logo
US envoy Barrack warns it would be 'very bad decision' for Hezbollah to join Israel-Iran war

US envoy Barrack warns it would be 'very bad decision' for Hezbollah to join Israel-Iran war

The National4 hours ago

US envoy has warned it would be a 'very, very, very bad decision' for Hezbollah to join the Israel-Iran war in support of its patron Tehran.
Mr Barrack, who is the US special envoy for Syria and ambassador to Turkey, made the comments during a visit to Beirut to meet senior Lebanese politicians, after he was asked what might happen if Hezbollah intervenes in the regional conflict.
'I can say on behalf of President [Donald] Trump, which he has been very clear in expressing as has Special Envoy [Steve] Witkoff: that would be a very, very, very bad decision,' he said.
Hezbollah, the Lebanese armed group and political party, has so far stayed out of the conflict. A Hezbollah official told The National on Wednesday that the group would stay out of it even if the US joins the air war.
Khamenei threat
On Thursday, Hezbollah condemned threats to the life of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei after Mr Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu openly discussed the possibility of assassinating Iran's supreme leader.
It said the 'mere utterance of such threats' was an insult to the Islamic world. 'Such an act is condemned and denounced in the strongest terms,' the group added.
However, its statement gave no suggestion of any change of its position on joining the conflict.
Lebanon is under pressure from the US, as well as domestically, to disarm Hezbollah.
During his meeting with Mr Barrack, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said efforts to bring all weapons under state control were under way in earnest and would intensify when the Israel-Iran war ended.
Once a formidable force and Iran's most powerful proxy, Hezbollah was severely weakened by Israel's war on Lebanon last year.
That conflict saw large sections of the group's weapons arsenal destroyed and most of its senior leadership wiped out.
A tenuous ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel was agreed last November, but Israeli forces have breached it more than 3,000 times.
Under the terms of the ceasefire deal, the Lebanese army is supposed to increase its presence in south Lebanon and ensure Hezbollah's fighters and infrastructure are dismantled in the area.
President Aoun said that task was being implemented, but added that Israel's continued occupation of five points of Lebanese territory was delaying the process.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Assad-era general asks Iran for funds to launch anti-Israel front in Syria
Assad-era general asks Iran for funds to launch anti-Israel front in Syria

The National

timean hour ago

  • The National

Assad-era general asks Iran for funds to launch anti-Israel front in Syria

A top military figure under Syria's former president Bashar Al Assad has contacted Tehran for financial support to rebuild Iran's influence in the country and strengthen its position as it comes under attack by Israel, a Syrian security official and former regime operatives has told The National. Iran is unlikely to divert resources from its current war effort but re-establishing a proxy presence in Syria could help it strategically in future, the sources said. The proposal to Tehran came from Ghiath Dalla, a brigadier general in elite Fourth Division, the praetorian guard of the former Iran-backed regime and the military unit closest to Iran, within the past 10 days. He is seeking hundreds of millions of dollars to create a militia drawn from former members of Mr Al Assad's now disbanded army that would fight Syria's new government led by Hayat Tahrir Al Sham and launch attacks on Israeli targets, the sources said. Mr Dalla, like most of his peers and the deposed president, is from the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, that dominated Sunni-majority Syria after a coup in 1963. He is among thousands of Alawite security personnel who have been on the run after the Assad regime fell to HTS-led rebel forces on December 8. Hundreds of Alawite officers, including Mr Dalla, are believed to have fled to Lebanon, where the Iran-backed Hezbollah group still wields significant influence, despite heavy losses in its war with Israel last year. 'He thinks that the [Israel-Iran] war is a golden chance to unite the Alawites and form a resistance force supported by Iran,' said the security official, who requested anonymity. Mr Dalla commanded the 42nd Armoured Brigade, regarded as among the best-equipped and best-trained formations in the former military. During the 2011-2024 civil war it operated in southern Syria, from where proxy groups backed by Iran launched rocket attacks on Israel in the final year of the Assad regime. 'The south has remnants of Iranian proxies whom Dalla can re-activate to resume the attacks,' the security official said. The official said the seizure by authorities of Grad rockets at a warehouse in the southern Deraa province this week, and a rocket attack on June 3 on an Israeli-occupied area of the Golan Heights by a splinter Hezbollah group, were signs of the potential for destabilisation that could be boosted by Iranian money. The official, who was a rebel fighting the regime in the northern province of Idlib, said the threat from Mr Dalla and his followers could not be underestimated. 'We were like him, hiding in the woods of Idlib, bereft of support. Once support [from Arab countries and Turkey] started coming, the game changed quickly,' he said, referring to the early years of the civil war. The official would not be drawn on whom Mr Dalla has been in contact with in Iran, citing ongoing intelligence gathering. The contact was made directly, not through Hezbollah, he said. A prominent figure in the Alawite community said Mr Dalla's obvious recruiting pool comprises at least 100,000 former Alawite security personnel. Many of them, associated with atrocities under the former regime, have sought refuge in the Alawite Mountains in Syria's coastal region, the ancestral homeland of the minority sect. However, widespread killings of Alawites in the area by pro-government forces have raised fears that the community might not survive under the new government led by HTS, a group once affiliated with Al Qaeda. An estimated 1,300 Alawite civilians were killed over two days in March after gunmen from the sect resisted, mainly through ambushes, an HTS-led incursion into the Alawite Mountains. The security operation was aimed at cleansing the coastal provinces of regime remnants, according to the government. Mr Dalla's loyalists, called the Military Council for the Liberation of Syria, led the ultimately failed resistance. The Alawite figure said Mr Dalla and his men, who are believed to number several thousand, still have an underground arsenal consisting mainly of light weapons but also significant amounts of medium weaponry, such anti-aircraft guns mounted on pickup trucks. 'He has been depleted cash-wise. But he is counting on the spreading fears that the Alawites have no home and the only path is resistance to create an Alawite province.' He said many Alawites still see a future in acquiescing to the new order and do not want to be associated with Iran, and added that he himself had declined requests for money by insurgents associated with Mr Dalla. A former Syrian intelligence operative, who is also Alawite, said Mr Dalla was trying to fill the leadership vacuum in the community created by the fall of Mr Al Assad, who fled to Moscow. Unlike the former regime, Mr Dalla is, in the main, not viewed as corrupt. He is also religious, unlike the secular Assads, which would make him more trustworthy to Iran. In contrast to the Assads, who have 'sacrificed the Alawites' for their own survival, Mr Dalla is a more ideological figure who believes that the only way for the community to survive is a long-term fight supported by Iran to a break away from Syria, the former intelligence operative said. Observers are split on how much advantage a Iran would have had in the war with Israel had the Assad regime survived the civil war. After Israeli attacks on Syrian security personnel and military infrastructure in 2023-2024, signs emerged that Mr Al Assad viewed his alliance with Iran as too costly for the regime. It remains an open question whether the former president was willing, or able, to stop Iran from using Syria as a conduit for weapons and supplies to Hezbollah, once considered Tehran's first line of defence against Israel. The Israeli military had already largely destroyed Syrian air defences by the time Mr Al Assad was ousted, giving its air force freedom to operate over Syria. However, Iran would be striking at Israel from short range with missiles and drones launched from Syria, instead of relying solely on long-distance attacks, had the former regime remained, a former member of Mr Al Assad's military said. 'It would have made a difference had they not lost Syria,' the source said. 'But nowhere near enough to gain a decisive advantage'.

UAE arrests wanted former Interpol official on fraud charges
UAE arrests wanted former Interpol official on fraud charges

Arabian Business

timean hour ago

  • Arabian Business

UAE arrests wanted former Interpol official on fraud charges

The UAE has arrested a former Interpol official wanted on suspicion of forgery, bribery and fraud charges. The Ministry of Interior in the UAE announced the arrest of Vitalie Pîrlog, a Moldovan national wanted in connection with a cross-border corruption case. Pîrlog, who had been the subject of an active Red Notice issued by INTERPOL at the request of French authorities, was apprehended on Sunday, 15th June 2025. UAE arrests Vitalie Pîrlog Previously, Pîrlog held the position of Chairman of the Commission for the Control of INTERPOL's Files (CCF). He now faces multiple charges, including forgery, bribery, facilitating bribery, and fraud. The arrest is part of a sustained and strategic collaboration with international law enforcement bodies, and regional and global organisations, reaffirming the UAE's steadfast commitment to the security and stability of the international community. In a statement, French officials praised the Ministry of Interior's professionalism and resolve, emphasising that such coordinated operations highlight the vital importance of international cooperation in tackling transnational crime.

Trump Family Trims Crypto Venture Stake
Trump Family Trims Crypto Venture Stake

Arabian Post

time2 hours ago

  • Arabian Post

Trump Family Trims Crypto Venture Stake

Donald Trump's family has quietly reduced its stake in World Liberty Financial, the crypto venture closely tied to his business and political interests, trimming its holding from 60 per cent to 40 per cent after June 8. The move marks a significant shift in the family's involvement in the blockchain sector. The reduction in equity coincided with a rising valuation for WLF, which earlier sold US$550 million in its native $WLFI tokens and has attracted substantial foreign investments, including a US$2 billion infusion from a UAE-backed entity using its stablecoin USD1 for Binance transactions. Analysts estimate the 20 per cent stake sale could have fetched around US$190 million, with approximately US$135 million potentially going to Donald Trump personally. World Liberty Financial, launched during the 2024 election cycle, has been a central hub of the Trump family's crypto strategy. The firm is a decentralised finance protocol that aggressively markets its connection to Trump, listing him as 'chief crypto advocate' and involving his sons in senior Web3 roles. Under its structure, Trump-linked entities capture 60 per cent of ownership and 75 per cent of token sale revenues. ADVERTISEMENT The firm's high-profile stablecoin USD1, launched in March 2025, swiftly became one of the top five global stablecoins, with a circulating supply exceeding US$2 billion by April. In May, the WLF stablecoin was chosen by an Abu Dhabi investment fund to purchase US$2 billion in Binance shares—a deal criticised for merging private enterprise and diplomatic influence. Critics have raised concerns that the share reduction, lacking any formal announcement, typifies the project's secretive nature and the family's opaque handling of crypto profits. DT Marks DEFI LLC—an entity renamed from DT Tower II LLC in 2024 and fully owned by Trump family—holds the WLF stake. Ownership structure has branched out to include Don Jr., Eric, and Barron Trump, each holding minor positions alongside their father within the DEFI entity. The lack of disclosure prompted scrutiny, and no official response has emerged from the Trump Organisation or WLF regarding the transaction. This latest move mirrors an earlier reduction in January 2025, when the family lowered its control from 75 per cent to 60 per cent. The pivot comes amid intensifying criticism of World Liberty's entanglement with state and family interests. Steve Witkoff—Trump's Middle East envoy—is linked to key dealmaking, with his son Zach co-founding WLF. Their collaborative efforts to court foreign investment from UAE and Pakistan have sparked concern over potential conflicts between diplomatic roles and private profit. Legal experts and ethicists question the blending of public service and personal gain in a venture that funnels income to the Trump and Witkoff families while concurrently lifting Trump administration deregulatory actions on digital assets. The share reduction enters a broader regulatory moment. The US Senate recently passed stablecoin legislation that may reshape legal frameworks around such assets, while Circle, a peer stablecoin issuer, saw its valuation spike—heightening investor comparisons with WLF. With global crypto markets in flux and the Trump-linked coin ecosystem expanding, the timing of the sale aligns with strategic portfolio recalibration. World Liberty continues to promote itself as the 'official' Trump crypto brand, prompting its legal team to issue cease-and-desist directives against unauthorised token imitations. There is no indication that the stake reduction signals a retreat; rather, it appears to be a calculated liquidity event amid heightened scrutiny and shifting valuations.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store