News Flash
WASHINGTON, May 1, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - The United States on Thursday confirmed meeting Syria's top diplomat and called on the country's interim authorities to take action on sectarianism as violence flares against the Druze minority.
Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad al-Shaibani last Friday raised his country's flag at the UN headquarters, marking a new chapter after the December overthrow of longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad.
State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce confirmed that US representatives met the Syrian delegation in New York on Tuesday.
She said the United States urged the post-Assad authorities to "choose policies that reinforce stability," without providing any assessment on progress.
"Any future normalization of relations or lifting of sanctions... will depend on the interim authority's actions and positive response to the specific confidence-building measures we have communicated," Bruce told reporters.
The demands were in line with those set out in December by the United States, then led by president Joe Biden, and include protecting minorities and preventing a role in Syria by Assad's ally Iran.
Since Islamist fighters toppled Assad, sectarian clashes have repeatedly flared.
The spiritual leader of the Druze community on Thursday alleged a "genocidal campaign" after two days of violence left 102 people dead.
"The recent violence and inflammatory rhetoric targeting members of the Druze community in Syria is reprehensible and unacceptable," Bruce said in a statement later Thursday.
"The interim authorities must stop the fighting, hold perpetrators of violence and civilian harm accountable for their actions, and ensure the security of all Syrians."