
Why does Syria matter to Israel and Turkiye?
Israel and Turkiye have been holding closed-door meetings in Azerbaijan to work out ways to avoid direct conflict in Syria.
Both have a military presence there, and both accuse the other of threatening regional security.
Israel has carried out hundreds of air strikes on Syria since Bashar al-Assad was toppled in December, destroying military infrastructure and hardware.
Turkiye says these attacks and Israel's expansion into the occupied Golan Heights are further destabilising the country, as the new government tries to rebuild.
For its part, Israel has accused Ankara of trying to turn Syria into a Turkish protectorate.
So, what are the two sides trying to achieve? And can they avoid coming to blows over Syria?
Presenter: James Bays
Guests:
Barin Kayaoglu – Assistant professor at the Institute for Area Studies at the Social Sciences University of Ankara
Joshua Landis – Director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma
Alon Liel – Former director at the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Qatar Tribune
3 hours ago
- Qatar Tribune
Qatar slams fabricated reports in Israeli media
Tribune News Network Doha Qatar has slammed recent fabricated reports in the Israeli media, denouncing them as 'a deliberate' attempt to sow division between the Gulf state and the US at a critical time of their joint mediation efforts in the Gaza Strip. In a statement, the International Media Office of the State of Qatar said fabricated documents are once again circulating in the Israeli media in an attempt to sow division between Qatar and the US at a crucial stage in the efforts to mediate a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. 'The timing of their release is no coincidence. It is a deliberate distraction, deployed by those who want to deflect attention from negative coverage of their own irresponsible actions in Gaza – including those reported in the news over the past week – at a moment when a breakthrough is within reach,' the statement said. It added that this tactic has been used previously by those who want diplomacy to fail. They do not want Qatar's work with the Trump administration – on the Gaza file and other regional files – to succeed in bringing peace to the region. Similar methods have been used against those who have spoken out against the continuation of the war, or worked diplomatically to bring the hostages home including members of President Trump's administration, in an effort to discredit them and undermine the diplomatic process. 'Their efforts will not succeed. No fabricated documents will weaken the bond between Qatar and the United States.' The statement said, 'We urge all media outlets to remain vigilant against misinformation spread by those who want to disrupt the negotiations by any means necessary in order to prolong the conflict.'


Qatar Tribune
3 hours ago
- Qatar Tribune
Iran reveals secret documents on Israeli nuclear weapons programme
TehrancTypeface:> Iran has published what it claims is secret information about Israel's nuclear weapons programme. In a statement released by the secret service to pro-government media on Tuesday, Iran accused the United States and European countries of being 'cooperation partners and contractors' in Israel's nuclear weapons programme. Iran said the documents contain precise information about secret Israeli locations and the names of scientists involved in nuclear weapons projects, including foreigners. There is broad international consensus that Israel possesses nuclear weapons. (DPA)


Qatar Tribune
3 hours ago
- Qatar Tribune
Two Israeli ministers sanctioned by UK, Canada, Australia and others
PA Media/dpa London Two Israeli government ministers, Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, have been sanctioned by the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Norway because of their comments on Gaza. Ben-Gvir, the security minister in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's coalition government, and Smotrich, the finance minister, will both face a travel ban and see their assets frozen. UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy said the two Israeli ministers had been 'inciting violence against Palestinian people for months and months and months, they have been encouraging egregious abuses of human rights.' In a joint statement with foreign ministers from the four other countries who have announced sanctions, Lammy said the two senior Israelis had also incited 'serious abuses of Palestinian human rights.' The statement added: 'These actions are not acceptable. This is why we have taken action now - to hold those responsible to account.' Both have been criticized for their hardline stance on the war in Gaza. Smotrich has campaigned against allowing aid into Gaza, while Ben-Gvir has called for Gaza's people to be resettled from the territory.