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Veterans of Arab uprisings warn Syrians of perils ahead

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Veterans of Arab uprisings warn Syrians of perils ahead

As jubilant Syrians celebrated the fall of dictator Bashar al-Assad this week, dire warnings proliferated across Arabic social media: that this joyful moment could lead to a bleak future.

That the end of the Assad dynasty came at the hands of an armed Islamist group with former links to al-Qaeda, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, deepened alarm even among Arabs well aware of the blood-soaked record of Assad’s regime.

“The people who are optimistic for the future of Syria, have they not been with us during the past 14 years?” Ezzedine Fishere, an Egyptian political science professor at Dartmouth University in the US, wrote on Facebook.

Another Egyptian social media user posted: “Isn’t what happened in Iraq, and after that the Arab uprisings [of 2011] enough to be terrified of what’s coming?”

In 2011 a wave of popular uprisings swept across the Arab world, toppling despots in Egypt, Libya, Tunisia and igniting hopes of democratic government and economic prosperity — hopes that were subsequently shattered by new autocracies or civil wars. Syria’s uprising began at the same time, but its government has only fallen 13 years later.

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Zaina Erhaim, a Syrian journalist who moved to London in 2017, said warnings she received from Tunisian and Egyptian friends were “simplistic and did not take the Syrian context into consideration. It is as if they are saying: ‘Those poor people are happy but they don’t know what awaits them’.”

“I am a bit hopeful,” she said. “We Syrians are aware of our own failures even more than we are aware of those of others. I hope we will learn not just from the lessons of others, but also from our own experiences.”

Journalist Zaina Erhaim: ‘I am a bit hopeful’ © Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images

For Syrians, this is a moment of intense hope, even if that is tinged with apprehension. Many Syrians are experiencing the same elation others in the region felt when they shook off their oppressors in 2011.

When Hosni Mubarak, the autocrat who ruled Egypt for 30 years, stepped down in 2011 after 18 days of peaceful protests, ecstatic crowds poured into Cairo’s Tahrir Square, chanting: “Hold your head up high, you are Egyptian.”

The Muslim Brotherhood subsequently won parliamentary elections, and in 2012 Mohamed Morsi, one of the group’s leaders, was elected president with a slim majority. His brief rule alienated many, including pro-revolution groups. Secular parties, elites from the Mubarak era and a range of Egyptians alarmed by the rise of the Islamists agitated against his rule.

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That gave Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, then defence minister and now president, opportunity to oust Morsi in a 2013 coup with broad popular support. Since then, Egypt’s democratic experiment has been curtailed, demonstrations are banned and there is little space for dissent.

Hisham Kassem, an Egyptian publisher and critic of the Sisi regime, said the transition failed because the Islamists “had been trying to hog the situation, and the economy was not taken seriously”.

“The military had been standing on the sidelines and were not really prepared to give up power, but failure was largely due to the bad performance of the country’s political forces,” he said.

Tunisian feminist activists call for the release of women detained for criticising the president during a national women’s day rally in August 2024
Tunisian feminist activists call for the release of women detained for criticising the president during a national women’s day rally in August 2024 © Hasna/AFP/Getty Images

After its own uprising, Tunisia’s fledgling democracy survived for a decade, but collapsed when Kais Saied, a democratically elected populist president, in 2021 shuttered parliament, rewrote the constitution to concentrate power in his hands and began jailing critics.

The autocratic shift was welcomed by Tunisians fed up with chaotic politics, falling living standards and ineffective government. In October Saied won the latest presidential elections with 90 per cent of the vote after jailing the more credible of two candidates allowed to run against him.

The lesson from Tunisia, said Olfa Lamloum, a political scientist in Tunis, is that “democratic freedoms cannot survive without the basics of a dignified life.

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“Protests in the past 10 years by the unemployed and others have been about social and economic rights,” she said. “People have to see that their lives are changing for the better.”

Libyan rebels battle government troops as smoke from a damaged oil facility darkens the sky on March 11 2011 in Ras Lanuf, Libya
Rival ruling elites in Libya have since settled into dysfunctional coexistence, funding themselves by siphoning off its oil revenues © John Moore/Getty Images

After an uprising in Libya ousted Muammer Gaddafi in 2011, the country split under two rival governments. They fought a civil war in 2019, in which Russia and regional powers armed and backed different sides.

Rival ruling elites have since settled into dysfunctional coexistence, funding themselves by siphoning off Libya’s oil revenues.

Syria’s trajectory seems unlikely to retrace the steps of other so-called “Arab Spring” countries, analysts said. Its fragmentation under different armed rebel groups, coupled with a mosaic of minorities, means the challenges will be different.

Also the collapse of the Assad regime followed a 13-year civil war in which half a million people were killed, mostly by the regime, and millions became refugees.

Assad’s ferocious repression of peaceful demonstrations in 2011 transformed the Syrian revolution into an armed uprising in which Islamist factions ultimately became the strongest groups. Assad invited in foreign allies: initially Iran and Iranian-backed militants including Hizbollah, then Russia, whose air force bombed rebel-held areas.

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Demonstrators protesting against Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad march through the streets during the funeral for a 10-year-old boy, Ibrahim Sheiban, who was killed at a protest rally the day before, in Damascus on October 15 2011
Syria’s uprising began in 2011, part of a wave of protests across the Arab world, but its government has only fallen 13 years later © Reuters

Following Assad’s fall, Isis still has active cells in parts of Syria; US-backed Kurds have set up an autonomous enclave in the north east; and Turkey, which controls pockets of northern Syria, backs other rebels to keep Kurdish militants in check. Ankara views Syrian Kurdish militants as an extension of its separatist Kurdistan Workers’ party, PKK, which has fought the Turkish state for four decades.

Abu Mohammad al-Jolani, leader of the Sunni HTS, has sought to rebrand himself as a moderate Islamist who will not trample on the rights of Syria’s minorities, including Christians, and the Alawites who formed the bedrock of the Assad regime. The Assad family were themselves Alawite, an offshoot of Shia Islam.

But he has not promised a democracy or outlined a vision of the future, while the US designates both him and his group as terrorists.

Yassin Haj Saleh, a Syrian writer and political dissident who spent 16 years in prison, wrote on Facebook that the “new Syria” could not be a state “ruled by an Islamist Sunni Assad . . . in which people remain followers without political rights and public freedoms including the freedom of religious belief”.

Armed rebels join a huge crowd of Syrians waving independence-era flags, used by the opposition since the uprising began in 2011, during celebrations after toppling Assad in Damascus’ central Umayyad Square on Friday
Armed rebels join Syrians waving independence-era flags, used by the opposition since the uprising in 2011, during celebrations in Umayyad Square on Friday © Omar Haj Kadour/AFP/Getty Images

There are also fears that Jolani could fail to unite the country, leaving rebel groups fighting over the spoils of Assad’s wrecked state, reigniting conflict and drawing in foreign interference.

Paul Salem, vice-president of the Middle East Institute in Washington, said that while Syria’s future was likely to be “bumpy”, it was a positive sign that the Syrian state has not melted away, unlike the Libyan state after Gaddafi’s fall.

“Notice also that opposition forces are protecting all government offices, all public institutions. They are not attacking any of them,” he said.

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Salem said Syria’s neighbours including Turkey “have no interest in a failed state” on their doorstep. While the presence of US-backed Kurdish militants and a self-governing Kurdish enclave could become an issue, it could be managed by “good diplomacy between Washington and Ankara”, he said.

“It’s definitely the case that removing a tyrant, while welcomed and celebrated, that’s very different from actually having a transition to something better,” said Salem.

“But in the Syrian case [because of] the extreme evil of the Assad regime, you can’t blame Syrians. He had to go.”

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Trump Says Israel and Lebanon Agree to Extend Cease-Fire by Three Weeks

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Trump Says Israel and Lebanon Agree to Extend Cease-Fire by Three Weeks

President Trump announced a three-week extension of a cease-fire between Israel and Lebanon that had been set to expire in a few days, after hosting a meeting between Israeli and Lebanese diplomats at the White House on Thursday.

Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed militant group that has been attacking Israel from southern Lebanon, did not have representatives at the meeting and did not immediately comment on the announcement. The prime minister of Israel and the president of Lebanon also did not comment.

A successful peace agreement would hinge upon Hezbollah halting attacks, which Lebanon’s government has little power to enforce because it does not control the militia. Lebanon’s military has mostly stayed out of the fighting and is not at war with Israel.

The cease-fire, which was scheduled to end on April 26, would last until May 17 if it takes effect as Mr. Trump described it. Before the cease-fire was brokered last week, nearly 2,300 people were killed in Lebanon and 13 in Israel. Since then, the number of Israeli airstrikes and Hezbollah attacks have been dramatically reduced, though the two sides have continued exchanging fire.

The Lebanese Ambassador to the United States, Nada Hamadeh, credited Mr. Trump for extending the cease-fire, saying that “with your help and support, we can make Lebanon great again.” Mr. Trump replied, “I like that phrase, it’s a good phrase.”

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Asked about the potential of a lasting peace agreement between Israel and Lebanon, Mr. Trump said that “I think there’s a great chance. They are friends about the same things and they are enemies on the same things.”

But Lebanon and Israel have periodically been at war since Israel’s founding in 1948. Israel has invaded Lebanon for the fifth time since 1978, incursions that have destabilized the country and the delicate balance of power between Muslim, Christian and Druze communities.

In the hours before the president’s announcement on social media, Israel and Hezbollah were trading attacks in southern Lebanon, testing the existing cease-fire.

Mr. Trump said the meeting at the White House had been attended by high-ranking U.S. officials, including Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and the U.S. ambassadors to Israel and Lebanon.

Earlier on Thursday, an Israeli strike near the southern Lebanese city of Nabatieh killed three people, according to Lebanon’s health ministry. Hezbollah claimed three separate attacks on Israeli troops who are occupying southern Lebanon, though none were wounded or killed.

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Hezbollah set off the latest round of fighting last month by attacking Israel soon after the start of the U.S.-Israeli bombing campaign in Iran. Israel responded to Hezbollah’s attacks by launching airstrikes across Lebanon and widening a ground invasion of the country’s south.

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U.S. soldier charged with suspected Polymarket insider trading over Maduro raid

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U.S. soldier charged with suspected Polymarket insider trading over Maduro raid

Smoke rises from Port of La Guaira in Venezuela on Jan. 3, 2026 after U.S. forces seized the country’s president, Nicolas Maduro and his wife.

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Federal prosecutors on Thursday unsealed an indictment against a U.S. Army soldier, accusing him of using his insider knowledge of the clandestine military operation to capture Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro in January to reap more than $400,000 in profits on the popular prediction market site Polymarket.

The Justice Department says Gannon Ken Van Dyke, 38, who was stationed at Fort Bragg, in North Carolina, was part of the team that planned and carried out the predawn raid in Caracas earlier this year that resulted in the apprehension of Maduro.

The Department of Justice and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission filed the actions against Van Dyke, the first time U.S. officials have leveled criminal charges against someone over prediction market wagers.

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According to the indictment, Van Dyke now faces counts of wire fraud, commodities fraud, misusing non-public government information and other charges.

Trading under numerous usernames including “Burdensome-Mix,” Van Dyke allegedly traded about $32,000 on the arrest of Maduro, resulting in profits exceeding $400,000.

“Prediction markets are not a haven for using misappropriated confidential or classified information for personal gain,” said U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton for the Southern District of New York. “Those entrusted to safeguard our nation’s secrets have a duty to protect them and our armed service members, and not to use that information for personal financial gain.”

Van Dyke’s defense lawyer is not yet publicly known. Polymarket did not return a request for comment.

The charges against Van Dyke come at a sensitive time for the prediction market industry, which has been growing exponentially, despite calls in Washington and among state leaders for the sites to be reined in.

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Van Dyke is the first to be charged in the U.S. for suspected Polymarket insider trading, but Israeli authorities in February arrested several people and charged two on suspicion of using classified information to place bets about military operations in Iran on Polymarket.

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Senate Adopts GOP Budget, Laying the Groundwork to Fund ICE and Reopen DHS

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Senate Adopts GOP Budget, Laying the Groundwork to Fund ICE and Reopen DHS

The Senate early Thursday morning adopted a Republican budget blueprint that would pave the way for a $70 billion increase for immigration enforcement and the eventual reopening of the Department of Homeland Security.

Republicans pushed through the plan on a nearly party-line vote of 50 to 48. It came after an overnight marathon of rapid-fire votes, known as a vote-a-rama, in which the G.O.P. beat back a series of Democratic proposals aimed at addressing the high cost of health care, housing, food and energy. The debate put the two parties’ dueling messages on vivid display six months before the midterm elections.

Republicans, who are using the budget plan to lay the groundwork to eventually push through a filibuster-proof bill providing a multiyear funding stream for President Trump’s immigration crackdown, used the all-night session to highlight their hard-line stance on border security, seeking to portray Democrats as unwilling to safeguard the country.

Democrats tried and failed to add a series of changes aimed at addressing cost-of-living issues, seizing the opportunity to hammer Republicans as out of touch with and unwilling to act on the concerns of everyday Americans.

Here’s what to know about the budget plan and the nocturnal ritual senators engaged in before adopting it.

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The budget blueprint is a crucial piece of Republicans’ plan to fund the Department of Homeland Security and end a shutdown that has lasted for more than two months. After Democrats refused to fund immigration enforcement without new restrictions on agents’ tactics and conduct, the G.O.P. struck a deal with them to pass a spending bill that would fund everything but ICE and the Border Patrol. Republicans said they would fund those agencies through a special budget bill that Democrats could not block.

“We can fix this with Republican votes, and we will,” said Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina and the Budget Committee chairman. “Every Democrat has opposed money for the Border Patrol and ICE at a time of great peril.”

In resorting to a new budget blueprint, Republicans laid the groundwork to deny Democrats a chance to stop the immigration enforcement funding. But they also submitted themselves to a vote-a-rama, in which any senator can propose unlimited changes to such a measure before it is adopted.

The budget measure now goes to the House, which must adopt it before lawmakers in both chambers can draft the legislation funding immigration enforcement. That bill will provide yet another opportunity for a vote-a-rama even closer to the November election.

Democrats took to the floor to criticize Republicans for supercharging funding for federal immigration enforcement rather than moving legislation that would address Americans’ concerns over affordability.

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“This is what Republicans are fighting for,” said Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York and the Democratic leader. “To maintain two unchecked rogue agencies that are dreaded in all corners of this country instead of reducing your health care costs, your housing costs, your grocery costs, your gas costs.”

Democrats offered a host of amendments along those lines, all of which were defeated by Republicans — and that was the point. The proposals were meant to put the G.O.P. in a tough political spot, showcasing their opposition to helping Americans afford high living costs. Fewer than a handful of G.O.P. senators crossed party lines to support them.

The G.O.P. thwarted an effort by Mr. Schumer to require that the budget measure lower out-of-pocket health care costs for Americans. Two Republicans who are up for re-election this year, Senators Susan Collins of Maine and Dan Sullivan of Alaska, voted with Democrats, but the proposal was still defeated.

Republicans also squelched a move by Senator Ben Ray Lujan, Democrat of New Mexico, to create a fund that would lower grocery costs and reverse cuts to food aid programs that Republicans enacted last year. Ms. Collins and Mr. Sullivan again joined Democrats.

Also defeated by the G.O.P.: a proposal by Senator John Hickenlooper, Democrat of Colorado, to address rising consumer prices brought on by Mr. Trump’s tariffs and the war in Iran; one by Senator Edward J. Markey, Democrat of Massachusetts, to require the budget measure to address rising electricity prices, and another by Mr. Markey to create a fund to bring down housing costs.

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Senator Jon Ossoff, a Democrat who is up for re-election in Georgia, also sought to add language requiring the budget plan to address health insurance companies denying or delaying access to care, but that, too was blocked by Republicans.

While Republicans had fewer proposals for changes to their own budget plan, they also sought to offer measures that would underscore their aggressive stance on immigration enforcement and dare Democrats to vote against them.

Mr. Graham offered an amendment to allocate funds toward a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to the apprehension and deportation of adult immigrants convicted of rape, murder, or sexual abuse of a minor after illegally entering the United States. It passed unanimously.

Senator Josh Hawley, Republican of Missouri, sought to bar Medicaid payments to Planned Parenthood, which provides abortion and other services, and criticized the organization for providing transgender care to minors. Senator John Kennedy, Republican of Louisiana, also attempted to tack on the G.O.P. voter identification bill, known as the SAVE America Act. Both proposals were blocked when Democrats, joined by a few Republicans, voted to strike them as unrelated to the budget plan.

The Republicans who crossed party lines to oppose their own party’s proposals for new voting requirements were Ms. Collins along with Senators Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Thom Tillis of North Carolina.

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Ms. Collins and Ms. Murkowski also opposed the effort to block payments to Planned Parenthood.

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