Jerusalem Post: Assad’s trip to UAE; A new era for Syria.
A Zionist newspaper reported that the Syrian president’s visit to the United Arab Emirates could be considered a new era in the expansion of Damascus’ relations with countries in the region.
The Zionist newspaper “Jerusalem Post” wrote in an analysis of the first visit of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to an Arab country since the beginning of the Syrian war that Assad’s visit to the UAE is a new era for Syria.
According to the report, Assad traveled to the UAE yesterday (Friday) and according to the UAE National newspaper, “Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai and Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the UAE Armed Forces “The latest developments in Syria were discussed with the president.”
The Emirati publication described the meetings as an important turning point for the Syrian government and wrote that the Syrian government’s ties with the outside world are expanding.
“Assad’s visit to the UAE was symbolic because the UAE voted against a resolution condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine at a UN Security Council meeting, and it seems to be easing the global order with China and India,” the Jerusalem Post reported. It is new.
UAE National: Assad’s meetings with Emirati officials are an important turning point for the Syrian government, which in a way indicates the expansion of the Syrian government’s relations with the outside world.
The report goes on to say that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was in the UAE and Saudi Arabia last week, and that US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken was scheduled to visit the UAE this month, although his visit has not yet been confirmed, and that Naphtali Bennett. The president of the Zionist regime also visited the United Arab Emirates earlier this year.
The Jerusalem Post continued that last year, the UAE took steps to get the Syrian government accepted in the region, and that the visit took place while Egypt also showed openness to Assad, and the Arab countries’ argument here is that the regime Assad is a bulwark of “stability” in the face of the chaos caused by the Syrian civil war.