudan, according to the satellite imagery and the diplomatic cable.

The first sign of activity in the area began in April, with forest clearing and the construction of metal-roofed buildings in a small area to the north of what is now the area of the camp with tents, where work began in the second half of October.

Satellite imagery shows a forested area where, ten months later, a camp with hundreds of tents was built in Benishangul-Gumuz, Ethiopia, December 15, 2024. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)

The diplomatic cable, dated November, described the camp as having a capacity of up to 10,000 fighters, saying activity began in October with the arrival of dozens of Land Cruisers, heavy trucks, RSF units and UAE trainers. Reuters is not revealing the country that wrote the cable, to protect the source.

Two of the officials described seeing trucks with the logo of the Emirati logistics company Gorica Group heading through the town of Asosa and towards the camp in October. Gorica did not respond to a request for comment.

The news agency was able to match elements of the timeframe specified in the diplomatic cable with satellite imagery. Images from Airbus Defense and Space show that after the initial clearing work, tents began filling the area from early November. Multiple diggers are visible in the imagery.

An image taken by US space technology firm Vantor on November 24 shows more than 640 tents at the camp, approximately four meters square. Each tent could comfortably house four people with some individual equipment, so the camp could accommodate at least 2,500 people, according to an analysis of the satellite imagery by defense intelligence company Janes.

Janes said it could not confirm the site was military based on their analysis of the imagery.

New recruits were spotted travelling to the camp in mid-November, two senior military officials said.

Satellite imagery shows an area where trucks come and go at a camp in Benishangul-Gumuz, Ethiopia, January 22, 2026. (Vantor/Handout via Reuters)

On November 17, a column of 56 trucks packed with trainees rumbled through dirt roads of the remote region, the officials, who witnessed the convoys, told Reuters, with each truck holding between 50 and 60 fighters, the officials estimated.

Two days later, both officials saw another convoy of 70 trucks carrying soldiers driving in the same direction, they said.

The November 24 image shows at least 18 large trucks at the site. The vehicles’ size, shape and design match those of models frequently used by the Ethiopian military and its allies to transport soldiers, according to Reuters analysis.

Development continued in late January, the Vantor images show, including new clearing and digging in the riverbed just north of the main camp and dozens of shipping containers lined around the camp visible in a January 22 image. A senior Ethiopian government official said construction on the camp was ongoing but did not elaborate on future building plans.

Sudan’s civil war erupted in 2023 after a power struggle between the Sudanese army and the RSF ahead of a planned transition to civilian rule.


Gaza Girls Take Up Boxing to Heal War’s Scars

Palestinian girls and young women attend a boxing training session between displacement tents in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, on February 9, 2026. (AFP)
Palestinian girls and young women attend a boxing training session between displacement tents in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, on February 9, 2026. (AFP)
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Gaza Girls Take Up Boxing to Heal War’s Scars

Palestinian girls and young women attend a boxing training session between displacement tents in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, on February 9, 2026. (AFP)
Palestinian girls and young women attend a boxing training session between displacement tents in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, on February 9, 2026. (AFP)

In a makeshift boxing ring etched into the sand between the tens of displaced Palestinians in southern Gaza, a dozen young girls warmed up before delivering fierce blows at their coach's command.

Osama Ayub once ran a boxing club in Gaza City, in the north of the Palestinian territory, until it was destroyed in a strike along with his home during the war between Israel and Hamas.

After finding shelter in the southern city of Khan Younis, he opted to put his sporting skills at the service of displaced Gazans, crammed by the tens of thousands in tents and makeshift shelters.

"We decided to work inside the camp to offer the girls some psychological relief from the war", Ayub told AFP.

Behind him, some of the young athletes faced each other in the ring surrounded by cheering gymmates, while others trained on a punching bag.

"The girls have been affected by the war and the bombardments; some have lost their families or loved ones. They feel pain and want to release it, so they have found in boxing a way to express their emotions," said Ayub.

Ayub now runs these free training sessions for 45 boxers aged between 8 and 19 three times a week, with positive feedback from his students as well as from the community.

One of the youngsters, Ghazal Radwan, aged 14, hopes to become a champion and represent her country.

"I practice boxing to develop my character, release pent-up energy and to become a champion in the future, compete against world champions in other countries, and raise the Palestinian flag around the world", she told AFP.

- Call for aid -

One after the other, the girls trained with Ayub, shifting from right to left jabs, hooks and uppercuts at his command.

In war-devastated Gaza, where construction materials are scarce, Ayub had to improvise to build his small training facility.

"We brought wood and built a square boxing ring, but there are no mats or safety measures," he said.

He called on the international community to support the boxers and help them travel abroad to train, "to strengthen their confidence and offer them psychological support".

The strict blockade that Israel imposed on the Gaza Strip makes the reconstruction of sports facilities particularly complicated, as building materials are routinely rejected by Israeli officials.

The official Palestinian news agency Wafa reported in January that a shipment of artificial turf donated by China to Gaza's youth and sports council was not allowed in by Israel.

With medicine, food and fuel all in short supply, sports equipment comes much lower on the list of items entering the Palestinian territory.

Rimas, a 16-year-old boxer, said she and her friends continued "to practice boxing despite the war, the bombardments and the destruction".

"We, the girls who box, hope for your support, that you will bring us gloves and shoes. We train on sand and need mats and punching bags," she said in comments addressed to the international community.


Is Iran Pushing Houthis Toward Military Action Against Washington?

Houthis continue mobilization, fundraising, and declare combat readiness (AP) 
Houthis continue mobilization, fundraising, and declare combat readiness (AP) 
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Is Iran Pushing Houthis Toward Military Action Against Washington?

Houthis continue mobilization, fundraising, and declare combat readiness (AP) 
Houthis continue mobilization, fundraising, and declare combat readiness (AP) 

As US military movements intensify in the Middle East and the possibility of strikes on Iran looms, Yemen’s Houthi group has continued military preparations, mobilizing fighters and establishing new weapons sites.

The Houthi mobilization comes at a time when the group is widely viewed as one of Iran’s most important regional arms for retaliation.

Although the Iran-backed group has not issued any official statement declaring its position on a potential US attack on Iran, its leaders have warned Washington against any military action and against bearing full responsibility for any escalation and its consequences.

They have hinted that any response would be handled in accordance with the group’s senior leadership's assessment, after evaluating developments and potential repercussions.

Despite these signals, some interpret the Houthis’ stance as an attempt to avoid drawing the attention of the current US administration, led by President Donald Trump, to the need for preemptive action in anticipation of a potential Houthi response.

The Trump administration previously launched a military campaign against the group in the spring of last year, inflicting heavy losses.

Islam al-Mansi, an Egyptian researcher specializing in Iranian affairs, said Iran may avoid burning all its cards unless absolutely necessary, particularly given US threats to raise the level of escalation should any Iranian military proxies intervene or take part in a confrontation.

Iran did not resort to using its military proxies during its confrontation with Israel or during a limited US strike last summer because it did not perceive an existential threat, al-Mansi said.

That calculation could change in the anticipated confrontation, potentially prompting Houthi intervention, including targeting US allies, interests, and military forces, he told Asharq Al-Awsat.

Al-Mansi added that although Iran previously offered, within a negotiating framework, to abandon its regional proxies, including the Houthis, this makes it more likely that Tehran would use them in retaliation, noting that Iran created these groups to defend its territory from afar.

Many intelligence reports suggest that Iran’s Revolutionary Guard has discussed with the Houthis the activation of alternative support arenas in a potential US-Iran confrontation, including the use of cells and weapons not previously deployed.

Visible readiness

In recent days, Chinese media outlets cited an unnamed Houthi military commander as saying the group had raised its alert level and carried out inspections of missile launch platforms in several areas across Yemen, including the strategically important Red Sea region.

In this context, Yemeni political researcher Salah Ali Salah said the Houthis would participate in defending Iran against any US attacks, citing the group’s media rhetoric accompanying mass rallies, which openly supports Iran’s right to defend itself.

While this rhetoric maintains some ambiguity regarding Iran, it repeatedly invokes the war in Gaza and renews Houthi pledges to resume military escalation in defense of the besieged enclave’s population, Salah told Asharq Al-Awsat.

He noted that Iran would not have shared advanced and sophisticated military technologies with the Houthis without a high degree of trust in their ability to use them in Iran’s interest.

In recent months, following Israeli strikes on the unrecognized Houthi government and several of its leaders, hardline Houthi figures demonstrating strong loyalty to Iran have become more prominent.

On the ground, the group has established new military sites and moved equipment and weapons to new locations along and near the coast, alongside the potential use of security cells beyond Yemen’s borders.

Salah said that if the threat of a military strike on Iran escalates, the Iranian response could take a more advanced form, potentially including efforts to close strategic waterways, placing the Bab al-Mandab Strait within the Houthis’ target range.

Many observers have expressed concern that the Houthis may have transferred fighters and intelligence cells outside Yemen over recent years to target US and Western interests in the region.

Open options

After a ceasefire was declared in Gaza, the Houthis lost one of their key justifications for mobilizing fighters and collecting funds. The group has since faced growing public anger over its practices and worsening humanitarian conditions, responding with media messaging aimed at convincing audiences that the battle is not over and that further rounds lie ahead.

Alongside weekly rallies in areas under their control in support of Gaza, the Houthis have carried out attacks on front lines with Yemen’s internationally recognized government, particularly in Taiz province.

Some military experts describe these incidents as probing attacks, while others see them as attempts to divert attention from other activities.

In this context, Walid al-Abara, head of the Yemen and Gulf Studies Center, said the Houthis entered a critical phase after the Gaza war ended, having lost one of the main justifications for their attacks on Red Sea shipping.

As a result, they may seek to manufacture new pretexts, including claims of sanctions imposed against them, to maintain media momentum and their regional role.

Al-Abara told Asharq Al-Awsat that the group has two other options. The first is redirecting its activity inward to strengthen its military and economic leverage, either to impose its conditions in any future settlement or to consolidate power.

The second is yielding to international and regional pressure and entering a negotiation track, particularly if sanctions intensify or its economic and military capacity declines.

According to an assessment by the Yemen and Gulf Studies Center, widespread protests in Iran are increasingly pressuring the regime’s ability to manage its regional influence at the same pace as before, without dismantling its network of proxies.

This reality is pushing Tehran toward a more cautious approach, governed by domestic priorities and cost-benefit calculations, while maintaining a minimum level of external influence without broad escalation.

Within this framework, al-Abara said Iran is likely to maintain a controlled continuity in its relationship with the Houthis through selective support that ensures the group remains effective.

However, an expansion of protests or a direct military strike on Iran could open the door to a deeper Houthi repositioning, including broader political and security concessions in exchange for regional guarantees.