Reports of US pressure on Syria's interim government to confront Iran's proxy in Lebanon are grounded in fact — yet repeatedly denied and resisted by all sides. Persistent reports that the United States wants to enlist Syria's interim government against Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed Shia movement in Lebanon, are rooted in documented fact, though the picture is more cautious than the rumours suggest. Far from a settled plan, the idea is a live source of US pressure that Damascus has so far declined to act upon. The strongest evidence is a Reuters report in March stating that Washington had encouraged Syria to consider sending forces into eastern Lebanon to help disarm Hezbollah. Citing roughly ten sources, the agency said the proposal had first surfaced a year earlier and resurfaced as the US and Israel escalated their confrontation with Iran. Syria's Sunni Islamist-led government, it reported, was weighing a cross-border operation but remained reluctant, fearing entangl...
I n an analysis published on June 15, in the Lebanese newspaper Al Joumhouria, Lebanese journalist Johnny Mounir examined the complex maneuvering surrounding the emerging US-Iran agreement, highlighting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's conspicuous silence after Washington, Tehran, and Islamabad announced they had reached a deal to end the current state of war. According to Mounir, Israeli media described Netanyahu as shocked and sidelined by the announcement. Yet after Hezbollah was targeted by drones in northern Israel, it appeared Netanyahu was waiting for an opening—possibly using the two-drone "attack" as the pretext he needed to respond and reverse the equation Washington had recently established between Beirut's southern suburb and northern Israel. The analysis draws a historical parallel: when warring powers move toward settlements, a different kind of conflict often begins internally, using local tools. Mounir points to signs of this within Iran, wh...