logo
Tucker Carlson gives US conservatives rare window into plight of Palestinian Christians

Tucker Carlson gives US conservatives rare window into plight of Palestinian Christians

Middle East Eye20 hours ago
During conservative media personality Tucker Carlson's podcast on Monday, Mother Agapia Stephanopoulos of the Russian Orthodox church gave his followers rare insight into the lives of Palestinian Christians under Israeli occupation.
The show was titled, "Here's What It's Really Like to Live as a Christian in the Holy Land", with the YouTube thumbnail image reading "SEGREGATION".
Mother Stephanopoulos has lived in Palestine since 1996 in the Palestinian town of Bethany, in the occupied West Bank, and was one of a string of pro-Palestine guests on the former Fox News host's show.
In addition to discussing discrimination against Palestinians, Carlson focused much of the interview on Christian Zionism, a right-wing ideology that believes Jews must return to the Holy Land to bring about the second coming of Christ.
'The problem you have is one with the Christian Zionists, the ones who don't recognise the Christians in the Holy Land as being fully Christian,' Stephanopoulos said.
New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch
Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters
'We are closed off in Bethany from going to our convent in Jerusalem because of the wall that was built on Palestinian land, on Christian land, there's a Christian home for boys that the Israelis just took over and cut up to make part of the wall,' she continued.
Carlson's interview received a variety of responses, many of which were positive.
'i can't believe i'm pushing a tucker carlson video but this is an extremely important interview. especially if you are an american christian. your faith is being hijacked and used against you,' one person wrote.
Gaza's Christians mourn 'true loss' of Pope Francis but hail his enduring solidarity Read More »
'Tucker is interviewing the Orthodox who actually have ministered in the region as opposed to Six Flags Over Jesus types', Zaid Jilani posted on X.
Another social media user, who has right-wing slogans in his Twitter bio, said, 'watching right now and Mother Agapia is amazing. Thank you for speaking the truth about what is happening to Christians under Israel's terror ☦️❤️✝️'.
Still, some conservatives responded negatively to the interview.
Texas Senator Ted Cruz, whom both Carlson and Mother Stephanopoulos mentioned by name, responded by saying that what has happened to Carlson was 'tragic'.
'He now routinely attacks Trump, shills for Iran & doesn't bother to hide his all-consuming hatred for Israel,' Cruz wrote.
Carlson is a former US TV network host for Fox News who left cable television to start his own YouTube channel that has garnered 4.4 million subscribers to date.
Palestinian Christians
Palestinian Christians make up up to 10 percent of Palestinians worldwide, and are primarily Greek Orthodox or Catholic.
Over 100,000 Palestinian Christians live in Israel, and 45,000 Palestinians reside in the occupied West Bank. They face frequent violence from Israeli settlers and soldiers.
Just over 1,000 Palestinian Christians live in Gaza, and many are unable to visit their holy sites due to Israel's war on the enclave.
Several churches in Gaza, including the Holy Family Church, Gaza's sole Catholic church, have been damaged or destroyed by Israeli bombardment.
The late Pope Francis of the Catholic Church spoke frequently about the plight of Palestinian Christians under Israeli occupation, and called the Holy Family Church every day.
His successor, Pope Leo XIV, has not continued this tradition, although he has called for a ceasefire and an end to starvation in Gaza.
Stories of occupation
Mother Stephanopoulos is not the first person Carlson has invited on his show to talk about Palestine.
Previous guests, such as political scientist John Mearsheimer, and the president of Iran, Masoud Pezeshkian, have discussed similar topics, which represents Carlson's shift towards featuring alternative voices outside of the mainstream pro-Israeli US media.
Early in the interview, Mother Stephanopoulos explained to Carlson how Israeli laws discriminate against both Muslim and Christian Palestinians.
Israeli settlers repeat attack on Palestinian Christian village in West Bank Read More »
She explained how Israeli law mandates that Palestinians in the occupied West Bank must drive on separate highways and pass through violent checkpoints in a system described by a United Nations rights expert and a growing list of humanitarian organisations as 'apartheid'.
'So little by little Israel just keeps taking over the land, confiscating, building the settlement, adding the checkpoints, and strangling the life of anybody living there,' Stephanopoulos said.
These stories resonated with some social media users, with one user describing them as 'riveting…told so very well, which brings to life the realities of what Zi0nism has done to the Christians in the Levant.'
When Carlson asked why Palestinian Christians were being punished for 'Islamic terror', the Orthodox nun discussed armed resistance against Israel.
'I don't think it's Islamic terror that's taking place in the first place. I think we have to disabuse ourselves of that notion that this is a battle between Muslim and Jew,' she responded.
'What is Hamas? Hamas are people who have had their homes taken from them, who, if they live in Gaza, have basically been in an open-air prison for certainly the last 20 years… I know people who wanted to try to go to school in America and couldn't get out of Gaza, you know, had a Fulbright scholarship and weren't able,' she continued.
Mother Stephanopoulos also discussed disparities in how western media outlets treat resistance.
'Think about when the war started with Ukraine and Russia. I remember a story in the New York Times, it was a huge story celebrating that a beer factory was now generating Molotov cocktails to throw against the Russians. [In Palestine] hundreds of teenage boys have been killed because Israel will say they were throwing a Molotov cocktail.'
The interview drew to an end with a question for Carlson.
'Aren't you, as a media person, horrified?' Stephanopoulos asked. 'Why can't reporters go into Gaza? Reporters are not allowed in large portions of the West Bank now. They call them military zones. What kind of press freedom is that? And what is [Israel] trying to hide?'
The interview has generated over half a million views on YouTube and 7.9 million views on X since its initial airing.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israel's plan for 'full control' of Gaza heralds a new Nakba - so the West is panicking
Israel's plan for 'full control' of Gaza heralds a new Nakba - so the West is panicking

Middle East Eye

time37 minutes ago

  • Middle East Eye

Israel's plan for 'full control' of Gaza heralds a new Nakba - so the West is panicking

If you thought western capitals were finally losing patience with Israel's engineering of a famine in Gaza nearly two years into the genocide, you may be disappointed. As ever, events have moved on - even if the extreme hunger and malnourishment of the two million people of Gaza have not abated. Western leaders are now expressing 'outrage', as the media call it, at Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's plan to 'take full control' of Gaza and 'occupy' it. At some point in the future, Israel is apparently ready to hand the enclave over to outside forces unconnected to the Palestinan people. The Israeli cabinet agreed last Friday on the first step: a takeover of Gaza City, where hundreds of thousands of Palestinians are huddled in the ruins, being starved to death. The city will be encircled, systematically depopulated and destroyed, with survivors presumably herded southwards to a 'humanitarian city' - Israel's new term for a concentration camp - where they will be penned up, awaiting death or expulsion. At the weekend, foreign ministers from the UK, Germany, Italy, Australia and other western nations issued a joint statement decrying the move, warning it would 'aggravate the catastrophic humanitarian situation, endanger the lives of the hostages, and further risk the mass displacement of civilians'. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Germany, Israel's most fervent backer in Europe and its second-biggest arms supplier, is apparently so dismayed that it has vowed to 'suspend' - that is, delay - weapons shipments that have helped Israel to murder and maim hundreds of thousands of Palestinians over the past 22 months. Netanyahu is not likely to be too perturbed. Doubtless, Washington will step in and pick up any slack for its main client state in the oil-rich Middle East. Follow Middle East Eye's live coverage of the Israel-Palestine war Meanwhile, Netanyahu has once again shifted the West's all-too-belated focus on the indisputable proof of Israel's ongoing genocidal actions - evidenced by Gaza's skeletal children - to an entirely different story. Now, the front pages are all about the Israeli prime minister's strategy in launching another 'ground operation', how much pushback he is getting from his military commanders, what the implications will be for the Israelis still held captive in the enclave, whether the Israeli army is now overstretched, and whether Hamas can ever be 'defeated' and the enclave 'demilitarised'. We are returning once again to logistical analyses of the genocide - analyses whose premises ignore the genocide itself. Might that not be integral to Netanyahu's strategy? Life and death It ought to be shocking that Germany has been provoked into stopping its arming of Israel - assuming it follows through - not because of months of images of Gaza's skin-and-bones children that echo those from Auschwitz, but only because Israel has declared that it wants to 'take control' of Gaza. It should be noted, of course, that Israel never stopped controlling Gaza and the rest of the Palestinian territories - in contravention of the fundamentals of international law, as the International Court of Justice ruled last year. Israel has had absolute control over the lives and deaths of Gaza's people every day since its occupation of the tiny coastal enclave many decades ago. But on 7 October 2023, thousands of Palestinian fighters briefly broke out of the besieged prison camp they and their families had endured after Israel momentarily dropped its guard. The promise of Palestinian statehood was always treated by the West as little more than a threat - and one directed at Palestinian leaders Gaza has long been a prison that the Israeli military illegally controlled by land, sea and air, determining who could enter and leave. It kept Gaza's economy throttled, and put the enclave's population 'on a diet' that saw rocketing malnourishment among its children long before the current starvation campaign. Trapped behind a highly militarised fence since the early 1990s, unable to access their own coastal waters, and with Israeli drones constantly surveilling them and raining down death from the air, the people of Gaza viewed it more as a modernised concentration camp. But Germany and the rest of the West were fine supporting all that. They have continued selling Israel arms, providing it with special trading status, and offering diplomatic cover. Only as Israel carries through to a logical conclusion its settler-colonial agenda of replacing the native Palestinian people with Jews, is it apparently time for the West to vent its rhetorical 'outrage'. Two-state trickery Why the pushback now? In part, it is because Netanyahu is pulling the rug out from under their cherished, decades-long pretext for supporting Israel's ever-greater criminality: the fabled two-state solution. Israel conspired in that trickery with the signing of the Oslo Accords in the mid-1990s. The goal was never the realisation of a two-state solution. Rather, Oslo created a 'diplomatic horizon' for 'final status issues' - which, like the physical horizon, always remained equally distant, however much ostensible movement there was on the ground. Lisa Nandy, Britain's culture secretary, peddled precisely this same deceit last week as she extolled the virtues of the two-state solution. She told Sky News: 'Our message to the Palestinian people is very, very clear: There is hope on the horizon.' Every Palestinian understood her real message, which could be paraphrased as: 'We've lied to you about a Palestinian state for decades, and we've allowed a genocide to unfold before the world's eyes for the past two years. But hey, trust us this time. We're on your side.' How murder of Al Jazeera journalists is part of Israel's Gaza occupation strategy Read More » In truth, the promise of Palestinian statehood was always treated by the West as little more than a threat - and one directed at Palestinian leaders. Palestinian officials must be more obedient, quieter. They had to first prove their willingness to police Israel's occupation on Israel's behalf by repressing their own people. Hamas, of course, failed that test in Gaza. But Mahmoud Abbas, head of the Palestinian Authority (PA) in the occupied West Bank, bent over backwards to reassure his examiners, casting as 'sacred' his lightly armed security forces' so-called 'cooperation' with Israel. In reality, they are there to do its dirty work. Nonetheless, despite the PA's endless good behaviour, Israel has continued to expel ordinary Palestinians from their land, then steal that land - which was supposed to form the basis of a Palestinian state - and hand it over to extremist Jewish settlers backed by the Israeli army. Former US President Barack Obama briefly and feebly tried to halt what the West misleadingly calls Jewish 'settlement expansion' - in reality, the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians - but rolled over at the first sign of intransigence from Netanyahu. Israel has stepped up the process of ethnic cleansing in the occupied West Bank even more aggressively over the past two years, while global attention has been on Gaza - with the Israeli newspaper Haaretz warning this week that settlers had been given "free rein'. A small window into the impunity granted to settlers as they wage their campaign of violence to depopulate Palestinian communities was highlighted at the weekend, when B'Tselem released footage of a Palestinian activist, Awdah Hathaleen, inadvertently filming his own killing. Extremist settler Yinon Levi was released on grounds of self-defence, even though the video shows him singling out Hathaleen from afar, taking aim and shooting. Alibi gone It is noticeable that, having stopped making reference to Palestinian statehood for many years, western leaders have revived their interest only now - as Israel is making a two-state solution unrealisable. That was graphically illustrated by footage broadcast this month by ITV. Shot from an aid plane, it showed the wholesale destruction of Gaza - its homes, schools, hospitals, universities, bakeries, shops, mosques and churches gone. Gaza is in ruins. Its reconstruction will take decades. Occupied East Jerusalem and its holy sites were long ago seized and Judaised by Israel, with western assent. Suddenly, western capitals are noticing that the last remnants of the proposed Palestinian state are about to be swallowed whole by Israel, too. Germany recently warned Israel that it must not take 'any further steps toward annexing the West Bank'. US President Donald Trump is on his own path. But this is the moment when other major western powers - led by France, Britain and Canada - have started threatening to recognise a Palestinian state, even as the possibility of such a state has been obliterated by Israel. Australia announced it would join them this week after its foreign minister, a few days earlier, said the quiet part out loud, warning: "There is a risk there will be no Palestine left to recognise if the international community don't move to create that pathway to a two-state solution." That is something they dare not countenance, because with it goes their alibi for supporting all these years the apartheid state of Israel, now deep into the final stages of a genocide in Gaza. That was why British Prime Minister Keir Starmer desperately switched tack recently. Instead of dangling recognition of Palestinian statehood as a carrot encouraging Palestinians to be more obedient - British policy for decades - he wielded it as a threat, and a largely hollow one, against Israel. He would recognise a Palestinian state if Israel refused to agree to a ceasefire in Gaza and proceeded with the West Bank's annexation. In other words, Starmer backed recognising a state of Palestine - after Israel has gone ahead with its complete erasure. Extracting concessions Still, France and Britain's recognition threat is not simply too late. It serves two other purposes. Firstly, it provides a new alibi for inaction. There are plenty of far more effective ways for the West to halt Israel's genocide. Western capitals could embargo arms sales, stop intelligence sharing, impose economic sanctions, sever ties with Israeli institutions, expel Israeli ambassadors, and downgrade diplomatic relations. They are choosing to do none of those things. And secondly, recognition is designed to extract from the Palestinians 'concessions' that will make them even more vulnerable to Israeli violence. In the West's view, the 'good Palestinians' are those who recognise and lay down before the state committing genocide against them According to France's foreign affairs minister, Jean-Noel Barrot: 'Recognising a State of Palestine today means standing with the Palestinians who have chosen non-violence, who have renounced terrorism, and are prepared to recognise Israel.' In other words, in the West's view, the 'good Palestinians' are those who recognise and lay down before the state committing genocide against them. Western leaders have long envisioned a Palestinian state only on condition that it is demilitarised. Recognition this time is premised on Hamas agreeing to disarm and its departure from Gaza, leaving Abbas to take on the enclave and presumably continue the 'sacred' mission of 'cooperating" with a genocidal Israeli army. As part of the price for recognition, all 22 members of the Arab League publicly condemned Hamas and demanded its removal from Gaza. Boot on Gaza's neck How does all of this fit with Netanyahu's 'ground offensive'? Israel isn't 'taking over' Gaza, as he claims. Its boot has been on the enclave's neck for decades. While western capitals contemplate a two-state solution, Israel is preparing a final mass ethnic cleansing campaign in Gaza. Starmer's government, for one, knew this was coming. Flight data shows that the UK has been constantly operating surveillance missions over Gaza on Israel's behalf from the Royal Air Force base Akrotiri on Cyprus. Downing Street has been following the enclave's erasure step by step. Netanyahu's plan is to encircle, besiege and bomb the last remaining populated areas in northern and central Gaza, and drive Palestinians towards a giant holding pen - misnamed a 'humanitarian city' - alongside the enclave's short border with Egypt. Israel will then probably employ the same contractors it has been using elsewhere in Gaza to go street to street to bulldoze or blow up any surviving buildings. Why Gaza's genocide ranks among the gravest horrors of human history Read More » The next stage, given the trajectory of the last two years, is not difficult to predict. Locked up in their dystopian 'humanitarian city', the people of Gaza will continue to be starved and bombed whenever Israel claims it has identified a Hamas fighter in their midst, until Egypt or other Arab states can be persuaded to take them in, as a further 'humanitarian' gesture. Then, the only matter to be settled will be what happens to the real estate: build some version of Trump's gleaming 'Riviera' scheme, or construct another tawdry patchwork of Jewish settlements of the kind envisioned by Netanyahu's openly fascist allies, Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben Gvir. There is a well-established template to be drawn on, one that was used in 1948 during Israel's violent creation. Palestinians were driven from their cities and villages, in what was then called Palestine, across the borders into neighbouring states. The new state of Israel, backed by western powers, then set about methodically destroying every home in those hundreds of villages. Over subsequent years, they were landscaped either with forests or exclusive Jewish communities, often engaged in farming, to make Palestinian return impossible and stifle any memory of Israel's crimes. Generations of western politicians, intellectuals and cultural figures have celebrated all of this. Former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and former Austrian President Heinz Fischer are among those who went to Israel in their youth to work on these farming communities. Most came back as emissaries for a Jewish state built on the ruins of a Palestinian homeland. An emptied Gaza can be similarly re-landscaped. But it is much harder to imagine that this time the world will forget or forgive the crimes committed by Israel - or those who enabled them. The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

Israeli ambassador met with key UK Labour donors and lobbyists throughout Gaza genocide
Israeli ambassador met with key UK Labour donors and lobbyists throughout Gaza genocide

Middle East Eye

time37 minutes ago

  • Middle East Eye

Israeli ambassador met with key UK Labour donors and lobbyists throughout Gaza genocide

The Israeli ambassador to the UK has met with an array of Labour donors, pro-Israel lobbyists and parliamentarians during Israel's genocide in Gaza, it has emerged. Tzipi Hotovely's diary has been obtained and reported on by Declassified UK, after being released following a Freedom of Information request by lawyer Elad Man at Hatzlacha, an NGO promoting social justice in Israel. Hotovely, who once called the Nakba, the ethnic cleansing of Palestine in 1948, an "Arab lie" and is an avowed opponent of the creation of a Palestinian state, has become a prominent public figure in the UK and takes a markedly interventionist approach to British politics. In recent months, for example, the ambassador issued an official complaint to the BBC over a documentary it aired on children in Gaza, because the child narrator was the son of a minister in the war-torn enclave. The film was ultimately pulled. In July, she met Lisa Nandy, the culture secretary, after complaining about the BBC iPlayer showing punk duo Bob Vylan chanting "Death to the IDF" during a performance at Glastonbury festival. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters She also launched an unexpected attack on the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, over his annual Eid al-Fitr message. The Israeli embassy accused him of "spouting Hamas propaganda" for talking about suffering in Gaza. Khan's office responded accurately that he has "repeatedly" condemned Hamas. Now, her diary reveals that Hotovely has met key Labour donors throughout Israel's ongoing genocide. Exclusive: UK won't say if spy planes captured footage of Israeli attacks on UK charity workers Read More » One of those is Stuart Roden, a chairman of Israeli venture capital firm Hetz Ventures, who donated over half a million pounds to Labour ahead of the 2024 general election that brought the party to power. Roden said last year that he expresses "views on some of the things I care about" to the Labour leadership. He is a hardline supporter of Israel's war on Gaza and declared in October 2023 that Israel was engaged in a "clash of civilisations". He was filmed that same month shouting "You murdered children" at a crowd of peaceful pro-Palestinian protesters outside the Labour conference. Roden met Hotovely twice in July 2024 after Labour entered government, according to Declassified UK. One meeting took place at a gallery in London, and the other in the ambassador's residence. Meetings with pro-Israel lobbyists Hotovely also met Jonathan Goldstein, a property tycoon and former chair of the Jewish Leadership Council, an umbrella body that represents major British Jewish organisations. Goldstein financially backed Foreign Secretary David Lammy's failed campaign to become London mayor in 2014. Declassified UK said it had approached the two for comment. The ambassador also twice met Michael Rubin, the director of lobby group Labour Friends for Israel (LFI). One of the meetings took place at the ambassador's residence. She met Labour MP Jon Pearce, the LFI chair, twice. Kemi Badenoch, Nigel Farage and Jimmy Carr attend secret Israeli party at British Museum Read More » An LFI spokesperson told Declassified that Rubin and Pearce met Hotovely to "reiterate our longstanding support for a ceasefire, increased humanitarian aid to Gaza and the release of the Israeli hostages held by Hamas since the 7 October atrocities". Luke Akehurst, a Labour MP and former pro-Israel lobbyist, had a meeting with Hotovely during the Labour conference last year. Before becoming an MP, Akehurst was once photographed wearing a T-shirt describing himself as a "Zionist shitlord". In November 2023, he said that the "major West Bank settlement blocks" should become part of Israel as part of a land exchange with Palestine, adding that he wants the occupied Syrian Golan Heights "to remain part of Israel". Hotovely's diary further reveals that she met Lord Stuart Polak, a Conservative peer and director of the Conservative Friends of Israel (CFI), on four occasions. On two of those occasions, in July and September 2024, they were joined by Israeli diplomats Yossi Amrani and Meirav Eilon Shahar. The Israeli ambassador certainly has a busy schedule. And some of her meetings will arouse interest among those who follow her increasingly regular interventions in British domestic politics.

Turkey warns Syrian Kurds: Don't become Israeli pawns
Turkey warns Syrian Kurds: Don't become Israeli pawns

Middle East Eye

time2 hours ago

  • Middle East Eye

Turkey warns Syrian Kurds: Don't become Israeli pawns

Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan on Wednesday issued yet another ultimatum to Syrian Kurdish armed groups, urging them to abandon hopes of cooperating with Israel against Damascus and to honour their agreement to integrate with the central government. In an unusually sharp tone, Fidan said Ankara was not naive and was fully aware of the Syrian Democratic Forces' (SDF) activities. 'They say that the agreement we made with Syria does not bind us much in terms of the clauses written in it,' he said. 'Well then, what does concern you? Is it making the esteemed Kurdish brothers of the region into Israel's pawns that concerns you?' Fidan's remarks came as Syrian Foreign Minister Assad Al-Shaibani visited Ankara, accompanied by the Syrian defence minister and intelligence chief, to discuss security challenges in northern Syria as well as the situation in Sweida. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters On Tuesday, Shaibani had attended a meeting in Jordan with US Special Envoy Thomas Barrack, aiming to find a path forward that would accommodate both Syrian and Israeli concerns regarding the safety of the Druze community in Suwayda. At the joint press conference in Ankara, Shaibani also criticised a recent conference held by the SDF in Hasakah, where representatives of various ethnic and religious minority groups called for autonomy. He said they did not represent the Syrian people and warned that Damascus remained resolute in preserving Syria's territorial integrity. Damascus last week cancelled a meeting with SDF representatives in Paris in protest for the conference, partially also because of Turkey's objections to the French mediation. Negotiations and centralisation In March, Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa signed a memorandum with SDF commander Mazlum Abdi, agreeing in principle to integrate with Damascus. The deal included incorporating SDF forces into the national army, transferring control of borders, government institutions, prisons, and oil and gas fields to the central authorities. This step coincided with Turkey's own peace talks with the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which announced its dissolution in May following appeals from its imprisoned founder Abdullah Ocalan. The SDF later said the process doesn't concern them either. Since then, the SDF, widely seen as a PKK offshoot, has shifted its stance and begun demanding autonomy and a decentralised system of governance, particularly after Israeli air strikes on Damascus and southern Syria. In multiple interviews, Abdi has said he wants the SDF to remain under a separate command structure. 'In an environment where Turkey's security concerns are not addressed, there is no way for us to remain calm here' - Hakan Fidan, Turkish Foreign Minister Fidan warned that Ankara's patience was wearing thin as the SDF failed to take concrete steps to address Turkish security concerns. 'At present, we see that members of the SDF coming from Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Europe have not left Syria,' he said, referring to the foreign fighters the SDF had pledged to expel. 'On the contrary, we see that they are waiting for possible problems to maximise their benefit from all processes - both in Damascus and in Ankara. They should not think we do not see this; we do see it.' Fidan further alleged that the SDF was seeking Israeli assistance to maintain control over Arab-majority areas by force and to preserve its ties to the PKK. 'But in an environment where Turkey's security concerns are not addressed, there is no way for us to remain calm here,' he said. While calling on the SDF to pursue peace with both Turkey and Damascus, Fidan also suggested that no one should be surprised by potential developments, hinting that Ankara was prepared to take other measures, possibly including military action. Deadlines Last month, Middle East Eye reported that Turkey and the US, in a meeting with SDF officials, had given Abdi's group a 30-day deadline to accelerate the process of joining Damascus. That deadline is set to expire within days. According to a regional source speaking to MEE, US officials warned the SDF that the international coalition might not be able to shield them if Damascus decided to launch a military offensive in the event the 10 March agreement was not upheld. Security sources told MEE that while Turkey would not directly intervene against the SDF, the Turkish Armed Forces could provide indirect support for a limited operation carried out by the Syrian army. They said preparations for such an operation had already been completed. Syrian democracy campaigners wary of upcoming 'selected' elections Read More » The sources also revealed that US Special Envoy Thomas Barrack, in meetings with Turkish officials in Ankara, requested more time for diplomatic efforts and negotiations with the SDF. Turkish officials reportedly responded, in diplomatic terms, that 'the decision and authority on the matter rest with the Damascus government, and that in line with the military cooperation between Damascus and Turkey and Turkey's national security sensitivities, any request for support from Damascus would be met positively'. Meanwhile, intermittent clashes have broken out between the Syrian army and the SDF in Deir Hafir, east of Aleppo, and around the Tishrin Dam last week, with both sides trading blame for the escalation. Syrian security sources told MEE that the Syrian delegation's visit to Ankara would focus on this context, with key agenda items including shared threats, border security, follow-up on agreements, and potential economic investments. Last month, Syria formally requested that Turkey extend security assistance. The sources added that discussions on the deployment of Turkish Armed Forces in Syria would also be part of the talks.

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