Jordan, Vietnam foreign ministers hold talks to boost cooperation following King Abdullah II’s visit

Jordan, Vietnam foreign ministers hold talks to boost cooperation following King Abdullah II’s visit
Jordan’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Ayman Safadi and his Vietnamese counterpart Le Hoai Trung. (Petra)
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Updated 1 min 25 sec ago

Jordan, Vietnam foreign ministers hold talks to boost cooperation following King Abdullah II’s visit

Jordan, Vietnam foreign ministers hold talks to boost cooperation following King Abdullah II’s visit
  • Safadi and Trung agreed to convene the first round of political consultations next year to develop a comprehensive roadmap for cooperation in trade, investment, health, education, and tourism

DUBAI: Jordan’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Ayman Safadi and his Vietnamese counterpart Le Hoai Trung met on Thursday to discuss strengthening cooperation between the two countries in a wide range of sectors.

The two officials met following the signing of two memoranda of understanding on Wednesday as part of King Abdullah II’s official visit to Hanoi. These include one establishing political consultations between the two countries’ foreign ministries and another enhancing cooperation between the Jordanian Diplomatic Institute and the Vietnamese Diplomatic Academy.

The two ministers discussed expanding bilateral collaboration and building on the outcomes of King Abdullah’s meetings with Vietnamese leaders.

During the talks, Safadi and Trung agreed to convene the first round of political consultations next year to develop a comprehensive roadmap for cooperation in trade, investment, health, education, tourism and other key areas.

The roadmap will provide a framework for translating the outcomes of the high-level meetings into tangible initiatives that benefit both countries.

The ministers also reviewed several draft agreements aimed at establishing the legal and institutional foundations for broader engagement between the private sectors of Jordan and Vietnam.

The discussions covered regional developments as well, particularly ongoing efforts to reinforce the ceasefire in Gaza, alleviate the humanitarian crisis, and begin implementing the second phase of the ceasefire agreement.


Syria to help US fight Iran-backed armed groups, envoy says

Syria to help US fight Iran-backed armed groups, envoy says
Updated 6 sec ago

Syria to help US fight Iran-backed armed groups, envoy says

Syria to help US fight Iran-backed armed groups, envoy says
DAMASCUS: Syria will play an active role in assisting the United States in fighting armed groups including Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, Hamas and Hezbollah, US special envoy Tom Barrack said on Thursday.
Interim President Ahmed Al-Sharaa, himself a former jihadist, became the first Syrian leader to visit the White House since his country’s independence in 1946.
Shortly after his visit, the US-led coalition fighting the Daesh group (IS) announced that Syria had become its 90th member.
On Thursday, Barrack wrote on X that “Damascus will now actively assist us in confronting and dismantling the remnants of Daesh, the IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps), Hamas, Hizballah, and other terrorist networks.”
Iran’s powerful IRGC and Lebanon’s Hezbollah were key backers of president Bashar Assad before he was ousted last december by a rebel coalition led by Sharaa.
Hamas does not have an armed presence in Syria.
Barrack also said he held a “pivotal” meeting with US top diplomat Marco Rubio, Turkiye’s Hakan Fidan and Syria’s Asaad Al-Shaibani, during which they discussed steps toward “integrating the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) into the new Syrian economic, defense and civic structure.”
Backed by Washington, the Kurdish-led SDF played a key role in unseating IS from its last strongholds in Syria.
SDF leader Mazloum Abdi told AFP last month that he had reached a “preliminary agreement” with Damascus on the integration of his troops into Syria’s military and security forces.
In a post on X on Tuesday, Abdi said he had discussed with Barrack “our commitment to accelerate the integration of the SDF into the Syrian state.”
Sharaa’s administration and the SDF had signed an agreement in March to integrate into national civilian and military institutions, but it has faced hurdles since.