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Syrian Intelligence Chief Met With Leaders Of Turkish-Backed Factions In Aleppo – Report

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Syrian Intelligence Chief Met With Leaders Of Turkish-Backed Factions In Aleppo - Report

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The chief of Syria’s General Intelligence Directorate Hussam Louqa held a meeting with the leaders of Turkish-backed armed factions in Aleppo city to brief them on the normalization process between Damascus and Ankara, Intelligence Online reported on May 12.

According to the French news website, Louqa accompanied Syrian Defense Minister Ali Mahmoud Abbas to the quadruple talks with Russia, Turkey and Iran in Moscow on April 25, where Ankara demanded a mechanism for the return of Syrian refugees and Damascus called for a Turkish withdrawal from Syrian territory.

The intelligence chief held a closed meeting with his Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan on the sideline of the talks, and the two agreed to meet again.

The Turkish military occupies vast parts of the northern Aleppo countryside, as well as a long strip of land between Raqqa and al-Hasakah in northeastern Syria. It also maintains a large presence in the northwestern region of Greater Idlib, where several terrorist groups are active.

Two days later, on April 27, Louqa traveled to the northern city of Aleppo where he met with the leaders of Turkish-backed armed factions to brief them on the quadruple talks in Moscow and set conditions for a possible reconciliation process. Two Russian senior officers attended the secret meeting, according to Intelligence Online.

Louqa was the mastermind behind several key reconciliation agreements in Syria. He was also credited with brokering a deal to restore relations with Saudi Arabia.

If confirmed, the meeting in Aleppo would be a sign of major advance in the Syrian-Turkish normalization process, which is backed by both Russia and Iran.

The foreign ministers of the four countries held a meeting in Moscow on May 10. The high-level talks didn’t result in any breakthrough, however.

A reconciliation agreement between Damascus and Turkish-backed armed factions could encourage Ankara to pull its troops out from Syria, push forward the political process in the country and help millions of Syrians return to their homes. However, it is still unclear if such an agreement will be possible to implement with the presence of many radical elements in the Syrian opposition.

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Dave

1) the meeting itself is a *major* breakthrough. Results will be forthcoming. 2) Extremist elements (not “radical”) are loosing support by Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar etc. so that problem will mostly dissipate.

hash
hashed
The Objective

It’s possible to reconcile if Assad is willing to make concessions to the opposition. He has to understand that total dictatorship is no longer possible, at least not without another war, which he is unlikely to win this time. Turkiye wants to team up with Russia, Iran, and Assad to kick the U.S. out of Syria. The U.S. cannot fight the militaries all these countries combined. It’s forces in Syria are too small for such a task and will be quickly obliterated. Turkiye can arm Assad with the kinds of weapons that will raise the cost for any occupying force, particularly America. Assad must understand that Russia has done all it can for him and cannot offer as much support as it did in the past. Iran also cannot defend Assad from another colour revolution. But Turkiye can. If Assad continues to dream that his totalitarian rule will be reinstated, then there can be no normalization.

Last edited 1 year ago by The Objective
Chris Gr

That revolution wasn’t orange and liberal but black and jihadist. Next war will be about the waters and the gold of Euphrates.

Lol

Get a life

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