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US envoy urges Syria’s Sharaa to revise policy or risk fragmentation

US Ambassador to Turkey and Special Envoy for Syria Thomas Barrack attends an interview with Reuters in Beirut, Lebanon July 22, 2025. (Reuters)
US Ambassador to Turkey and Special Envoy for Syria Thomas Barrack attends an interview with Reuters in Beirut, Lebanon July 22, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 23 July 2025

US envoy urges Syria’s Sharaa to revise policy or risk fragmentation

US Ambassador to Turkey and Special Envoy for Syria Thomas Barrack attends an interview with Reuters in Beirut, Lebanon July 22.
  • Sharaa has promised to protect members of Syria’s many sectarian minorities
  • Barrack said the new government should consider being “more inclusive quicker” when it comes to integrating minorities into the ruling structure

BEIRUT: A US envoy has urged Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa to recalibrate his policies and embrace a more inclusive approach after a new round of sectarian bloodshed last week, or risk losing international support and fragmenting the country.
US envoy to Syria Thomas Barrack said he had advised Sharaa in private discussions to revisit elements of the pre-war army structure, scale back Islamist indoctrination and seek regional security assistance.
In an interview in Beirut, Barrack told Reuters that without swift change, Sharaa risks losing the momentum that once propelled him to power.
Sharaa should say: “I’m going to adapt quickly, because if I don’t adapt quickly, I’m going to lose the energy of the universe that was behind me,” Barrack said. He said Sharaa could “grow up as a president and say, ‘the right thing for me to do is not to follow my theme, which isn’t working so well.’“
Sharaa, leader of a former Al-Qaeda offshoot, came to power in Syria after fighters he led brought down President Bashar Assad in December last year after more than 13 years of civil war.
Though his own fighters have roots in Sunni Muslim militancy, Sharaa has promised to protect members of Syria’s many sectarian minorities. But that pledge has been challenged, first by mass killings of members of Assad’s Alawite sect in March, and now by the latest violence in the southwest.
Hundreds of people have been reported killed in clashes in the southern province of Sweida between Druze fighters, Sunni Bedouin tribes and Sharaa’s own forces. Israel intervened with airstrikes to prevent what it said was mass killing of Druze by government forces.
Barrack said the new government should consider being “more inclusive quicker” when it comes to integrating minorities into the ruling structure.
But he also pushed back against reports that Syrian security forces were responsible for violations against Druze civilians. He suggested that Daesh group militants may have been disguised in government uniforms and that social media videos are easily doctored and therefore unreliable.
“The Syrian troops haven’t gone into the city. These atrocities that are happening are not happening by the Syrian regime troops. They’re not even in the city because they agreed with Israel that they would not go in,” he said.
“No successor” to Sharaa
The US helped broker a ceasefire last week that brought an end to the fighting, which erupted between Bedouin tribal fighters and Druze factions on July 13.
Barrack said the stakes in Syria are dangerously high, with no succession plan or viable alternative to the country’s new government.
“With this Syrian regime, there is no plan B. If this Syrian regime fails, somebody is trying to instigate it to fail,” Barrack said. “For what purpose? There’s no successor.”
Asked if Syria could follow the dire scenarios of Libya and Afghanistan, he said: “Yes, or even worse.”
The US has said it did not support Israel’s airstrikes on Syria. Barrack said the strikes had added to the “confusion” in Syria.
Israel says Syria’s new rulers are dangerous militants, and has vowed to keep government troops out of the southwest and protect Syria’s Druze minority in the area, encouraged by calls from Israel’s own Druze community.
Barrack said his message to Israel is to have dialogue to alleviate their concerns about Syria’s new Sunni leaders and that the US could play the role of an “honest intermediary” to help resolve any concerns.
He said Sharaa had signaled from the beginning of his rule that Israel was not his enemy and that he could normalize ties in due time.
He said the United States was not dictating what the political format of Syria should be, other than stability, unity, fairness and inclusion.
“If they end up with a federalist government, that’s their determination. And the answer to the question is, everybody may now need to adapt.”


Jordan’s tourism minister chairs UNWTO committee meeting in Riyadh

Jordan’s tourism minister chairs UNWTO committee meeting in Riyadh
Updated 40 sec ago

Jordan’s tourism minister chairs UNWTO committee meeting in Riyadh

Jordan’s tourism minister chairs UNWTO committee meeting in Riyadh
  • Meeting held on sidelines of 26th UNWTO General Assembly, in the presence of Saudi Minister of Tourism Ahmed Al-Khateeb

RIYADH: Jordan’s Minister of Tourism and Antiquities Imad Hijazeen chaired a session of the Committee on Associate Members of the UN World Tourism Organisation in Riyadh on Saturday.

The meeting was held on the sidelines of the 26th UNWTO General Assembly.

During the meeting, Hijazeen highlighted the committee’s role in promoting stronger public-private partnerships and enhancing the private sector’s contribution to tourism development, the Jordan News Agency reported.

He emphasized that such cooperation was vital to support industry growth, empower local communities, and improve workforce efficiency within the sector.

On the sidelines of the assembly, Hijazeen met with the newly elected UNWTO Secretary-General Sheikha Al-Nowais, congratulating her on her historic election as the first woman and second Arab to hold the position, following former Secretary-General Taleb Rifai.

The two officials discussed ways to strengthen cooperation and partnership between Jordan and the UNWTO, with Hijazeen extending an invitation for Al-Nowais to visit Jordan to explore its leading tourism experiences.

In the presence of Jordan’s ambassador to ֱ, Hijazeen also held meetings with the tourism ministers of Syria, Kuwait, Tunisia, Greece, and Venezuela.

The discussions focused on enhancing collaboration through experience sharing, joint tourism marketing, improved air connectivity, and the implementation of initiatives aimed at boosting tourism activity among the participating countries.