Syrian foreign minister visits Beirut after Trump comments about taking on Hezbollah

Photo by JOSEPH EID / AFP Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad al-Shaibani looks on during a meeting with Lebanon's parliament speaker at the speaker's residence in Beirut, Lebanon. (AFP)
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Syrian foreign minister visits Beirut after Trump comments about taking on Hezbollah

  • Trump said last month he had spoken to Sharaa about combating Hezbollah, after criticizing Israel for killing too many civilians in Lebanon and not getting the job done

BEIRUT: Syria’s foreign minister traveled to Beirut ‌on Thursday to meet Lebanese government leaders, in his first visit there since US President Donald Trump raised the possibility of Syrian forces combating Iran-backed Hezbollah ​in Lebanon.
Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa, however, has previously denied what he called rumors about any Syrian presence entering Lebanon.
The Syrian minister, Asaad Al-Shibani, met Lebanese President Joseph Aoun on his first stop, and then headed for a meeting with the parliament speaker, Nabih Berri, an ally of Hezbollah.
Syria’s new government under former Al-Qaeda commander Sharaa has emerged as a US ally since his forces ‌toppled President Bashar Assad ‌in 2024, and has largely stayed ​out ‌of the ⁠regional war ​between ⁠the US and Israel, and Iran.
Trump said last month he had spoken to Sharaa about combating Hezbollah, after criticizing Israel — which is at war with the group — for killing too many civilians in Lebanon and not getting the job done. “I suggested to Israel to let Syria take care of Hezbollah, because to be honest with you, ⁠I think they do a better job of doing ‌it,” Trump said.

DAMASCUS WARY OF ‌BEING DRAWN INTO WAR
Reuters reported in March ​that the US had encouraged ‌Syria to consider sending forces into eastern Lebanon to help ‌disarm Hezbollah, but that Damascus was reluctant to embark on such a mission for fear of being sucked into the war in the Middle East and inflaming sectarian tensions in Syria and Lebanon.
Sharaa has since Trump’s comments ‌said that “the rumors circulating about Syria entering Lebanon are completely unfounded,” according to Syrian state media.
The former rebels ⁠and commanders ⁠that now run Syria fought against Hezbollah for years while it deployed to Syria to support former President Bashar Assad.
Now that they are in power, they are having to calibrate alliances and military action carefully in efforts to maintain relative stability in Syria, which is still recovering from 14 years of civil war.
Syria long dominated Lebanon under the Assad family, sending in forces in 1976 during the 1975-90 civil war and controlling Lebanon’s post-war politics until its withdrawal in 2005.
Any Syrian intervention could fuel sectarian tensions in both ​Syria and Lebanon, home ​to a mosaic of sects including Sunni Muslims, Shiite Muslims, Christians and Druze.

PRESIDENT AOUN COMMITTED TO ESTABLISHING FRATERNAL RELATIONS 

After a meeting with the Syrian foreign minister Aoun said he is keen on both countries' stability and is reassured by the coordination between Beirut and Damascus, especially in the areas of border control and preventing the smuggling of persons and weapons. Aoun also said the Syrian president assured him multiple times that Syria's role “will not be like its role in the past” and that a “new page has been opened”. The president received an official invite to visit Damascus soon.