US to Establish Military Base in Damascus as Part of Controversial Syria-Israel Security Pact.

Syrian interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa meets with U.S. Special Envoy for Syria Thomas Barrack in Damascus, May 29, 2025.

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    The United States is reportedly setting up a military base in Damascus as part of a Washington-brokered security agreement between Syria and Israel. According to Reuters, the move marks the first U.S. military presence in the Syrian capital and reflects Damascus’s growing realignment toward Washington following the fall of Bashar al-Assad. The base described as a hub for “logistics and humanitarian operations” will operate near areas proposed as part of a future demilitarized zone under the pact.

    President Donald Trump is expected to meet Syria’s unelected president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, at the White House in the coming weeks to finalize the deal. U.S. officials claim the project aims to “stabilize” post-war Syria, but analysts view it as a deeper attempt to secure Israel’s borders and extend U.S. influence into yet another Arab capital. The Pentagon reportedly accelerated plans over the past two months, mirroring similar “temporary” deployments in Iraq and Lebanon that quietly became permanent.

    Critics argue that this initiative is less about peace and more about power. By embedding itself in Damascus, Washington cements a new regional order centered on Israeli security, while erasing the political questions surrounding occupation and Palestinian sovereignty. Israel, despite its ongoing violations of international law from settlement expansion in the West Bank to the devastation in Gaza continues to be rewarded with normalization and U.S. military protection.

    From an Islamic and moral standpoint, the hypocrisy is striking. The same nations preaching democracy and human rights are those arming the aggressor and shielding war crimes. The Qur’anic principles of justice, compassion, and defense of the oppressed are continuously violated as Arab regimes align with those perpetuating suffering in Gaza and beyond.

    The new U.S. base also raises fears of long-term dependency. By hosting foreign troops, Syria risks surrendering its sovereignty under the guise of reconstruction. For Washington, the move consolidates its strategic corridor across the Levant, linking its operations from Iraq to Israel.

    Human rights groups warn that such pacts, absent accountability, will entrench injustice rather than end conflict. Until justice becomes the foundation not the casualty of peace, the region will remain trapped between occupation and obedience, and the promise of liberation will remain deferred.

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