Syria's permanent envoy to the United Nations on Tuesday urged the governments of Iraq and Lebanon to deploy official state forces along their borders with Syria and to prevent the spread of militia groups in those areas, Rudaw reported, citing remarks delivered to a UN Security Council meeting on the Middle East. Ibrahim Olabi, addressing the council, said Damascus welcomed the extension of the US–Iran ceasefire to Lebanon and reiterated longstanding Syrian support for "efforts aimed at preserving Lebanon's unity, sovereignty, and territorial integrity, as well as protecting its security and the safety of its people," according to Rudaw. He went further by calling on Beirut and Baghdad to push armed groups back from the frontier. "We also support limiting weapons to the hands of the state in Iraq and call on both brotherly countries, Iraq and Lebanon, to deploy forces in the border areas with Syria and prevent militias from spreading there," Olabi said, as ...
Iraq has emerged from nearly half a year of political paralysis after President Nizar Amedi named Ali al-Zaidi, a 40-year-old businessman with no prior government experience, as the country's prime minister-designate. The appointment, announced on Monday, came just hours after the Coordination Framework — the Shia-led coalition that holds the largest bloc in parliament — settled on al-Zaidi as a compromise candidate, averting a constitutional crisis that had been building since the November 2025 elections. Background: A Deadlock Driven by Foreign and Domestic Pressure The road to al-Zaidi's nomination was anything but straightforward. Following the parliamentary elections of November 11, 2025, the Coordination Framework declared itself the largest bloc and, under Iraq's confessional power-sharing system, claimed the right to nominate the next prime minister. Under that system — known as the Muhasasa arrangement and in place since the 2003 US-led invasion — the presidency is...