Another round of Israel-Syria negotiations reportedly to begin Monday in Paris

The fifth round of talks between Israel and Syria will reportedly start on Monday in Paris, the first in nearly two months, as progress toward a security arrangement between the two countries stalled.

The negotiations are expected to last two days, Axios reported on Sunday, citing an Israeli official and another source with knowledge of the details.

US President Donald Trump, who has been eager for a deal to be signed, asked Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to restart the talks when they met last week at Mar-a-Lago, according to the report.

While Netanyahu agrees with Trump that a deal must be reached soon, he has insisted that a deal must not cross Israel’s red lines on ensuring security along its frontier with Syria, the Israeli official told Axios.

Trump’s Syria envoy Tom Barrack, who is also the US ambassador to Turkey, will mediate the talks.

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With the resignation of Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, who led the previous rounds, Netanyahu placed his US Ambassador Yechiel Leiter at the head of the Israeli team, along with Military Secretary Maj. Gen. Roman Gofman and acting National Security Adviser Gil Reich, Axios reported.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (right) hosts US Ambassador to Turkey and Special Envoy to Syria and Lebanon Tom Barrack (left), in Jerusalem on December 15, 2025. (Maayan Toaf / GPO)

Syria’s Foreign Minister Asaad al-Shaibani will represent the Syrian side.

The Israeli embassy in the US refused to comment on the report.

Trump has expressed hope for a diplomatic accord between Israel and Syria, after the IDF seized parts of southern Syria, mostly within a UN-patrolled buffer zone, after the collapse of Bashar al-Assad’s regime in December 2024.

Israel cited fears the area would fall into the hands of terror groups who could use it as a staging ground for attacks, and said the 1974 disengagement agreement, through which the buffer zone was created, had been made temporarily void by Assad’s ouster.

IDF troops, meanwhile, have been operating in areas up to around 15 kilometers (nine miles) inside Syria, aiming to capture weapons that Israel says could pose a threat to the country if they fall into the hands of “hostile forces.”

While there was optimism in September that a deal could be signed, Reuters reported at the time of the assembly that contacts between Israel and Syria regarding the deal had reached a dead end due to Israel’s demand to open a “humanitarian corridor” into the Sweida province in southern Syria – where sectarian violence has killed hundreds of people from the Druze community, which Israel has vowed to protect.

Syrian government security forces stand guard at a checkpoint in the village of Walgha, near the city of Sweida, on July 21, 2025. (Bakr ALkasem / AFP)

Sources told Reuters that Israel requested early on in the talks to open a passage for delivering aid to Sweida, but Syria rejected the request, claiming it would harm its sovereignty. According to the sources, Israel repeated the demand later in the negotiations, leading progress on the agreement to stall.

Reports in November suggested Israel’s terms have since changed, and it is now demanding full diplomatic relations, which Syria has said is not currently on the cards, further complicating the process.

Trump in December warned Israel against destabilizing Syria and its new leadership, days after IDF soldiers battled gunmen in the country’s south, and said he is “very satisfied” with the country’s performance under new President Ahmad al-Sharaa, whose forces ousted Assad.


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