Syria and Lebanon could join the Abraham Accords in a fragile moment, balancing military escalation with unprecedented US-mediated diplomacy.
Browsing: Syria
Israel’s gas could solve Syria’s power crisis via Jordan, but faces political and financial obstacles despite the urgent need.
Syria’s offensive against Kurdish forces triggers a fragile deal, raising risks of ISIS resurgence and shifting regional power dynamics.
U.S. policy must prevent Syria’s fragmentation to diminish Russia’s strategic influence and stabilize the region as a neutral buffer.
A fragile Syrian ceasefire aims to integrate Kurdish areas but risks collapse over autonomy, threatening renewed ethnic conflict.
Russia’s renewed security cooperation with Syria’s new government risks restricting Israel’s military freedom of action and complicates regional dynamics.
Syria remains a key front in the U.S.-Russia rivalry; preventing its fragmentation is essential to blocking Moscow’s path back to regional influence.
Iraq must secure its Syrian border and balance U.S.-Iran pressures as Assad’s fall reshapes regional alliances and threats.
Iraq can secure oil access, labor, and border stability by partnering with Syria, countering militia opposition and seizing post-Assad economic opportunities.
Turkey sees dual wins with the SDF’s disintegration and Israel’s non-intervention, strengthening Ankara’s influence as Syria’s Kurds lose autonomy and Damascus reasserts control.
