Breaking 10:30 Mattel investor calls for strategic review as toy demand weakens 10:20 Search for two missing US soldiers in Morocco enters fifth day with 600 personnel deployed 10:15 Vatican’s careful language on Pope-Rubio meeting signals strained relations with Trump administration 09:30 Marco Rubio meets Giorgia Meloni amid tensions between Rome and Washington 09:00 Zyphra's sub-billion parameter AI model matches industry giants on reasoning benchmarks 08:37 Iran threatens UAE will "pay the price" after explosions rock Qeshm island 08:15 US investigates alleged smuggling of Nvidia AI Chips through Thailand 07:59 Trump sets July 4 deadline for EU to ratify trade deal or face higher tariffs 07:03 Microsoft scales back Copilot as the company retreats from its AI-everywhere strategy 17:00 Rave files antitrust lawsuit against Apple over App Store removal 16:45 BlackRock reduces private credit fund valuation by 5% in first quarter 16:20 Nvidia's Jensen Huang calls AI job loss warnings ridiculous and attacks rivals' God complex 16:15 United States sanctions Iraqi oil official and militias over alleged Iran ties 15:56 European climate model puts odds of a super El Niño by November at 100 percent 15:45 Whirlpool shares plunge after weak revenue and dividend suspension 15:23 Rubio visits Rome to ease Trump's rift with the Vatican and Italy 15:00 Trump and Lula meet at White House to address tariffs, minerals and security ties 14:30 Blackstone marks down private credit fund amid software sector concerns 13:02 Anthropic's Claude guided hackers toward water infrastructure control systems in documented cyberattack, report finds 13:00 US Jobless claims rise slightly as labor market remains stable

Call for Syria-Israel Non-Aggression Pact Marks Diplomatic Shift

Thursday 29 May 2025 - 15:35
By: Zahouani Ilham
Call for Syria-Israel Non-Aggression Pact Marks Diplomatic Shift

Thomas Barrack, the U.S. special envoy to Syria, has proposed a "non-aggression pact" between Syria and Israel as a starting point for renewed dialogue. During his visit to Damascus, Barrack emphasized that the longstanding conflict between the two nations could be resolved through open discussion. He stressed that the first step should involve an agreement to cease hostilities, followed by talks on borders and a path toward a new bilateral relationship.

Barrack’s trip signals a significant development in U.S.-Syria relations, coinciding with the inauguration of the American ambassador’s residence in the Syrian capital. This marks a symbolic reopening of diplomatic ties, following the closure of the U.S. embassy during the Syrian civil conflict that erupted in 2011 under Bashar al-Assad’s rule.

The envoy also met with interim Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, who came to power after leading an Islamist coalition that ousted Assad in December. This meeting follows earlier talks between U.S. President Donald Trump and al-Chareh in Riyadh, which resulted in the lifting of American sanctions against Damascus.

President Trump announced that Syria’s new leadership is open to normalizing ties with Israel, despite decades of hostilities dating back to 1948. Meanwhile, Israel has continued to carry out military operations inside Syria, including hundreds of airstrikes on strategic sites and deployments in the UN-monitored buffer zone on the Golan Heights.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.