Erdogan turns Trump’s Gaza deal into a power play for Turkiye

Erdogan turns Trump’s Gaza deal into a power play for Turkiye
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan’s signature on the Gaza document supercharged Turkey's push for a central role in the Middle East, a status Erdogan has increasingly sought to reclaim, often invoking Ottoman-era ties and leadership. (AFP/File)
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Erdogan turns Trump’s Gaza deal into a power play for Turkiye

Erdogan turns Trump’s Gaza deal into a power play for Turkiye
  • Erdogan’s signature on the Gaza document supercharged Turkiye’s push for a central role in the Middle East
  • Sinan Ulgen, director of the Istanbul-based think tank EDAM, said Ankara’s success in delivering Hamas’s acceptance of Trump’s Gaza deal has given it new diplomatic leverage at home and abroad

ANKARA/DUBAI: Turkiye’s ties to Hamas, once a liability in Washington, have turned into a geopolitical asset. By persuading Hamas to accept Donald Trump’s Gaza deal, Ankara has reasserted itself on the Middle East chessboard, to the dismay of Israel and Arab rivals.
Initially resistant to the US president’s ultimatum — free the Israeli hostages or face continued devastation — Hamas leaders relented only when Turkiye, a country they view as a political patron, urged them to agree to the American plan.
Two regional sources and two Hamas officials told Reuters that Ankara’s message was unequivocal: The time had come to accept.
“This gentleman from a place called Turkiye is one of the most powerful in the world,” Trump said last week, referring to Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, after the Palestinian militant group agreed to a ceasefire and hostage-release plan.
“He’s a reliable ally. He’s always there when I need him.”
Erdogan’s signature on the Gaza document supercharged Turkiye’s push for a central role in the Middle East, a status Erdogan has increasingly sought to reclaim, often invoking Ottoman-era ties and leadership.
Now, after the deal, Turkiye is seeking to reap dividends, including in bilateral issues with the US, the sources said.
Sinan Ulgen, director of the Istanbul-based think tank EDAM and a senior fellow at Carnegie Europe, said Ankara’s success in delivering Hamas’s acceptance of Trump’s Gaza deal has given it new diplomatic leverage at home and abroad.
Turkiye, he said, is likely to use its renewed goodwill in Washington to push for progress on stalled F-35 fighter jet sales, an easing of US sanctions and US help in advancing Turkiye’s security goals in neighboring Syria.
“If those laudatory statements from Trump translate into lasting goodwill, Ankara could use that momentum to resolve some of the long-standing disagreements,” Ulgen told Reuters.

AT TRUMP-ERDOGAN MEETING, A REVAMP OF TIES BEGAN
The diplomatic recalibration between Ankara and Washington, officials said, began during Erdogan’s September visit to the White House, his first in six years.
The meeting addressed unresolved flashpoints, including Turkiye’s push to lift US sanctions imposed in 2020 over its purchase of Russian S-400 missile systems, a move that angered Washington and also led to its removal from the F-35 program.
Syria was another key topic. Turkiye wants to pressure the US-backed Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) to merge into the Syrian army. Ankara views the SDF as a threat due to its ties to the PKK, which Turkiye designates a terrorist group.
That push appears to be gaining ground. SDF commander Mazloum Abdi confirmed a mechanism to merge with the Syrian army, an outcome Turkiye sees as a strategic win.
The Gaza deal follows other boosts to Turkish prestige. Trump praised Erdogan for hosting Russia-Ukraine talks earlier this year, and Ankara’s influence grew after Bashar Assad’s fall in Syria in 2024, where Turkiye backed opposition forces.
Turkiye’s ambition to reclaim a dominant Middle East role recalls for some skeptics the legacy of the Ottoman empire, which once ruled much of the region. Its collapse a century ago left modern Turkiye inward-looking as it built a secular republic and somewhat sidelined from regional diplomacy.
For years, Ankara was not part of high-level efforts to solve the Israeli-Palestinian dispute, a core source of regional instability. Turkiye’s support for Islamist movements — including political and diplomatic backing for Hamas, whose leaders it has hosted — strained ties with Israel and several regional states, and its perceived drift under Erdogan from NATO norms further distanced it from peacemaking.
But to break the deadlock in Gaza ceasefire talks, Trump turned to Erdogan, betting on the Turkish leader’s sway over Hamas. Turkish officials, led by spy chief Ibrahim Kalin, assured Hamas the ceasefire had regional and US backing, including Trump’s personal guarantee.
By enlisting Erdogan, Trump handed Ankara the role it craved as a dominant regional Sunni power. 
“Erdogan is a master in expanding his influence, seizing opportunities, taking advantage of events, turning them to his own interest and taking credit for them,” said Arab political commentator Ayman Abdel Nour. 
While Arab states shared an interest with Turkiye in ending the war, said Lebanese analyst Sarkis Naoum, the larger role given to Ankara was worrisome for them, recalling the history of Ottoman imperial rule over many countries in the region.
Turkiye’s Foreign Ministry and MIT intelligence agency did not respond to Reuters requests for comment. The US State Department did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
For Hamas, the main concern was that Israel might renege on the deal and resume military operations. Deep distrust nearly derailed the process, regional sources said.
“The only real guarantee,” a senior Hamas official told Reuters, “came from four parties: Turkiye, Qatar, Egypt, and the Americans. Trump personally gave his word. The US message was: ‘release the hostages, hand over the bodies, and I guarantee there will be no return to war.’”

CRUSHING PRESSURE ON HAMAS
Turkiye’s entry into the talks was initially vetoed by Israel, but Trump intervened, pressuring Israel to allow Ankara’s involvement, two diplomats said.
There was no immediate comment from Israel’s foreign ministry.
A senior Hamas official said Gaza’s military leaders accepted the truce not as surrender, but under the crushing pressure of relentless mediation, a collapsing humanitarian situation, and a war-weary public.
The deal won the release of Israeli hostages taken during Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attack, which killed 1,200 people, and triggered an Israeli offensive that has since left over 67,000 Palestinians dead, according to Gaza health authorities.
Whether the Gaza deal will eventually open a way toward a Palestinian state remains unclear. Turkiye and Arab states including Qatar and Egypt say the plan lacks a roadmap toward a two-state solution, a historic Palestinian demand.
Asked about a potential Turkish troop deployment to Gaza in a post-war scenario and ways to ensure the enclave’s security, Erdogan said on October 8 the ceasefire talks were critical for discussing the issue in detail, but the priority was achieving a full ceasefire, aid deliveries and rebuilding Gaza.


World Bank estimates $216bn needed to rebuild Syria after civil war

World Bank estimates $216bn needed to rebuild Syria after civil war
Updated 47 min 6 sec ago

World Bank estimates $216bn needed to rebuild Syria after civil war

World Bank estimates $216bn needed to rebuild Syria after civil war
  • The conflict destroyed large swaths of the country and battered critical infrastructure
  • The World Bank says the rebuilding may cost between $140 billion and $345 billion

DAMASCUS: Rebuilding Syria after over a decade of civil war is expected to cost about $216 billion, the World Bank said in an assessment published Tuesday. The cost is almost ten times Syria’s 2024 gross domestic product.
Syria’s civil war began in 2011 when mass protests against the government of then-President Bashar Assad were met with a brutal crackdown and spiraled into armed conflict. Assad was ousted in December in a lightning rebel offensive.
The conflict destroyed large swaths of the country and battered critical infrastructure, including its electrical grid.
The World Bank says the rebuilding may cost between $140 billion and $345 billion, but their “conservative best estimate” is $216 billion.
The World Bank estimates that rebuilding infrastructure will cost $82 billion. It estimated the cost of damages for residential buildings at $75 billion and $59 billion for non-residential structures.
The province of Aleppo and the Damascus countryside, where fierce battles took place, will require the most investment, according to the assessment.
“The challenges ahead are immense, but the World Bank stands ready to work alongside the Syrian people and the international community to support recovery and reconstruction,” World Bank Middle East Director Jean-Christophe Carret said in a statement.
Despite reestablishing diplomatic relations with the West and signing investment deals worth billions of dollars with Gulf countries since Assad was ousted, the country is still struggling financially.
While the United States and Europe have lifted many of the sanction s imposed during the rule of the Assad dynasty, the impact on the ground has so far been limited.
Cuts to international aid have worsened living conditions for many. The United Nations estimates that 90 percent of Syria’s population lives in poverty.


Palestinian woman hospitalized after Israeli settler attack

Palestinian woman hospitalized after Israeli settler attack
Updated 21 October 2025

Palestinian woman hospitalized after Israeli settler attack

Palestinian woman hospitalized after Israeli settler attack
  • Afaf Abu Alia was clubbed twice on head while picking olives in West Bank
  • US journalist who filmed attack: ‘It’s the most vivid image that’s ever been seared in my mind’

LONDON: A Palestinian woman in the occupied West Bank has been hospitalized after being clubbed on the head by a Jewish settler while picking olives, the BBC reported.

The unprovoked attack on Afaf Abu Alia, 55, was filmed by American journalist Jasper Nathaniel in the Palestinian village of Turmus Ayya.

Nathaniel said the settler knocked Abu Alia unconscious with a club before hitting her as she lay on the ground.

The Israel Defense Forces claimed that its personnel ended the confrontation after arriving at the scene, and that it “strongly condemns” settler violence.

However, Nathaniel said: “No Israeli forces showed up to the attack at any point.” He added that Israeli soldiers were in the area before the attack and had “lured” him and others into an “ambush,” before speeding off ahead of the settler attack.

He said of the video footage: “It’s the most vivid image that’s ever been seared in my mind. He swings it (the club) one time and I saw her body go completely limp. And then he stood over her and hit her twice more.”

Abu Alia was seen bleeding as she was carried into a vehicle to be taken to hospital. She was first admitted to intensive care but is now in a stable condition, doctors said.

The attack was part of a wider assault by 15 masked Jewish settlers on local Palestinians picking olives, part of the harvest season that began on Oct. 9

The group was seen throwing stones at the Palestinians and activists who had arrived to support them, including Nathaniel.

At least 80 percent of Turmus Ayya residents hold US citizenship or residency, according to Israeli media reports.

Nathaniel contacted a US Embassy official about the incident, but was told that the diplomatic body could not offer protection to him or other American citizens in the area.

The age-old Palestinian cultural ritual of the olive harvest has come under growing Israeli pressure in recent years.

Farmers in the West Bank regularly face organized assaults by Jewish settlers, as well as arbitrary roadblocks and land access bans by Israeli forces.

The UN’s humanitarian office documented 71 settler attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank from Oct. 7-13, with at least half related to the olive harvest.

Human rights groups say the assaults are designed to intimidate Palestinians into leaving their ancestral lands so that settlers can seize new areas.

From 2005 to 2023, just 3 percent of official Israeli investigations into settler violence resulted in a conviction, according to Israeli civil rights group Yesh Din.


Sustaining Gaza ceasefire ‘vital’ to deliver aid, save lives: UN

Sustaining Gaza ceasefire ‘vital’ to deliver aid, save lives: UN
Updated 21 October 2025

Sustaining Gaza ceasefire ‘vital’ to deliver aid, save lives: UN

Sustaining Gaza ceasefire ‘vital’ to deliver aid, save lives: UN
  • The spokeswoman said WFP now had 26 food distribution points open in Gaza

GENEVA: Maintaining the Gaza ceasefire is crucial to delivering life-saving humanitarian aid in the territory, the United Nations said Tuesday, repeating a call for all crossings to be opened.
“Sustaining the ceasefire is vital; really it’s the only way we can save lives,” Abeer Etefa, Middle East spokeswoman for the UN’s World Food Programme, told a briefing in Geneva.
“We know it’s a fragile ceasefire; the most important thing is that it lasts.”
Etefa said that since the ceasefire came into force, 530 WFP trucks had crossed into Gaza, bringing in more than 6,700 tons of food, which she said was “enough for close to half a million people for two weeks.”
“Convoys are pushing through, food is getting to the warehouses and distributions are happening in an organized and dignified manner,” she said.
Etefa added that WFP had not seen looting of its convoys since the ceasefire.
The spokeswoman said WFP now had 26 food distribution points open in Gaza — up from five on Friday, but still far short of the 145 it hopes to run throughout the territory. Most are in the south and center of the Strip.
“People are showing up in large numbers” at the distribution points, Etefa said.
She said that only the Kerem Shalom and Kissufim crossings were open, but called for every entry point into the Palestinian territory to be opened, particularly those in the north, where the food situation “is extremely dire.”
“We don’t have an indication on when those border points wil be open,” she said, adding: “We haven’t gotten to the point where Gaza is flooded with food.”

France’s President Emmanuel Macron also called on Tuesday for aid routes into Gaza to be reopened as a matter of “absolute urgency” to allow crucial aid in for war-stricken civilians.
“The situation in Gaza remains very fragile,” Macron told a news conference in Ljubljana alongside Slovenian Prime Minister Robert Golob.
“We wish to remain committed along with our European, Arab and US partners to immediately obtain — and this is a matter of absolute urgency — the reopening of humanitarian sites and routes so that aid, food and basic necessities can be brought to the population.”


Syria gives banks six months to absorb losses from Lebanese crisis

Syria gives banks six months to absorb losses from Lebanese crisis
Updated 21 October 2025

Syria gives banks six months to absorb losses from Lebanese crisis

Syria gives banks six months to absorb losses from Lebanese crisis
  • Syrian officials say the decision is part of a wider effort to clean up a banking sector crushed by 14 years of war and Western sanctions and help address a liquidity crisis that has stifled economic activity

DAMASCUS: Syria’s central bank has ordered commercial lenders to fully provision for losses tied to Lebanon’s financial collapse and submit credible restructuring plans within six months, a move that could reshape the country’s battered banking sector.
The directive issued on September 22 requires banks to recognize 100 percent of their exposure to Lebanon’s financial system, where Syrian lenders parked funds during the country’s civil war.
Syrian officials say the decision is part of a wider effort to clean up a banking sector crushed by 14 years of war and Western sanctions and help address a liquidity crisis that has stifled economic activity.
The order has prompted some banks to seek new investors or explore foreign acquisitions, three Syrian bankers told Reuters.
“They will need to provide us with a credible plan for restructuring, and now the countdown has started,” Syrian Central Bank governor Abdelkader Husriyeh told Reuters.
“They can find various ways to do this, including via their sister banks in Lebanon or by partnering with other international institutions,” he said.

SYRIAN BANKS FACE SIGNIFICANT EXPOSURE
Syrian commercial banks have more than $1.6 billion in exposure to Lebanon, Husriyeh said.
That represents a significant proportion of the $4.9 billion in total deposits in the Syrian commercial banking sector, according to a Reuters calculation based on the 2024 financial reports of all 14 commercial banks in Syria, published by the Damascus Stock Exchange.
The banks most affected include Bank Al-Sharq, Fransabank, Bank of Syria and Overseas, and Banque Bemo Saudi Faransi, Shahba Bank and Ahli Trust Bank, all originally Lebanese banks that opened branches in Syria in the 2000s. None of the banks immediately responded to requests for comment.
Bankers say they turned to Lebanon during Syria’s civil war, with few other options due to Western sanctions that have gradually been rolled back since former leader Bashar Assad was ousted last year.
But those deposits were trapped when Lebanon’s banking system imploded in 2019, following years of fiscal mismanagement and political paralysis.
Lebanon has yet to adopt a plan to resolve the crisis, although Lebanese officials say they have made significant progress toward a “financial gap law” to determine how to prioritize compensating people for their losses.

BANKS CHALLENGE SHORT DEADLINE
Some Syrian bankers have criticized the short timeline to comply with the directive to fully provision for losses related to Lebanon.
“The decision in and of itself is justified, but the time given isn’t,” one banker said. “It’s preemptive, premature — pre-whatever you want. Political.”
Syrian officials deny any political motives.
Husriyeh said the move was part of a broader effort to adhere to regulations neglected by the previous government.
“We don’t want any bank to face issues, but denial is also not a solution,” he said. “We are moving from the denial of the old regime to acknowledgement and treatment of the problem.”
Some of the affected banks are in the early stages of talks with Arab financial institutions, including banks based in Jordan, and Qatar, over possible acquisitions, three Syrian bankers said.
Husriyeh said the government aims to double the number of commercial banks operating in Syria by 2030 and said some foreign banks were already in the process of getting licensed. He declined to provide details, citing the confidentiality of the process.


US Vice President JD Vance arrives in Israel with Gaza ceasefire uncertain

US Vice President JD Vance arrives in Israel with Gaza ceasefire uncertain
Updated 21 October 2025

US Vice President JD Vance arrives in Israel with Gaza ceasefire uncertain

US Vice President JD Vance arrives in Israel with Gaza ceasefire uncertain
  • Gaza ceasefire remains shaky
  • Hamas and mediators talking in Cairo

JERUSALEM/CAIRO: US Vice President JD Vance arrived in Israel on Tuesday, as Washington tries to stabilize the first, shaky, phase of the Gaza ceasefire and push Israel and Hamas toward the harder concessions asked of each side in coming talks.
The two sides have accused each other of repeated breaches of the ceasefire since it was formally agreed eight days ago, with flashes of violence and recriminations over the pace of returning hostage bodies, bringing in aid and opening borders.
However, US President Donald Trump’s 20-point ceasefire plan will require much more difficult steps to which the sides have yet to fully commit, including the disarmament of Hamas and steps toward a Palestinian state.
Vance’s visit follows that of Witkoff
Vance’s visit follows Monday’s talks between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US envoys Steven Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and comes as Hamas meet mediators in Cairo.
Netanyahu said on Monday he would be discussing regional challenges and opportunities with Vance.
Israel’s war in Gaza and related conflicts with Iran, Lebanese Hezbollah and Yemen’s Houthis have left it militarily dominant in the Middle East but with increasingly frosty relations with Arab states.
Hamas’ Cairo talks, led by the group’s exiled leader Khalil Al-Hayya, are looking at prospects for the next phase of the truce and post-war arrangements in Gaza as well as stabilizing the existing ceasefire.
Trump’s plan called for the establishment of a technocratic Palestinian committee overseen by an international board with Hamas taking no role in governance.
A Palestinian official close to the talks said Hamas encouraged the formation of such a committee to run Gaza without any of its representatives, but with the consent of the group as well as the Palestinian Authority and other factions.
Last week senior Hamas official Mohammed Nazzal told Reuters the group expected to maintain a security role on the ground in Gaza during an undefined interim period.
Israel has said Hamas can have no role at all in Gaza, while it and Trump have said the group must disarm. Nazzal would not commit to the group disarming.
Hamas last week battled rival gangs on the streets in Gaza and publicly executed men it accused of having collaborated with Israel. Trump condoned the killings but the US military’s Middle East command urged Hamas to stop violence “without delay.”
Vance was expected on Tuesday to visit the headquarters of joint forces led by the US military and meant to help with Gaza stabilization efforts.
Return of hostage bodies and aid deliveries
Speaking to Egyptian television late on Monday, Hayya reaffirmed the group’s compliance with the truce and said it would fulfil its obligations in the first phase, including returning more bodies of hostages.
“Let their (hostages) bodies return to their families, and let the bodies of our martyrs return to their families to be buried in dignity,” he said.
One more body of a hostage seized by Hamas in its Oct. 7, 2023, attack that triggered the war was returned on Monday and identified by Israeli authorities. Some 15 bodies are believed to remain in Gaza, with Israel expecting about five of them to be returned soon and others requiring a slower, more complex, process of retrieval.
Inside Gaza on Tuesday, more aid was flowing into the enclave through two Israeli-controlled crossings, Palestinian and UN officials said.
However, with Gaza residents facing catastrophic conditions aid agencies have said far more needs to be brought in.
Ismail Al-Thawabta, director of the Hamas-run Gaza government’s media office said far fewer trucks had entered than had been agreed upon and called it “a drop in the ocean of what people need.”
Violence in Gaza since the truce has mostly focused around the “yellow line” demarcating Israel’s military pullback. On Tuesday Israel’s public Kan radio reported troops had killed a person crossing the line and advancing toward them.
Palestinians near the line, running across devastated areas close to major cities, have said it is not clearly marked and hard to know where the exclusion zone begins. Israeli bulldozers began placing yellow concrete blocks along the route on Monday.
Qatar, one of the mediators of the ceasefire, on Tuesday accused Israel of “continuous violations” of the truce.