Iran in direct contact with groups in new Syrian leadership, Iranian official says

FILE PHOTO: An Iranian man reads a newspaper with a picture of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Tehran, Iran December 8, 2024. (Majid Asgaripour/West Asia News Agency via Reuters)
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Updated 09 December 2024
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Iran in direct contact with groups in new Syrian leadership, Iranian official says

DUBAI : Iran has opened a direct line of communication with rebels in Syria’s new leadership since its ally Bashar Assad was ousted, a senior Iranian official told Reuters on Monday, in an attempt to “prevent a hostile trajectory” between the countries. The lightning advance of a militia alliance spearheaded by Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham, a former Al-Qaeda affiliate, marked one of the biggest turning points for the Middle East in generations. Assad’s fall as president removed a bastion from which Iran and Russia exercised influence across the Arab world. Hours after Assad’s fall, Iran said it expected relations with Damascus to continue based on the two countries’ “far-sighted and wise approach” and called for the establishment of an inclusive government representing all segments of Syrian society.
There is little doubt about Tehran’s concern about how the change of power in Damascus will affect Iran’s influence in Syria, the lynchpin of its regional clout.
But there is no panic, three Iranian officials told Reuters, as Tehran seeks diplomatic avenues to establish contact with people whom one of the officials called “those within Syria’s new ruling groups whose views are closer to Iran’s.”
“The main concern for Iran is whether Assad’s successor will push Syria away from Tehran’s orbit,” a second Iranian officials said. “That is a scenario Iran is keen to avoid.”
A hostile post-Assad Syria would deprive Lebanese armed group Hezbollah of its only land supply route and deny Iran its main access to the Mediterranean and the “front line” with Israel.
One of the senior officials said Iran’s clerical rulers, facing the loss of an important ally in Damascus and the return of Donald Trump to the white House in January, were open to engaging with Syria’s new leaders.
“This engagement is key to stabilize ties and avoiding further regional tensions,” the official said.

Contacts with Syrian Leadership

Tehran has established contacts with two groups inside the new leadership and the level of interaction will be assessed in the coming days after a meeting at Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, a top security body, he said.
Two of the Iranian officials said Tehran was wary of Trump using Assad’s removal as leverage to intensify economic and political pressure on Iran, “either to force concessions or to destabilize the Islamic Republic.”
After pulling the United States out of Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with six major powers in 2018, then-President Trump pursued a “maximum pressure” policy that led to extreme economic hardship and exacerbated public discontent in Iran. Trump is staffing his planned administration with hawks on Iran.
In 2020, Trump, as president, ordered a drone strike that killed Qassem Soleimani, Iran’s most powerful military commander and mastermind of overseas attacks on US interests and those of its allies.
“Iran is now only left with two options: fall back and draw a defensive line in Iraq or seek a deal with Trump,” said Ali Vaez of the International Crisis Group.
The fall of Assad exposed Tehran’s dwindling strategic leverage in the region, exacerbated by Israel’s military offensives against Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza. Iran’s clerical rulers spent billions of dollars propping up Assad during the civil war that erupted in Syria in 2011 and deployed its Revolutionary Guards to Syria to keep its ally in power and maintain Tehran’s “Axis of Resistance” to Israel and US influence in the Middle East.
Assad’s fall removes a critical link in Iran’s regional resistance chain that served as a crucial transit route for Tehran to supply arms and fund its proxies and particularly Hezbollah.


Leila Shahid, the face of Palestinians in Europe, dies in France

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Leila Shahid, the face of Palestinians in Europe, dies in France

  • Shahid was born in Lebanon in 1949 to an affluent family originally from Jerusalem
  • In 1989, she became the first woman to serve as a PLO representative abroad, posted to Ireland

PARIS: Leila Shahid, who died Wednesday at the age of 76, was for more than twenty years the face and voice in Europe for the Palestinians.
Posted in Paris from 1993 to 2006, Shahid had also served as a representative to Ireland, the Netherlands, Denmark and later the EU from 2006 to 2015.
Faced with the war in the Gaza Strip, sparked by Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel, she consistently called on the international community to work for a ceasefire.
But in an interview with France Inter two days after the October 7 attack, she called herself “pessimistic” about the Palestinian future and warned against Israeli annexation of “what remains of the Palestinian territories.”
Known for her distinctive voice and rolled Rs, Shahid was born in Lebanon in 1949 to an affluent family originally from Jerusalem and grew up steeped in a lineage marked by politics and displacement.
Her family had been expelled from British-mandate Palestine for “nationalist activity.”
Her great-grandfather, who served as mayor of Jerusalem from 1904 to 1909, was among the many relatives to shape her worldview.
But the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, in which Israel defeated several of its Arab neighbors and captured East Jerusalem and the West Bank, Gaza, most of Syria’s Golan Heights and Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, was a turning point.
“The defeat of 1967 was a major awakening for me,” she told AFP in 1993.
At 18, Shahid abandoned what she later described as a “protected” bourgeois youth in Beirut and went on to join the Palestine Liberation Organization.
Two years later, she met Yasser Arafat at a student congress in Jordan, forging an enduring loyalty to the Palestinian leader.
From 1969 to 1974, she worked in Palestinian refugee camps, particularly Shatila, where she witnessed first-hand the struggle against the Lebanese army for social self-governance.
“Those were the best years of my life,” she later said.
After earning a master’s degree in anthropology from the American University of Beirut, she began a doctoral thesis on the social structure of Palestinian refugee camps, which took her to the EPHE research institute in Paris.

- ‘Perpetual heartbreak’ -

However, the siege of the Tel Al-Zaatar camp by Lebanese Phalangists in 1976 drew Shahid back to politics.
Elected president of the Union of Palestinian Students in France, she worked closely with Azzedine Kalak, the PLO’s representative in Paris, and developed a close friendship with French author Jean Genet.
She then spent about 10 years in Morocco after her 1977 marriage to Moroccan writer and academic Mohamed Berrada.
But she found herself back in France after the outbreak of the first Palestinian intifada, or uprising, against Israeli rule in 1987.
Upon her return, she worked with Elias Sanbar and other exiled Palestinian intellectuals while also cultivating ties with Israeli peace activists.
In 1989, Shahid became the first woman to serve as a PLO representative abroad, posted to Ireland.
It was, she told AFP in 1993, a “recognition of the role women have played in the Palestinian cause for 40 years.”
She described living in “a perpetual heartbreak between my belonging to my people, the need to fight alongside them in my own way, and the desire for a normal and peaceful life.”
Shahid died at her home in southern France after several years of severe illness, according to Le Monde, with police treating suicide as the most likely cause.