Syrian Interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa arrived in Moscow on Wednesday, January 28, for his second official visit in less than four months, engaging in high-stakes discussions with Russian President Vladimir Putin. This meeting marks a critical juncture as Russia seeks to secure its military presence in Syria, while al-Sharaa pursues vital assistance for the nation's post-Assad reconstruction. The visit follows a historic inaugural meeting in October 2025, the first since al-Sharaa's forces ousted Russia's long-standing ally, Bashar al-Assad, in December 2024. Despite this history, al-Sharaa has adopted a pragmatic approach, signaling a willingness to honor existing agreements and permit Russia continued access to its strategic military installations, including the Hmeimim Air Base and Tartus Naval Base. Putin has publicly supported al-Sharaa's efforts to restore Syria's territorial integrity, a stance emphasized by Russia's recent military repositioning, such ...
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, the second son of Libya's longtime dictator Muammar Gaddafi and once considered his political heir, was shot dead by masked gunmen at his residence in Zintan on Tuesday night. He was 53. His killing, confirmed by his lawyer Khaled al-Zaidi and political adviser Abdullah Othman, marks the end of a tumultuous journey for a man who transformed from Western-educated reformer to wanted war criminal, and who spent his final years pursuing an improbable political resurrection in a nation still scarred by his family's legacy. The Reformer's Facade Born in 1972 to Muammar Gaddafi and his second wife Safia Farkash, Saif al-Islam was educated partly in the West and carefully cultivated an image as the acceptable, modern face of an otherwise brutal regime. For years before the 2011 uprising that toppled and killed his father, he was considered the most powerful figure in Libya after Muammar Gaddafi himself. Though he held no formal government position, his influe...