WORLD
3 MIN READ
US lifts arrest bounty on Syria's new leader Ahmed al Sharaa
US diplomat for the Middle East confirmed that Washington would no longer seek the arrest of Syria's Ahmed al Sharaa following talks that included promises to fight terrorism.
US lifts arrest bounty on Syria's new leader Ahmed al Sharaa
Positive discussions led to the cancellation of the arrest reward for Ahmed al Sharaa. / Photo: AFP
December 20, 2024

The US on Friday said it will no longer be pursuing a $10 million “Rewards for Justice” bounty on Ahmed al Sharaa, leader of the new administration in Syria, also known as Abu Mohammad al Jolani.

"I told him (al Sharaa) we would not be pursuing the Rewards for Justice, reward offer that has been in effect for some years," Barbara Leaf, the US assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs, told reporters following her meeting with Hayat Tahrir al Sham (HTS) officials in Damascus.

In her talk with al Sharaa, Leaf said she had a "good", and "thorough" discussion on a range of regional issues as well as the domestic scene.

"I heard him on his priorities, which are very much rooted in and getting Syria on the road to economic recovery," she continued.

She said the Syrian leader came across as "pragmatic," adding: "We've been hearing this for some time, some very pragmatic and moderate statements on various issues, from women's rights to protection, equal rights for all communities."

"It was a good first meeting. We will judge by deeds, not just by words," she added.

RelatedUS diplomats on first visit to Syria since Assad's ouster

Fight against terrorism

Emphasising the "critical need to ensure terrorist groups cannot pose a threat inside of Syria or externally", she said the HTS leader has expressed a commitment to this as well.

The meeting marks first meeting between US officials and HTS members days after Bashar Assad, Syria’s regime leader for nearly 25 years, fled to Russia after anti-regime groups took control of Damascus on December 8, ending the Baath Party regime, which had been in pow er since 1963.

The takeover came after HTS fighters captured key cities in a lightning offensive that lasted less than two weeks.

HTS has been designated as a terrorist organization by the US, UK, UN and Türkiye. However, the group and its leader have sought to rebrand themselves as a more moderate force in Syria, emphasising inclusion and a political path forward.

According to several reports, the US, along with the UN and several other countries, are considering removing HTS's from the terror list though the officials have yet to confirm it officially.

RelatedUN calls for reassessment of Syria sanctions amid new leadership
SOURCE:AA
Explore
EU plans to train 3,000 Palestinian police officers for post-ceasefire Gaza
UK says 'military options ready' as Russian ship uses lasers against RAF pilots
US Commission acknowledges Pakistan's military success over India in May clash
'Parasocial' is Cambridge Dictionary's choice for the word of 2025
Poland to shut last Russian consulate after railway blast; Kremlin ‘regrets’ move
Macron calls the online world 'Wild West' for European teenagers, urges measures
#GameOverIsrael: Athletes call on UEFA to bar Israel from European football
What's the meaning behind Picasso's Guernica painting that Zelenskyy just viewed?
Nestle's infant cereal sold with higher sugar content in Africa, NGO claims
Blocked over Pakistan, cash-strapped Air India seeks shortcut through China's Xinjiang
Poland scrambles jets, closes two airports after Russian strikes on western Ukraine
US approves $700M air defence sale to Taiwan, second arms package in a week
Ukraine fires US-made ATACMS missiles at Russia amid intensified fighting
Trump team secretly drafting new Ukraine peace plan in talks with Moscow: report
Israel shells Syria’s Quneitra in new violation of country’s sovereignty
Trump greenlights CIA to prepare plans for covert operations in Venezuela: report
Cristiano Ronaldo attends White House meeting between Trump and Saudi crown prince
US House overwhelmingly passes bill demanding release of more Epstein files
Germany, France push EU to secure digital sovereignty, curb reliance on US, China
Türkiye renames 'Central Asia' as 'Turkistan' in school curriculum