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Lebanon peace deal with Israel needed, US envoy says

With the Iran-Israel war opening up a new road for the Mideast, Syria and Lebanon need to reach peace agreements with Israel, the U.S. special envoy to Syria said Sunday.

"President (Ahmad) al-Sharaa has indicated that he doesn’t hate Israel... and that he wants peace on that border. I think that will also happen with Lebanon. It’s a necessity to have an agreement with Israel," Tom Barrack said in an interview with Turkey’s state news agency Anadolu.

"What just happened between Israel and Iran is an opportunity for all of us to say: 'Time out. Let's create a new road' (and) Turkiye is key in that new road," Barrack told Anadolu.

"The Middle East is ready to have a new dialogue, people are tired of the same old story," he said, saying it was essential for decades-long enmities to be reframed.

Israel, he said, was "in the process of being redefined" and its regional neighbors needed to reach agreement with it.

What is happening in Syria is "in big part due to Turkey" -- a key backer of the Islamist-led rebels who toppled Bashar al-Assad and now form the Damascus government -- and Turkey could play a central role in changing the regional narrative, he said.

U.S. President Donald Trump and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan "see that this is an opportunity at a really interesting point in both of their lives where they can change the dialogue," he said.

"And dialogue in the Middle East takes strong leadership."

Barrack also said he believed there would be a ceasefire soon in the deadly Gaza war which would also speed up a shift in regional thinking.

"We're going to see a ceasefire in Gaza in the near future, I think we have the right team on it," he told Anadolu.

"Everybody is starting to move back towards the Abraham Accords, especially as the Gaza situation dissipates," he said referring to the U.S.-sponsored agreements struck by Israel to normalize ties with the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco.

And he expressed confidence that Turkey and Israel -- whose relationship has been shattered by the Gaza war -- would resume their former ties.

"It can happen again, it's not a religious issue, it's a misunderstanding of territorial desires. So having a discussion, a dialogue.. will take place."

Source: Agence France Presse


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