Syria’s Druze seek a place in a changing nation, navigating pressures from the government and Israel

Syria’s Druze seek a place in a changing nation, navigating pressures from the government and Israel
The many local Druze militias are reluctant to give up their arms until they’re confident of an inclusive new system. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 10 March 2025

Syria’s Druze seek a place in a changing nation, navigating pressures from the government and Israel

Syria’s Druze seek a place in a changing nation, navigating pressures from the government and Israel
  • Members of the small religious sect find themselves caught between two forces that many of them distrust
  • The many local Druze militias are reluctant to give up their arms until they’re confident of an inclusive new system

JARAMANA: Syria’s Druze minority has a long history of cutting their own path to survive among the country’s powerhouses. They are now trying again to navigate a new, uncertain Syria since the fall of longtime autocrat Bashar Assad.
Members of the small religious sect find themselves caught between two forces that many of them distrust: the new, Islamist-led government in Damascus and Syria’s hostile neighbor, Israel, which has used the plight of the Druze as a pretext to intervene in the country.
Syria’s many religious and ethnic communities are worried over their place in the new system. The transitional government has promised to include them, but has so far kept authority in the hands of the Islamist former insurgents who toppled Assad in December — Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham, or HTS. That and HTS’s past affiliation with Sunni Muslim extremist Al-Qaeda, has minorities suspicious.
The most explosive hostilities have been with the Alawite religious minority, to which Assad’s family belongs. Heavy clashes erupted this week between armed Assad loyalists and government forces, killing at least 70, in the coastal regions that are the Alawites’ heartland.
In contrast, the Druze — largely centered in southern Syria — have kept up quiet contacts with the government. Still, tensions have broken out.
Last week in Jaramana, a suburb of Damascus with a large Druze population, unknown gunmen killed a member of the government’s security forces, which responded with a wave of arrests in the district.
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and military officials weighed in by threatening to send forces to Jaramana to protect the Druze. Druze leaders quickly disavowed the offer. But soon after, someone hung an Israeli flag in Sweida, an overwhelmingly Druze region in southern Syria, prompting residents to quickly tear it down and burn it.
Many fear another flare-up is only a matter of time.
Multiple Druze armed militias have existed for years, originally set up to protect their communities against Daesh group fighters and drug smugglers coming in from the eastern desert. They have been reluctant to set down their arms. Recently a new faction, the Sweida Military Council, proclaimed itself, grouping several smaller Druze militias.
The result is a cycle of mistrust, where government supporters paint Druze factions as potential separatists or tools of Israel, while government hostility only deepens Druze worries.
A struggle to unite a divided country
On the outskirts of Sweida, a commander in Liwa Al-Jabal, a Druze militia, stood on a rooftop and scanned the hills with binoculars. He spoke by walkie-talkie with a militiaman with an assault rifle below. They were watching for any movement by militants or gangs.
“Our arms are not for expansionist purposes. They’re for self-defense and protection,” said the commander, who asked to be identified only by his nickname Abu Ali for security reasons. “We have no enemies except those who attack us.”
Abu Ali, who is a metal worker as his day job, said most Druze militiamen would merge with a new Syrian army if it’s one that “protects all Syrians rather than crushes them like the previous regime.”
The Druze religious sect began as a 10th-century offshoot of Ismailism, a branch of Shiite Islam. 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.
In Syria, the Druze take pride in their fierce independence. They were heavily involved in revolts against Ottoman and French colonial rule to establish the modern Syrian state.
During Syria’s civil war that began in 2011, the Druze were split between supporters of Assad and the opposition. The Sweida region stayed quiet for much of the war, though it erupted with anti-government protests in 2023.
Assad reluctantly gave Druze a degree of autonomy, as they wanted to avoid being involved on the frontlines. The Druze were exempted from conscription into the Syrian army and instead set up local armed factions made of workers and farmers to patrol their areas.
Druze say they want Syria’s new authorities to include them in a political process to create a secular and democratic state.
“Religion is for God and the state is for all” proclaimed a slogan written on the hood of a vehicle belonging to the Men of Dignity, another Druze militia patrolling the outskirts of Sweida.
‘Being inclusive will not hurt him’
Many Druze quickly rejected Israel’s claims to protect the minority. Hundreds took to the streets in Sweida to protest Netanyahu’s comments.
“We are Arabs, whether he or whether the Lord that created him likes it or not. Syria is free,” said Nabih Al-Halabi, a 60-year-old resident of Jaramana.
He and others reject accusations that the Druze want partition from Syria.
But patience is wearing thin over what many see as arbitrary layoffs of public sector workers, shortage of economic opportunities, and the new authorities’ lack of more than token inclusion of Syrians from minority communities. For the first time, a protest took place in Sweida on Thursday against Damascus’ new authorities.
Interim President Ahmad Al-Sharaa has promised to create an inclusive system, but the government is made up mostly of his confidantes. The authorities convened a national dialogue conference last week, inviting Syrians from different communities, but many criticized it as rushed and not really inclusive.
“What we are seeing from the state today, in our opinion, does not achieve the interests of all Syrians,” said retired nurse Nasser Abou-Halam, discussing local politics with other residents in Sweida’s public square where near-daily protests took place. “It’s a one-color government, with leadership appointed through factions rather than through elections.”
Al-Sharaa “has a big opportunity to be accepted just to be Syrian first and not Islamist first. Being inclusive will not hurt him,” said Bassam Barabandi, a former Syrian diplomat currently based in Washington. “On the contrary, it will give him more power.”
Economic woes shorten the honeymoon
Syria’s new leaders have struggled to convince the United States and its allies to lift Assad-era sanctions. Without the lifting of sanctions, it will be impossible for the government to rebuild Syria’s battered infrastructure or win over minority communities, analysts say.
“I’m scared sanctions won’t be lifted and Syria won’t be given the chance,” said Rayyan Maarouf, who heads the activist media collective Suwayda 24. He has just returned to Sweida after fleeing to Europe over a year ago because of his activism.
“Syria could go back to a civil war, and it would be worse than before,” he said.
Outside Sweida, Abu Ali was helping train new volunteers for the militia. Still, he said he hopes to be able to lay down his weapons.
“There is no difference between the son of Sweida or Jaramana and those of Homs and Lattakia,” he said. “People are tired of war and bloodshed … weapons don’t bring modernizm.”


Trump eyes Egypt trip, says hostages to be freed early next week

Trump eyes Egypt trip, says hostages to be freed early next week
Updated 4 sec ago

Trump eyes Egypt trip, says hostages to be freed early next week

Trump eyes Egypt trip, says hostages to be freed early next week
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said he would try to go to Egypt for the signing of a Gaza ceasefire deal, adding that he expected Hamas to free hostages on Monday or Tuesday under the long-sought agreement.
Speaking at a cabinet meeting on Thursday, Trump said the agreement between Israel and Palestinian militant group had “ended the war in Gaza” and would lead to broader Middle East peace.
“We secured the release of all of the remaining hostages, and they should be released on Monday or Tuesday,” Trump told his assembled cabinet secretaries at the White House.
But Trump said that the bodies of some of the dead hostages would be “hard to find.”
Trump announced plans to travel to the Middle East even before he unveiled the first phase of the peace deal on Wednesday, but said arrangements were still being made for a possible stop in Egypt.
“I’m going to try and make a trip over. We’re going to try and get over there, and we’re working on the timing, the exact timing,” Trump said Thursday.
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi said earlier that he had invited his US counterpart to take part in a “celebration to be held in Egypt” for the agreement for the first phase of a ceasefire.
Trump said he also expected to visit Israel, adding that he had been invited to address the Israeli parliament.
“They asked me to speak at the Knesset and... I’ve agreed to, if they would like me to, I will do it,” Trump said in response to a question from a reporter.
Trump falsely claimed that he would be the first president to do so. The Knesset website lists US presidents George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter among foreign leaders who have addressed the parliament in the past.

- ‘Extraordinary phone calls’ -

The Republican gave few details about the second phase of the peace deal and the future of Gaza.
Trump said “there will be disarming, there will be pullbacks,” in apparent reference to Israel’s demand that Hamas disarm and calls by the Palestinian militant group for Israel to withdraw its forces, but did not elaborate.
He added that Gaza would be “slowly redone” and indicated that Arab states with “tremendous wealth” would help it rebuild, as well as possibly taking part in peacekeeping efforts.
Trump did not comment on whether he now expected to achieve his long-held dream of winning the Nobel Peace Prize.
But his cabinet officials lined up to praise him, led by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who had on Wednesday handed the US president a note during an event saying a deal was imminent.
“Frankly, I don’t know of any American president in the modern era that could have made this possible,” Rubio said.
Rubio also hinted at the tough negotiations that led to the agreement, which saw Trump pressure Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and rally Arab and Muslim states to lean on Hamas.
“One day, perhaps the entire story will be told,” Rubio said.
“The president had some extraordinary phone calls and meetings that required a high degree of intensity and commitment and made this happen.”
dk/des

Foreign ministers of France, Jordan discuss next moves in Gaza

Foreign ministers of France, Jordan discuss next moves in Gaza
Updated 1 min 56 sec ago

Foreign ministers of France, Jordan discuss next moves in Gaza

Foreign ministers of France, Jordan discuss next moves in Gaza
  • 2 ministers approve ceasefire deal, necessity of implementing terms
  • France hosting ministerial meeting to look at US plan, how to achieve its 20 points

LONDON: Jordan’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Ayman Safadi has met his French counterpart in Paris, Jean-Noel Barrot, to discuss the situation in Gaza following the ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas.

The two ministers expressed their approval of the agreement and the necessity of implementing its terms, the Jordan News Agency reported.

Israel and Hamas agreed early on Wednesday on the first phase of a Gaza plan put forward by US President Donald Trump, in which the two sides will exchange captives by next week.

The discussions on Thursday took place before a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron, and included the foreign ministers of Jordan, Qatar, , Egypt, and an Emirati state minister.

Safadi emphasized the need to end the conflict in Gaza and address its consequences through a practical and effective approach to deliver humanitarian aid, aiming to alleviate the famine caused by Israeli aggression, Petra added.

Safadi commended Trump for proposing the plan to end the conflict, deliver aid, prevent displacement, and rebuild Gaza, as well as his commitment to prevent Israel from annexing the West Bank.

He highlighted the essential results of the UN meeting organized by France and in September to garner support for a two-state solution and to achieve a just and lasting peace in the region.

France is hosting a ministerial meeting to discuss the US plan for Gaza and the steps to achieve its 20 points.

Representatives from various Arab, Islamic, and European countries are attending the meeting, along with Kaja Kallas, the high representative for foreign affairs and security policy, and vice president of the European Commission.


President Aoun welcomes Gaza ceasefire, urges Israeli restraint in Lebanon

President Aoun welcomes Gaza ceasefire, urges Israeli restraint in Lebanon
Updated 5 min 26 sec ago

President Aoun welcomes Gaza ceasefire, urges Israeli restraint in Lebanon

President Aoun welcomes Gaza ceasefire, urges Israeli restraint in Lebanon
  • Aoun expressed hope that this first step would lead to a permanent ceasefire and end the humanitarian crisis facing Palestinians in Gaza

BEIRUT: Lebanese President Joseph Aoun on Thursday welcomed the initial ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas aimed at ending the war in Gaza.

Aoun expressed hope that this first step would lead to a permanent ceasefire and end the humanitarian crisis facing Palestinians in Gaza.

He called for sustained international and regional efforts to achieve a comprehensive and just peace in line with the Arab Peace Initiative adopted in Beirut in 2002.

The president also urged Israel to heed calls from Arab and global leaders to cease hostilities in the rest of Palestine, Lebanon, and Syria, fostering an environment conducive to lasting stability in the Middle East.

Meanwhile, Lebanon continues its internal efforts to assert state sovereignty over arms.

In early September, the government approved the army’s confidential plan to monopolize weapons and retrain and redeploy forces throughout Lebanese territory.

Kamal Chehade, Lebanon’s minister of displaced persons and minister of state for technology affairs, on Thursday highlighted the importance of extending army authority nationwide as a foundation for stability.

He said that “the government has adopted the security plan and is closely monitoring its implementation, as it moves forward with its decision to restrict weapons and prevent their transfer across Lebanese territory.”

Speaking to “Beirut Today,” the minister revealed that the army commander’s report to the Cabinet detailed the first phase of transferring weapons under state authority — a process scheduled to last one to three months, of which about a third has already elapsed.

“The report included encouraging figures showing clear progress in the south, where the number of individual missions carried out by the army in the area south of the Litani River exceeded 4,200 – double the previous rate,” he said.

“The army’s response rate to the demands of the ‘mechanism’ (i.e., the committee charged with monitoring the implementation of the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement) reached 85 percent. Seven tunnels have been completely sealed, and the army is working to close four additional tunnels,” he added.

Chehade also noted that the army had found some weapons under the rubble of destroyed buildings, explaining that retrieving them will take time.

The Trump administration recently provided an important boost to the mission, when Washington unlocked $230 million in funding for Lebanon’s security forces, including $195 million to the Lebanese Army, double what it had previously provided.

Chehade credited US diplomacy, particularly the efforts of Morgan Ortagus, for securing the funds in time, just ahead of the US government shutdown, and noted ongoing French, Saudi, and wider Arab initiatives to convene an international conference in support of the Lebanese Army.

Chehade said the army has begun containing armed incidents across Lebanon, including along the Syrian border and near Palestinian camps, noting that the southern phase is expected to be completed within 50 days.

Despite Israeli attacks, he admitted that only Hezbollah knows the location of its weapon stockpiles.

“The party has withheld this information from the army, and there is no cooperation concerning tunnels and booby traps,” he said.

Since the army’s first report was submitted in April, Chehade and other ministers have pushed for greater transparency.

“The army commander has promised to appoint an official spokesperson responsible for communicating with the media and documenting missions for the public,” he said.

He emphasized that the government’s efforts “are rooted in protecting Lebanon and its people,” adding that citizens have the right to be informed about ongoing developments.

“The state has made a sovereign and diplomatic decision: that Lebanon’s protection relies on the self-sustaining capabilities of the army, internal security forces, and political and diplomatic relations,” the minister said.

The government has formally begun to implement UN Security Council Resolution 1701, he added, but warned that the process will take time.

“The government’s decision is not subject to bargaining. Our goal is reconstruction, the liberation of the five regions, the return of prisoners, and putting all weapons, including Hezbollah’s and those of all armed factions, under Lebanese Army control,” the minister said.

Chehade identified the greatest obstacles to disarmament as the army’s limited resources, difficulty accessing weapon caches, and ongoing Israeli attacks. Still, he maintained that “progress is ongoing and there is a will to accomplish the mission,” calling on Hezbollah to accelerate the handover of its arms and cooperate with the army if it truly wants to “protect the south.”

According to Chehade, diplomats revealed that Israeli strikes are likely to continue until Hezbollah relinquishes its weapons south of the Litani River, after which the focus will move to areas north of the river.

“The government’s policy is clear: a complete monopoly on arms,” he said.

He noted that the first part of the initial phase is nearly complete, but that the second part may require 50 more days to finish.

US diplomats have reportedly told Lebanon that no reciprocal Israeli response should be expected before both segments are done, after which the army is committed to advancing to subsequent phases.

“The political decision has been made, and there will be no turning back. No government since 1969 has dared to take such a step,” Chehade said.

Turning to politics, the minister emphasized that Cabinet and Parliament are the appropriate venues for dialogue and challenged opponents to “head to the polls” rather than “circumvent” legitimate institutions.

“We are living in a parliamentary democracy that answers to the ballot box.”

Separately, Prime Minister Nawaf Salam received Dr. Christian Turner, political director and director general for geopolitical affairs at the British Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, accompanied by British Ambassador to Lebanon Hamish Cowell to discuss political developments.

Talks covered British support for the Lebanese army and the importance of achieving a full Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon.

In a significant diplomatic move, the UK this week floated the idea — first reported by pro-Hezbollah Al-Akhbar newspaper — to appoint a special envoy to negotiate with the party to disarm and fully integrate into the state.

Reports named Jonathan Powell, national security adviser under the government of Keir Starmer and former chief of staff under Tony Blair, who has experience in dealing with rebel forces or those classified as terrorist organizations.

Meanwhile, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Emigrants Youssef Rajji received Charles Fries, deputy secretary-general for peace, security, and defense at the European External Action Service, accompanied by EU Ambassador to Lebanon Sandra De Waele and a delegation from the EU.

Discussions included ways the EU could support Lebanon, particularly by enhancing the capabilities of the army so it can carry out its duties in implementing UN Security Council Resolution 1701.

Rajji expressed gratitude to the EU for its multifaceted support to Lebanon, emphasizing the importance of maintaining assistance for the Lebanese Armed Forces, which will assume increased responsibilities after the conclusion of UNIFIL’s mandate at the end of 2026 — a mission in which several EU member states participate.

He urged the EU to increase pressure on Israel to cease its daily attacks, withdraw from occupied Lebanese territory, and release prisoners.

Rajji also affirmed the government’s commitment to the reform process, underscoring that it answers both public demand and international requirements.

For his part, Fries reaffirmed the EU’s commitment to Lebanon and its armed forces, outlining proposals to assist Lebanon after UNIFIL departs.

He welcomed the progress of Lebanon’s reforms and noted that they will deepen the strategic partnership, attract financial support, and enhance broader EU-Lebanon relations.

Fries reiterated EU backing for Lebanon’s position on the return of Syrian refugees in accordance with international law.

Additionally, Rajji met a delegation from the Economic and Social Council, led by Charles Arbid, who briefed him on preparations for the “Beirut One” Investment Conference scheduled for Nov. 18-19, 2025, organized in partnership with the ESC and under the patronage of President Aoun.

The delegation highlighted the foreign ministry’s role in promoting active participation by the Lebanese diaspora, whose contributions are essential to reviving Lebanon’s economy and ensuring a sustainable recovery.


US envoy Witkoff says Trump to travel to Egypt next week

US envoy Witkoff says Trump to travel to Egypt next week
Updated 09 October 2025

US envoy Witkoff says Trump to travel to Egypt next week

US envoy Witkoff says Trump to travel to Egypt next week
  • “The President is really excited to come to Egypt,” Witkoff said
  • The deal agreed by Israel and Hamas will see a ceasefire and an exchange of hostages

CAIRO: US envoy Steve Witkoff said President Donald Trump is set to travel to Egypt next week, after Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi extended an invitation to attend celebrations over a Gaza ceasefire deal.
“The President is really excited to come to Egypt, and that is the plan, that he comes next week,” Witkoff said in a meeting with El-Sisi, a video of which was released by the Egyptian presidency.
El-Sisi’s office said he invited Trump to “participate in the celebration to be held in Egypt to mark the conclusion of the agreement for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip,” the first phase of which has been signed during talks in Egypt.
The deal agreed by Israel and Hamas will see a ceasefire and an exchange of hostages held in Gaza for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails.
Israel said the ceasefire would take effect “within 24 hours” of a meeting of Israel’s security cabinet Thursday.


Egypt’s El-Sisi tells Trump in phone call he ‘deserves Nobel Peace Prize’

Egypt’s El-Sisi tells Trump in phone call he ‘deserves Nobel Peace Prize’
Updated 09 October 2025

Egypt’s El-Sisi tells Trump in phone call he ‘deserves Nobel Peace Prize’

Egypt’s El-Sisi tells Trump in phone call he ‘deserves Nobel Peace Prize’
  • El-Sisi’s office said the president “stressed the need to move forward toward implementing the ceasefire agreement”

CAIRO: Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi told his US counterpart Donald Trump in a phone call that he “deserves the Nobel Peace Prize” for bringing about a deal to end the war in Gaza.
He invited Trump to “participate in the celebration to be held in Egypt to mark the conclusion of the agreement for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip,” the first phase of which has been signed during talks in Egypt.
The statement from El-Sisi’s office said the president “stressed the need to move forward toward implementing the ceasefire agreement in the Gaza Strip in all its stages.”