Yossi Schwartz ISL (RCIT section in Israel/Occupied Palestine) 15.11.2025
The revolution in Syria accomplished only one aspect of a democratic revolution. The removal of Assad, the bloody dictator, but has not completed the democratic revolution. Its tasks include expelling the imperialists, ensuring equal treatment of ethnic groups, achieving equality for women and the LGBT community, implementing an agrarian revolution, and promoting industrialization. To complete the tasks of the democratic revolution, the revolutionary process must end in a working-class revolution led by a revolutionary leadership.
As a result, Syria’s interim president, Ahmad al-Sharaa, went to the USA to serve it and its control of the Middle East against the influence of Russia, China, and Iran.
“Ahmad al-Sharaa, who formerly fought with al-Qaeda and was jailed by the US as a terrorist, was welcomed at the White House by US President Donald Trump — even if he and his delegation did arrive for the meeting through a side door, as a message to the status of the new servant, during his visit to the white house.
In the first time since 1946, a Syrian ruler has come to the White House, and the meeting, which was planned around weighty issues such as the lifting of sanctions, the fight against the Islamic state and the reconstruction of post-war Syria.
“Israel has stood defiantly outside this US-led support for al-Sharaa’s state-building efforts,” Lynch writes. “If the US really does establish an air base in Damascus, it would quickly be forced to grapple with the fact that the most dangerous and destabilizing external threat to Syria currently is Israel. That makes Syria the unexpected leading edge of the little-noticed emerging divide in priorities between the US and Israel, which could have wide-ranging implications for the regional order,” Lynch concluded.
The meeting at the White House suddenly turned into a spectacular public relations show for Trump’s new perfume as Trump sprayed al-Sharaa with the scent.
The perfume, which proudly bears the names of the 45th and 47th presidents of the United States, is sold for $249 in a golden bottle shaped like a Trump statuette in a suit—a scented version of the presidential Oscars. Trump’s perfume line includes cologne for men and perfume for women, both in fragrances defined as “power, self-confidence and victory.”
It was an act of baptism, turning a dirty terrorist into a loyal servant.
Politics and scent merged into an unforgettable scene: During his historic meeting with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad at the White House on Tuesday, Donald Trump pulled out a bottle of perfume from his new collection, Victory, and sprayed it directly on his surprised guest.
This is the first time since 1946 that Syria’s ruler has come to the White House, and the meeting, which was planned around weighty issues such as the lifting of sanctions, the fight against the Islamic State and the reconstruction of post-war Syria, also suddenly turned into a spectacular public relations show for Trump’s new perfume.
In an interview published tonight in the Washington Post, after his historic visit to the White House, the president said Syria, Ahmed al-Shara, said that his country had taken a “significant step” in the talks with Jerusalem on a security agreement, and claimed that US President Donald Trump supports the Syrian position and will even “work to promote a quick solution.”
To join the Abraham Accords, the Syrian servants and Quisling asked Israel to relinquish its new conquests of Syrian lands.
“We are in direct negotiations with Israel, and we have come a long way toward an agreement. In order for us to reach a final agreement, Israel must withdraw to the borders before December 8, 2024,”[i] al-Shara said in other words, leaving Israel with the lands occupied in the 1973 war.
During the interview, al-Shara said that Israel is violating the 1974 separation of forces agreement after the fall of the Assad regime: “When the Assad regime fell, Israel canceled the agreement, expanded its presence in Syria, expelled the UN force, and occupied new territories. Since December 8, they have carried out more than 1,000 airstrikes – they bombed the presidential palace and the Defense Ministry, and we have not responded, because we are focused on rebuilding Syria.”[ii]
On the possibility of agreeing to a large-scale demilitarization of southern Syria, he said: “Making an entire area unarmed is problematic. If a certain kind of chaos is created, who will protect the region? If a hostile element shoots at Israel, who will bear responsibility? Ultimately, this is Syrian territory, and Syria will determine what happens there.”
[i] https://epoch.org.il/news/609535/
[ii] Ibid
