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What could derail Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace plan?

Analysis What could derail Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace plan?
A smoke plume billows following Israeli bombardment on the Gaza Strip. (AFP)
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Updated 01 October 2025

What could derail Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace plan?

What could derail Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace plan?
  • Experts warn vague timelines, weak enforcement, and political polarization make the peace plan fragile and vulnerable to collapse
  • Several analysts caution that, without a clear path to Palestinian sovereignty, the peace deal cannot deliver lasting regional stability

LONDON: Within hours of Monday’s press conference at the White House, it seemed the whole world was ready to enthusiastically embrace the 20-point peace plan proposed by US President Donald Trump and — with a certain degree of arm-twisted reluctance — accepted by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

But with the best will of the world, say observers, the survivability of the peace plan depends on neither Trump nor Netanyahu, but on two factions not consulted in its creation: Hamas and the right-wing members of Netanyahu’s government, who see any form of peace with Hamas as a betrayal and capitulation.

According to Qatar, the Hamas delegation in Doha has agreed to study the peace proposal “responsibly.” Meanwhile, the Palestinian Authority said it welcomed “the sincere and determined efforts of President Donald J Trump to end the war on Gaza and affirms its confidence in his ability to find a path toward peace.”




President Donald Trump shakes hands with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on Sept. 29, 2025. (AFP)

But if they so choose, the right-wing members of Netanyahu’s cabinet could force the collapse of his government, triggering an election in the new year and imperiling the peace process.

As part of Monday’s unfolding drama in Washington, Netanyahu picked up the phone while sitting in the Oval Office with Trump and apologized to Mohammed Al-Thani, Qatar’s prime minister, for Israel’s attack on Hamas delegates in Doha on Sept. 9.

It was patently obvious that Trump had insisted on the call, during which, according to a White House release, Netanyahu “expressed his deep regret that Israel’s missile strike against Hamas targets in Qatar unintentionally killed a Qatari serviceman.”

He “further expressed regret that, in targeting Hamas leadership during hostage negotiations, Israel violated Qatari sovereignty and affirmed that Israel will not conduct such an attack again in the future.”

The call was made just before Trump and Netanyahu emerged to present the peace plan to the world.

The fury with which Netanyahu’s far-right cabinet members, Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, greeted the Qatar apology was a sign of the trouble ahead for both the Israeli PM and the peace plan.

Smotrich said “a groveling apology to a state that supports and funds terror” was “a disgrace,” comparing it to former British prime minister Neville Chamberlain’s appeasement of the Nazis in 1938.

By Tuesday, at least one of the threads of the peace plan was already showing signs of unravelling.




People walk with humanitarian aid packagesin Nuseirat. (AFP)

Back home and now facing his domestic audience, Netanyahu was quick to make clear that he had not agreed to a Palestinian state and that “it is not written in the agreement either.” He added: “We are firmly opposed to a Palestinian state. President Trump also said this; he said he understands our position.”

But this is not entirely true — a juggling with the truth that will not have escaped the notice of those pressing for Palestinian statehood, from Hamas to the 159 of the 193 UN member states that now recognize a State of Palestine, and which bodes ill for the long-term health of the peace plan.

Point 9 of the plan envisages that “Gaza will be governed under the temporary transitional governance of a technocratic, apolitical Palestinian committee … with oversight and supervision by a new international transitional body, the Board of Peace.”

This, it adds, would remain in place until “such time as the Palestinian Authority has completed its reform program, as outlined in various proposals, including … the Saudi-French proposal, and can securely and effectively take back control of Gaza.”

The Saudi-French proposal, of course, envisages all such steps as leading ultimately to Palestinian statehood. Indeed, Clause 19 of the Trump plan itself identifies statehood as the ultimate goal.

“While Gaza re-development advances and when the (Palestinian Authority) reform program is faithfully carried out,” it reads, “the conditions may finally be in place for a credible pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood, which we recognize as the aspiration of the Palestinian people.”

In a joint statement, the foreign ministers of ֱ, Jordan, the UAE, Indonesia, Pakistan, Turkiye, Qatar and Egypt backed the peace plan, declaring their “readiness to engage positively and constructively with the US and the parties toward finalizing the agreement and ensuring its implementation, in a manner that ensures peace, security and stability for the peoples of the region.”

But, in the wake of a series of recent international recognitions of Palestinian statehood, the sticking point for the peace deal may yet be found in the unflinching demand by the eight countries in the same statement for “a just peace on the basis of the two-state solution, under which Gaza is fully integrated with the West Bank in a Palestinian state in accordance with international law as key to achieving regional stability and security.”




TonyBlair made no mention of his own proposed role, nor of the Palestinian ambition for statehood. (AFP)

Others are treading diplomatically around this central issue of such importance to the people of Palestine and the wider region.

Clause 9 of the plan proposes a role in the Trump-led “Board of Peace” for former British prime minister Tony Blair — a curious choice in a region in which many have not forgotten his government’s support for and role in the 2003 US invasion of Iraq.

On Monday, Blair praised “a bold and intelligent plan which, if agreed, can end the war, bring immediate relief to Gaza, the chance of a brighter and better future for its people, whilst ensuring Israel’s absolute and enduring security and the release of all hostages.”

But he made no mention of his own proposed role, nor of the Palestinian ambition for statehood.

Kelly Petillo, program manager for the Middle East and North Africa at the European Council on Foreign Relations, told Arab News the peace plan “reflects the most the international community can get from the US and Israel given where they are at this stage.”

She said: “It reflects an attempt to balance different considerations, such as appeasing the Israeli public and the army, who want an end to the war, to see hostages return, and the Israeli far-right components of the government, as well as Netanyahu himself, who want to continue it.

“It also reflects pressure on the US, both when it comes to voters who support an end of the war, and by Arab states, which were able to prevent annexation, replace (Trump’s initial) ‘Gaza Riviera’ plan with one that at least does not entail the forced displacement of Palestinians from Gaza and factors in some kind of Palestinian-led entity.”

Right now, there is a determination among leaders globally and regionally not to undermine the plan’s potential by quibbling over details at this stage.

“The plan has been welcomed by the EU, including France and Italy, and the UK, and of course by Arab and Muslim countries, such as Qatar, ֱ and others, who were directly invested in these conversations,” said Petillo.




Demonstrators gather around an installation ahead of an anti-government protest in Tel Aviv. (AFP)

“There is a clear emphasis among all these actors to make the overall plan work, without focusing too much on the details or single aspects. When asked about specific aspects, so far these actors have been deflecting journalists’ questions.

“The idea is that if you stay vague and do not attach any timeline or specific focus on single aspects or conditions, and rather focus on the big picture, you can at least end the war in the immediate period and secure some kind of breakthrough.

“But of course the problems will likely emerge soon after that.”

Brian Katulis, a senior fellow at the non-partisan Middle East Institute specializing in US foreign policy and national security, agrees.

“Like the Holy Roman Empire, which wasn’t very holy or Roman, this is not much of a plan and won’t likely lead to much of a peace,” he told Arab News.

“It’s a fig leaf for the current Israeli government to avoid where the consensus in the Middle East is — in favor of a two-state solution.

“It also lacks a principle of getting a commitment from the Israeli right and violent settlers for peaceful coexistence.”

For Burcu Ozcelik, a senior research fellow for Middle East security at the UK-based Royal United Services Institute, the plan constitutes the most comprehensive peace initiative yet, pulling together several ideas that have been floated in recent months.

“The main hope for success lies in the support this plan seems to have from regional Arab countries and Turkiye,” she told Arab News. “It is not precisely what they may have wanted, but not all sides will get exactly what they want in such a complex and traumatic situation.”




Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip. (AFP)

Importantly, she added: “Any post-conflict plan for Gaza requires regional backing to be representative and effective. This cannot be seen as a US-Israel plan that is dictated from the top at the expense of Arab buy-in.

“The main sticking point is what Hamas will do now. Any rejection will be a failure of the Hamas leadership and a failure by Arab negotiators to sufficiently pressure Hamas to comply through a mix of incentives and sticks.

“Make no mistake: While this is an important milestone, it is by no means the end of the road. There is a great deal that needs to happen to disarm Hamas, build a fair and inclusive governance structure that speaks for the Palestinian people, and to ensure Israeli withdrawal from Gaza. But this is a start, and it looks like the best and last option Hamas may have.”

The problem with the plan, said Sir John Jenkins, the former British ambassador to ֱ, Syria and Libya, “is that it’s a technocratic answer to a prior and more fundamental political question: Is a Palestinian state desirable?

“That has always had two very different answers from Israelis and from Palestinians,” he told Arab News. “Why is it going to be different this time, especially since opinion on both sides is so polarized and both Hamas and the Israeli religious right have every incentive to block it? So how does a non-Palestinian international authority make it so?”

Technocracy, he added, “tries to take the politics out of policy.”




A demonstrator holds a sign referencing the Israeli prime minister's speech at the UN. (AFP)

He added: “But that age is over. This plan is effectively the 2002 Road Map rebooted and re-engineered for Gaza. The Road Map foundered on politics. My guess is that this will too.”

Arab leaders, said Sanam Vakil, director of the Middle East and North Africa Program at Chatham House, “have cautiously supported the Trump-Blair plan because it promises a ceasefire, a hostages-for-prisoners exchange, and a pathway to stabilize Gaza — all important steps seen as preferable to endless war and humanitarian collapse.”

“Yet while the war must end, the plan faces a number of challenges,” she told Arab News. “It excludes Hamas and gives only a vague role to the Palestinian Authority, leaving key Palestinian actors sidelined.”

Furthermore, “it grants Israel broad security leeway without binding obligations, reinforcing power asymmetries; it risks being viewed as foreign trusteeship that undermines Palestinian sovereignty; and it underestimates the immense humanitarian and reconstruction needs.”

Ultimately, she believes, “its lack of clear timelines, enforcement mechanisms, and integration with the broader Palestinian question makes its implementation fragile.”

Hasan Al-Hhasan, senior fellow for Middle East policy at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in Bahrain, expects that “the Arab and Muslim-majority countries who have so far lent their support for Trump’s effort will begin to temper their enthusiasm as Netanyahu’s and Trump’s true intentions — which take little stock of these countries’ interests and preferences — become more apparent.”

The reality, he told Arab News, was that “Trump’s 20-point plan for Gaza is a poisoned chalice. While appearing to offer hope for a ceasefire and surge in aid, it surreptitiously provides Israel with a blank check for waging forever war in Gaza with US and Arab approval.

“It includes no timebound commitment on Israel to halt military operations, allows Israel to maintain a permanent military presence in Gaza, and enshrines the separation of Gaza from the West Bank and Palestinian Authority.”

It was, he added, “not difficult to see why Arab and Muslim-majority countries are backing what they might consider to be their best shot at obtaining a ceasefire, given their desire to put an end to the bloodshed in Gaza and secure a surge in aid.”




Israeli army self-propelled artillery Howitzers are stationed at a position along the border with the Gaza Strip. (AFP)

But the risk is that “they’re signing on to a plan whose provisions are so vague that it is already being interpreted by Netanyahu as allowing for open-ended Israeli military presence in Gaza with the freedom to wage a forever war under the pretext of fighting Hamas.

“For instance, while the Arab-Muslim statement mentions a ‘full Israeli withdrawal,’ the plan allows Israel to maintain a permanent military presence in a ‘security perimeter’ in Gaza. Netanyahu has since clearly stated, moreover, that he has no intention of withdrawing the Israeli military from Gaza.”

Furthermore, “the plan, which offers Hamas a safe exit in exchange for surrendering, disarming, and immediately turning over the hostages, is designed to be rejected by the group.

“Netanyahu is hoping to depict Hamas as the obstructionist party and defuse mounting international pressure on Israel through a plan that imposes no real constraint on his ability to continue waging war in Gaza unabated.”

Yossi Mekelberg, senior consulting fellow with the Middle East and North Africa Programme at Chatham House, is likewise skeptical.




The survivability of the peace plan depends on neither Trump nor Netanyahu, observers say. (AFP)

“The plan requires the consent of both sides,” told Arab News. “Trump assumes that Israel accepted it as it is, and I am not so sure Netanyahu, under immense pressure from his coalition partners, won’t try to derail it.

“If Hamas refuses it, it won’t be the only one to face the consequences, but ordinary Gazan people too, and this surely can’t be right.

“Moreover, some of the 20 points are actionable and could be implemented immediately, but others are more aspirational, lack details and would require the world’s attention for years. Is this possible?”


Hamas wants to amend disarmament clause in Trump plan: source close to group leaders

Updated 14 sec ago

Hamas wants to amend disarmament clause in Trump plan: source close to group leaders

Hamas wants to amend disarmament clause in Trump plan: source close to group leaders
DOHA: Hamas officials want amendments to clauses on disarmament in US President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace plan, a Palestinian source close to the group’s leadership told AFP on Wednesday.
Hamas negotiators held discussions Tuesday with Turkish, Egyptian and Qatari officials in Doha, the source said, requesting anonymity to discuss sensitive matters and adding the group needed “two or three days at most” to respond.
Trump’s plan, backed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, calls for a ceasefire, the release of hostages by Hamas within 72 hours, the group’s disarmament and a gradual Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.
But the Palestinian source said: “Hamas wants to amend some of the clauses such as the one on disarmament and the expulsion of Hamas and faction cadres.”
Hamas leaders also want “international guarantees for a full Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip” and guarantees of no assassinations inside or outside the territory.
Six people were killed in an Israeli attack on Hamas officials meeting in Doha to discuss an earlier ceasefire proposal last month.
The source said Hamas was also in touch with “other regional and Arab parties,” without giving details.
Another source familiar with the negotiations told AFP that the Palestinian group was split over Trump’s plan.
“So far there are two views within Hamas: the first supports unconditional approval because the important thing is to have a ceasefire guaranteed by Trump, provided that the mediators guarantee Israel’s implementation of the plan,” the source said, also requesting anonymity for the same reasons.
But others have “great reservations on important clauses,” the source added.
“They reject disarmament and for any Palestinian citizen to be taken away from Gaza,” the source said.
“They support a conditional agreement with clarifications that take into account demands by Hamas and the resistance factions so that the occupation of the Gaza Strip is not legitimized while the resistance is criminalized,” they added.
“Some factions reject the plan, but discussions are ongoing and things will become clearer soon.”

Gaza flotilla says vessels approached its boats as it nears Israeli blockade

Gaza flotilla says vessels approached its boats as it nears Israeli blockade
Updated 01 October 2025

Gaza flotilla says vessels approached its boats as it nears Israeli blockade

Gaza flotilla says vessels approached its boats as it nears Israeli blockade
  • The Global Sumud Flotilla consists of more than 40 civilian boats carrying about 500 people
  • The flotilla has raised international tensions in recent days since it was attacked by drones

The international flotilla trying to deliver aid to Gaza said unidentified vessels approached some of its boats before dawn on Wednesday as it got closer to a zone where Israel has imposed a naval blockade on the war-stricken strip.
The Global Sumud Flotilla consists of more than 40 civilian boats carrying about 500 people, among them parliamentarians, lawyers and activists including Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg. It aims to break Israel’s blockade of the Palestinian enclave.
“We continue to sail to Gaza approaching the 120 nautical mile mark, near the area where previous flotillas have been intercepted or attacked,” organizers said in a statement.
‘Dangerous maneuvers’, drone attack
It was not clear who operated the vessels that approached the flotilla. A video post on the flotilla’s Instagram page said that an Israeli military vessel approached its boats, carrying out “dangerous maneuvers” and damaging its communication systems before departing.
The post showed the silhouetted outline of what appeared to be a military vessel with a gun turret near the civilian vessels. Reuters could not immediately verify the footage.
Israeli officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The flotilla has raised international tensions in recent days since it was attacked by drones, which dropped stun grenades and itching powder on the vessels, causing damage but no injuries.
Israel did not comment on that attack, but has said it will use any means to prevent the boats from reaching Gaza, arguing that its naval blockade is legal as it battles Hamas militants in the coastal enclave.
Italy and Spain have deployed naval ships to accompany the flotilla to help with any rescue or humanitarian needs but have said they will not engage militarily.
Turkish drones are also following the boats. However, Italy said its navy would stop following the flotilla once it gets within 278km of Gaza.
Spain has told members of the flotilla that its maritime rescue vessel is within range to carry out rescue operations if necessary, but that it will not enter Israel’s exclusion zone as doing so would put the physical integrity of its crew and the flotilla at risk, a government source said.


Viral ‘adventure’ of Algerian teens crossing to Spain sparks debate on migration crisis

Viral ‘adventure’ of Algerian teens crossing to Spain sparks debate on migration crisis
Updated 01 October 2025

Viral ‘adventure’ of Algerian teens crossing to Spain sparks debate on migration crisis

Viral ‘adventure’ of Algerian teens crossing to Spain sparks debate on migration crisis
  • Resource-rich Algeria has Africa’s third-largest economy but many of its 47 million people wish to emigrate, and their motives are not restricted to poverty

TUNIS: Viral TikTok videos showing seven Algerians teenagers arriving by boat in Spain have sparked debate over rising youth migration in a country where half the population is estimated to be under 30.
The clips, originating in early September, show the teens cutting across the sea in a small recreational boat, with one video drawing 3.4 million views.
Another shows one of the boys, the youngest of whom was said to be just 14, patting the motor as a self-appointed captain shouted: “Spain!“
Many in Algeria have blamed their parents for allowing the trip, while others see an example of an issue long fueled by a lack of opportunities in the country and endemic corruption.
One of the teens, identifying himself on TikTok as “Ouais Belkif,” later went live on the app to field questions from viewers about their voyage.
He recommended using a maritime navigation app called Navionics Boating, saying it could be used offline once the charts were downloaded. “It works both on iPhone and Android,” he said.
He also recounted how they “stole the boat at night and set off” from La Perouse, a town at the eastern edge of the bay of Algiers, and how they stocked gasoline by filling a friend’s moped at a petrol station then secretly syphoning its tank in bottles for the trip.
Stolen boat, or rented? 
“Some wondered what we were up to, but we wouldn’t say anything,” Belkif said.
Yet a Spanish migrant-rescue NGO worker told AFP on condition of anonymity that their plans were not secret.
Their parents had contacted him in advance, he said, in case the teens went missing, adding that the boat theft claims were “a tall tale.”
“The boat was rented out by one of the boys’ father,” he said.
The teens were now at a juvenile center in the custody of Spanish immigration services, the NGO worker said.
None of the parents AFP reached out to agreed to be interviewed. A school teacher who allegedly taught three of the youths also declined to comment.
The youngest of the teens, whom they called “le petit” (the little one), was an aspiring football player on the municipal team, one local told AFP, also on condition of anonymity.
He said that after the boy tried out for Paradou AC — an Algiers club known for its youth academy — but was turned down, he “thought he would have a better chance of playing professionally in Spain.”
Algerian authorities rarely issue statements on irregular migration.
The Defense Ministry’s magazine El Djeich denounced reports as stemming from “malicious media agendas” seeking to “convey a false image of Algeria.”
It called the incident “an isolated act” that did not “reflect the reality of Algerian society,” citing “higher levels of irregular migration” in other countries.
But Europe’s border agency Frontex says irregular crossings on western Mediterranean routes have risen by 22 percent compared to last year, with departures from Algeria accounting for over 90 percent of the 11,791 crossings it detected on those routes this year.
‘Escape and adventure’ 
El Djeich said Algeria had “carried out major projects... for the benefit of ambitious young people who are offered vast future prospects.”
Resource-rich Algeria has Africa’s third-largest economy but many of its 47 million people wish to emigrate, and their motives are not restricted to poverty.
“It’s a mixed phenomenon driven by multiple factors like limited opportunities, political grievances and restricted mobility,” said Ahlam Chemlali, an EU migration researcher at Aalborg University in Copenhagen.
“People feel the changes that were promised never came,” she said.
Yet, “migration can also simply be about autonomy,” Chemlali added. “Younger people just want more of life. They sometimes want thrill, escape and adventure.”
Algerian sociologist Nacer Djabi said another factor was that “younger people now view borders differently.”
As they are “more connected” on social media, “they’re more globalized than older generations,” he said.
Djabi also spoke of political frustrations after Algeria’s quelled 2019 mass protests, saying that youths sought “more social freedoms” in the conservative country.
But he also noted that it was not just young men attempting the crossing, saying “government workers, families and lone girls are doing it, too.”
All seven teenagers were set to resume school this month.


Israel military says to block access to north Gaza for residents from south

Israel military says to block access to north Gaza for residents from south
Updated 01 October 2025

Israel military says to block access to north Gaza for residents from south

Israel military says to block access to north Gaza for residents from south
  • Israel military: ‘Al-Rashid Street will be closed to traffic from the southern sector area at 12:00 (0900 GMT)’

JERUSALEM: The Israeli military said it will close on Wednesday the last remaining route for residents of southern Gaza to access the north, as it presses its offensive on Gaza City.
“Al-Rashid Street will be closed to traffic from the southern sector area at 12:00 (0900 GMT),” the military’s Arabic-language spokesman Avichay Adraee said on X. “Movement southward will be allowed for those who were unable to evacuate Gaza City. At this stage, the (Israeli military) permits free movement southward without inspection.”


Druze seek Sweida autonomy and turn toward Israel, adding new twist to Syria’s tensions

Druze seek Sweida autonomy and turn toward Israel, adding new twist to Syria’s tensions
Updated 01 October 2025

Druze seek Sweida autonomy and turn toward Israel, adding new twist to Syria’s tensions

Druze seek Sweida autonomy and turn toward Israel, adding new twist to Syria’s tensions
  • Druze groups have set up a de facto military and governmental body in Sweida, similar to the Kurdish-led authorities in the country’s northeast
  • It is a major setback for Damascus struggling to exert its authority across the country following a 13 year civil war and win the support of minorities

BEIRUT: Syrian government fighters entered the city of Sweida over the summer in an apparent bid to assert control over the enclave of the Druze minority that for years had operated in semiautonomy.
It backfired. Sectarian attacks on Druze civilians during the ensuing fighting have hardened Sweida’s stance against the government, pushed it toward Israel, and led some in the minority sect to go as far as calling for secession.
Now Druze groups have set up a de facto military and governmental body in Sweida, similar to the Kurdish-led authorities in the country’s northeast. It is a major setback for Damascus struggling to exert its authority across the country following a 13-year civil war and win the support of minorities.
When former President Bashar Assad was brought down by Islamist-led insurgents in December, many Druze celebrated, welcoming a new era after over 50 years of autocratic rule. They were willing to give interim President Ahmad Al-Sharaa, a former Al-Qaeda-linked militant who promised a democratic and inclusive political transition, a chance.
Among them was Omar Alkontar, a 21-year-old biology student. Then his village outside the city of Sweida was burned to the ground in July’s clashes.
Now, he said, “The main idea is that we have to separate (from Damascus) to prevent another massacre.”
A de facto Druze administration
While many Druze were initially willing to work with the new authorities, a notable exception was Druze spiritual leader Sheikh Hikmat Al-Hijri, a divisive figure who had flip-flopped between support for Assad and anti-government protests and now opposed dealing with the new government.
In July, armed groups affiliated with Al-Hijri clashed with local Bedouin clans, spurring intervention by government forces who effectively sided with the Bedouins. Hundreds of civilians, mostly Druze, were killed, many by government fighters.
Videos surfaced online showing armed men killing Druze civilians kneeling in squares and shaving the mustaches off elderly men in an act of humiliation.
The sectarian violence changed the minds of many Druze about the new authorities — and about Al-Hijri, who has emerged as the dominant Druze figure in Syria. In August, he established a government-like body called the Supreme Legal Council.
Dozens of armed factions originally formed to counter drug gangs and Daesh group extremists have banded together under the National Guard. Critics say it includes former Assad loyalists and allied militias trafficking the amphetamine known as Captagon. It also includes former opponents of Al-Hijri, most notably the Men of Dignity, a prominent group that had endorsed cooperation with Damascus before the July violence.
“We urge all the honorable in the world … to stand with the Druze sect in southern Syria to declare a separate region that keeps us protected until the end of time,” Al-Hijri said in August, upon welcoming the Men of Dignity into the National Guard.
Al-Hijri did not respond to interview requests and it is unclear exactly what kind of system he envisions.
Many in Sweida want some form of autonomy in a federal system. A smaller group is calling for total partition. Local Druze figures that still back Al-Sharaa are now widely seen as traitors.
The attacks in Sweida sounded “strong alarm bells among the Druze” as well as other minority groups, said Mazen Ezzi, a Syrian researcher from Sweida now based in Paris.
“The Druze realized that to stay part of this new political status quo” under the new authorities “will be extremely difficult,” he said.
Israel seizes the moment
Most of the roughly 1 million Druze worldwide live in Syria, with the rest in Lebanon, Israel and the Golan Heights which Israel seized from Syria in 1967 and later annexed.
The Druze of Syria take pride in their historic involvement in revolts against Ottoman and French colonial rule to establish a secular, nationalist Syrian state.
Sheikh Mowafak Tarif, Israel’s Druze spiritual leader, was largely rejected by Druze leaders in Syria and Lebanon, who opposed Israel and supported the Palestinians.
But what happened in July has shaken about a century of Syrian Druze political history and driven many toward a formerly taboo ally.
When violence broke out in Sweida, Tarif called for Israeli military intervention to protect the Druze. Israel responded, launching strikes on Syrian government forces and on the Syrian Defense Ministry headquarters in Damascus. Syrian forces withdrew from Sweida.
Tarif told The Associated Press that he and Al-Hijri stay in touch “all the time,” organizing deliveries of aid to the besieged province.
Tarif also meets with senior Western politicians and diplomats and has called for a demilitarized southern Syria and establishment of a humanitarian corridor from Israel to deliver food and medical supplies to Sweida. Israeli officials have also pushed for a wider demilitarized zone in Syria’s south.
Al-Hijri has thanked Israel publicly on several occasions.
The impact on the ground is apparent.
When someone hoisted an Israeli flag in Sweida in March, residents quickly took it down. Now, in Karama Square, where people once gathered to celebrate Assad’s downfall, portraits of Al-Hijri and Tarif appear side by side at protests against Al-Sharaa. Most carry the Druze faith’s five-colored flag, but some also wave the Israeli flag.
It’s a sign of “a people who feel let down by their nationalism,” Ezzi said.
Alkontar, the biology student, doesn’t believe Israel’s motives are altruistic, but says its intervention was a lifeline for many in Sweida.
“It’s not necessarily a love for Israel. They felt safer after the strikes, which is very sad,” Alkontar said after a attending a protest in Karama Square. “You want the army of your own government to provide you with that security, not a foreign country.”
Damascus struggles to change course
Al-Sharaa has tried to appeal to the Druze community since the July fighting and warned that Israel is trying to exploit the tensions.
“Mistakes were made by all sides: the Druze community, the Bedouins, even the state itself,” he said in an interview with state television. “Everyone who committed wrongdoing, made mistakes, or violated people’s rights must be held accountable.”
The president then formed a fact-finding mission. Last month, Damascus alongside the United States and Jordan announced a road map to return displaced Druze and Bedouins, deliver aid to Sweida, and bring about reconciliation.
Both moves were widely dismissed in Sweida.
A Sweida resident, whose fiance and members of his family were killed by gunmen who raided their village, accused Damascus of “covering the attacks up.” She spoke on condition of anonymity after previously receiving threats for speaking out.
“When the (Assad) regime fell, we were the first people to celebrate … but I think Ahmad Al-Sharaa is a murderous extremist,” she said.
Alkontar is disheartened as he walks past another long breadline in a small bakery near ruined buildings after visiting a displaced family.
He believes some Druze “could have a change of heart ... if the government changes its ways and extends a hand.” But many will not.
“As long as this government in Damascus stays, people will lean toward partition or independence,” Alkontar said. “I prefer we stay part of Syria without this ruling group. But as long as they’re there, I don’t know if even federalism will keep us safe.”