logo
Israel strikes military tanks in southern Syria as fighting intensifies

Israel strikes military tanks in southern Syria as fighting intensifies

New York Post3 days ago
BUSRA AL-HARIR, Syria — Israel's army said Monday it has struck military tanks in southern Syria, where government forces and Bedouin tribes clashed with Druze militias.
Dozens of people have been killed in the fighting between local militias and clans in Syria's Sweida province.
Government security forces that were sent to restore order Monday also clashed with local armed groups.
4 Syrian security forces firing a weapon from a pickup truck.
AFP via Getty Images
Syria's Interior Ministry has said more than 30 people have died and nearly 100 others have been injured.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a U.K.-based war monitor, reported at least 89 dead, including two children, two women and 14 members of the security forces.
The clashes in Syria initially broke out between armed groups from the Druze and Sunni Bedouin clans, the observatory said, with some members of the government security forces 'actively participating' in support of the Bedouins.
Interior Ministry spokesperson Noureddine al-Baba said government forces entered Sweida in the early morning to restore order.
'Some clashes occurred with outlawed armed groups, but our forces are doing their best to prevent any civilian casualties,' he told the state-run Al-Ikhbariya TV.
The observatory said the clashes started after a series of kidnappings between both groups, which began when members of a Bedouin tribe in the area set up a checkpoint where they attacked and robbed a young Druze man.
4 Interior Ministry spokesperson Noureddine al-Baba said government forces entered Sweida in the early morning to restore order.
AFP via Getty Images
Rami Abdurrahman, who heads the observatory, said the conflict started with the kidnapping and robbery of a Druze vegetable seller, leading to tit-for-tat attacks and kidnappings.
Syria's defense and interior ministries were deploying personnel to the area to attempt to restore order.
The Interior Ministry described the situation as a dangerous escalation that 'comes in the absence of the relevant official institutions, which has led to an exacerbation of the state of chaos, the deterioration of the security situation, and the inability of the local community to contain the situation despite repeated calls for calm.'
U.N. Deputy Special Envoy for Syria Najat Rochdi expressed 'deep concern' over the violence and urged the government and local groups to 'take immediate steps to protect civilians, restore calm, and prevent incitement.'
She said in a statement the clashes underscored the 'urgent need for genuine inclusion, trust-building, and meaningful dialogue to advance a credible and inclusive political transition in Syria.'
4 Syria's defense and interior ministries were deploying personnel to the area to attempt to restore order.
Getty Images
In Israel, Druze are seen as a loyal minority and often serve in the armed forces.
Syria's Foreign Ministry called for 'all countries and organizations to respect the authority of the Syrian Arab Republic and refrain from supporting any separatist rebel movements.' In a statement, it called for Syrians to 'cease acts of violence, surrender illegal weapons and thwart those seeking to dismantle the Syrian social fabric and sow discord and division.'
Israel sees Druze as a loyal minority
Israel has previously intervened in Syria in defense of the Druze religious minority. In May, Israeli forces struck a site near the presidential palace in Damascus, in what was seen as a warning to Syrian interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa. The strike came after dozens were killed in fighting between pro-government gunmen and Druze fighters earlier this year in the town of Sahnaya and the Druze-majority Damascus suburb of Jaramana.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz said in a statement at the time that Israel 'will not allow the deployment of (Syrian government) forces south of Damascus or any threat to the Druze community.'
Over half of the roughly 1 million Druze worldwide live in Syria. Most other Druze live in Lebanon and Israel, including in the Golan Heights, which Israel captured from Syria in the 1967 Mideast War and annexed in 1981.
While many Druze in Syria have said they do not want Israel to intervene on their behalf, factions from the Druze minority have also been suspicious of the new authorities in Damascus after former President Bashar Assad fled the country in December during a rebel offensive led by Sunni Islamist insurgent groups. On several occasions, Druze groups have clashed with security forces from the new government or allied factions.
4 Over half of the roughly 1 million Druze worldwide live in Syria.
AFP via Getty Images
A group led by Sheikh Hikmat Al-Hijri, a Druze spiritual leader who has been opposed to the new government in Damascus, on Monday issued a statement calling for 'international protection' and accused government forces and General Security agency of 'supporting takfiri gangs' – using a term for extremist Sunni terrorists.
'Like unwrapping an onion'
The Druze religious sect is a minority group that began as a 10th-century offshoot of Ismailism, a branch of Shiite Islam. In Syria, they largely live in the southern Sweida province and some suburbs of Damascus, mainly in Jaramana and Ashrafiyat Sahnaya to the south.
The Druze developed their own militias during the country's nearly 14-year civil war, during which they sometimes faced attacks by the Islamic State and other Islamist terror groups.
Every morning, the NY POSTcast offers a deep dive into the headlines with the Post's signature mix of politics, business, pop culture, true crime and everything in between. Subscribe here!
Israel has taken an aggressive stance toward Syria's new leaders since Assad's fall, saying it does not want Islamist terrorists near its borders.
Israeli forces earlier seized a U.N.-patrolled buffer zone on Syrian territory along the border with the Golan Heights and have launched hundreds of airstrikes on military sites in Syria.
The Trump administration has been pushing for the new Syrian government to move toward normalization with Israel.
Syrian officials have acknowledged holding indirect talks with Israel to attempt to defuse tensions, but have not responded to reports that the two sides have also held direct talks.
U.S. envoy to Syria Tom Barrack told The Associated Press last week that he believes normalizing ties will happen 'like unwrapping an onion, slowly.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Going to therapy while the world is on fire
Going to therapy while the world is on fire

Boston Globe

time28 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Going to therapy while the world is on fire

'I'm doing well,' I answer in a semireflexive way. The kids are thriving, summer is here, vacation is coming soon. Yet my answer does not capture the full picture. 'Well, I mean apart from the fact that terrible things are happening all around and that the world feels on the brink of collapse.' Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up A car ablaze in Sweida, Syria, following clashes between Bedouin and Druze factions on July 14. Getty Images/Getty Advertisement One of my patients doesn't wait for me to ask how he is doing as we start an early morning session. 'I can't do therapy today,' he says. I listen, curious. 'There's just too much dissonance. Not sure I can really go into the details of what's happening in my life when the world seems to be crumbling all around.' I've heard many versions of this expressed in therapy over the past several months, a hesitation about feeling entitled to a 50-minute therapy session. (I received consent from my patients to reference their stories anonymously.) 'Your life matters,' I say. 'Yes, big things are happening, but this doesn't mean your life doesn't have significance.' My words feel flimsy, perhaps because I'm only partially convinced of them myself. My patient knocks them down in the next three seconds. 'Yeah, well, you're a therapist, so of course you are going to say that.' Advertisement Sometimes I need a good little kick of radical honesty in a session to sharpen my focus. 'Many people are talking about this very question in therapy,' I say. I tell him that I'm thinking about this question, too. He tells me about hypernormalization, a term introduced by the Russian-born American anthropologist Alexei Yurchak to describe the way in which people carried on with life pretending everything was normal in the 1970s Soviet Union despite the systemic failure of government and institutions. I listen in silent agreement. My patient tells me he is grateful for having just gotten a good job offer, but his happiness is tempered by his awareness of what is happening in the country and the world. Some of his friends want to leave the country. 'What do I do?' he asks. 'Should I escape to Europe? Focus on my job? Amass wealth and buy a house? Fight? How do I fight?' A Ukrainian firefighter worked to extinguish a fire following Russian drone strikes on houses in Odesa, on July 11. OLEKSANDR GIMANOV/AFP via Getty Images We end the session without having gotten into the dynamics of the romantic relationship he had wanted to talk about. I remember learning in grad school about the late American psychologist Urie Bronfenbrenner's biopsychosocial model, which holds that human development is influenced by multiple interconnected systems in a person's environment. An illustration showing a stick-figure individual at the center of several concentric circles: family and close friends first, with community and school one ring out, and politics, government, religion, and culture circling the whole. I imagine the stick figure — my patient or me — becoming uncentered, floating across the lines that are themselves wobbly. Advertisement Therapy feels like this: destabilized. Can we truly shut out the outside world and carry on with day-to-day therapy work when the world keeps smashing into us? What weight do our individual lives carry? Some patients wonder at the self-indulgence of paying good money to talk about relationships, health, families, careers, kids, pets. These perennial questions for the practice of therapy have resurfaced with a new urgency over the past several months. For other patients, the political world has become of immediate relevance to their day-to-day lives. Depression, anxiety, anger, dissociation, and fear are heightened for many. Scientist and doctor patients whose research funding has been cut question their life's direction. Other patients talk about deportation; yet others are fearful of losing food stamps and housing benefits. A woman with a severe trauma history, whose government-subsidized housing has provided her with a sense of safety she had never felt, tells me she has a suicide plan if her benefits get taken away. She is not joking. A colleague mentions a patient with a history of delusions who is terrified when he sees black SUVs pull up in front of his building. The presence of Immigration and Customs Enforcement in his neighborhood now gives his delusions a grounding in reality. The line that separates anxiety from paranoia has shifted. Smoke and fire rose to the sky following an Israeli army bombardment in the northern Gaza Strip, as seen from southern Israel on July 10. Leo Correa/Associated Press And then there are many patients who, like me, feel enraged and powerless, consumed and wanting to escape. Meanwhile, life on the street in my neighborhood looks eerily normal: People get coffee, kids play while parents chat at the playground, runners run, and, of course, people go to their weekly therapy appointments. Advertisement I ask my own therapist, 'Is it strange for me to talk to you about my own little life in the context of the world? What are you telling your patients? What should I be telling mine?' I see in her eyes that she knows what I'm talking about. She is asking similar questions. She tells me about a book she is reading about the power of defiance. Sounds good, I tell her, as I put it in my online cart. Not a typical therapist move. We are out of mainstream therapy water. Both as therapist and patient, I wonder how much my individual story has weight and consequence in the context of a breaking social order. Is there a risk that I am becoming complicit with this break if I carry on talking about relationships and family and summer plans in my therapy as if nothing else were going on? And what if I don't feel like talking about politics in therapy? Or what if I need to shut out the world so I can focus on what's happening in my smaller sphere? I reflect on what I had said to my patient, about his life continuing to matter. It hits me on my bike ride home along the river after my therapy appointment, alongside the people sitting by the water taking in the afternoon sun. Our lives matter. The fact of an administration that seeks to crush individual voices, and in particular dissenting ones, urges us to stay aware of ourselves. Many skills developed in therapy are important not just to individual well-being and personal growth; they are tools to support coping and, if we want them to be, can be vehicles for political change and resistance. These tools and vehicles include self-exploration, curiosity, reflection, questioning of previously held assumptions and what we thought were given truths, taking risks, tolerating distress, managing uncomfortable emotional states, appreciating one's unique identity, questioning fear, building on one's strengths, and exploring possibilities for change. At a time when difference and diversity in being and critical thought are in peril, now more than ever is the time to bolster those very qualities. Advertisement

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