The visit sends the clearest signal yet that the Arab world is willing to re-engage with Syriaâs once widely shunned president. It comes against the backdrop of the raging war in Ukraine where Assadâs main ally, Russian President Vladimir Putin, is pressing on with a military offensive, now in its fourth week, raining lethal fire on Ukrainian cities, including the capital, Kyiv. Syria has supported Russiaâs invasion, blaming the West for having provoked it.
Syria was expelled from the 22-member Arab League and boycotted by its neighbors after the conflict broke out 11 years ago. Hundreds of thousands of people have been killed in the war, which displaced half of Syriaâs population. Large parts of Syria have been destroyed and reconstruction would cost tens of billions of dollars.
Arab and Western countries generally blamed Assad for the deadly crackdown on the 2011 protests that evolved into civil war, and supported the opposition in the early days of the conflict.
Assad has very rarely traveled outside the country during Syriaâs civil war, only visiting Russia and Iran. Tehran has given the Syrian government billions of dollars in aid and sent Iran-backed fighters to battle alongside his forces â assistance that, along with Russian air power, has helped turn the tide in Assadâs favor.
With the war having fallen into a stalemate and Assad recovering control over most of the country thanks to military assistance from his two allies, Arab countries have inched closer toward restoring ties with the Syrian leader in recent years.
The UAE reopened its embassy in Syria in late 2018 in the most significant Arab overture toward the Assad government, though relations remained cold. Last fall, the Emirati foreign minister flew to Damascus for a meeting with Assad, the first visit by the countryâs top diplomat since 2011. The United States, a close Emirati partner, criticized the visit at the time, saying it would not support any normalization with Assadâs government.
A key motive for the overtures by Sunni Muslim countries in the Persian Gulf is to blunt the involvement of their Shiite-led foe, Iran, which saw its influence expand rapidly in the chaos of Syriaâs war.
The rapprochement, however, could serve both sides.
Syria badly needs to boost relations with oil-rich countries as its economy is being strangled by crippling Western sanctions and as it faces the task of post-war reconstruction. The UAE is also home to thousands of Syrians who work in the Gulf Arab nation and send money to their relatives at home.
The UAEâs state-run WAM news agency said the countryâs de facto ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan welcomed Syriaâs Bashar al-Assad at his palace in Abu Dhabi.
At the meeting, Sheikh Mohammed expressed his hope âthis visit would be the beginning of peace and stability for Syria and tee entire region.â
The report said Assad briefed Sheikh Mohammed on the latest developments in Syria and the two leaders discussed mutual interests in the Arab world. Assad was reported to have left the UAE later on Friday from Abu Dhabi.
Sheikh Mohammed stressed to Assad that Syria remains a âfundamental pillar of Arab securityâ and that he hopes the UAE can facilitate its development. The leaders also discussed the importance of âthe preservation of Syriaâs territorial integrity and withdrawal of foreign forces,â the report added.
The similarly vague statement said Dubaiâs Sheikh Mohammed affirmed the UAEâs desire to âdiscover new paths of constructive cooperationâ with Syria and made no reference to the war.
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Karam reported from Beirut. Associated Press writer Isabel DeBre contributed from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
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