Sheikh Khazali reveals an American-Zionist plan to divide the region and warns against the transfer of the Syrian project to Iraq.
12 January 2025
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The General Secretary of the Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq, His Eminence Sheikh Qais Khazali, confirmed today (Saturday) that the situation in Syria reflects a conflict between two basic projects that differ in goals and objectives, noting that these conflicts have dangerous repercussions on the region as a whole, including Iraq.
Sheikh Khazali said in a televised interview that the first project is the Turkish project that seeks to expand Turkey’s influence and achieve the dream of the “new Ottoman Empire” or what he called the “Erdogan Empire,” through increasing expansion and control over lands. As for the second project, which is the American-Zionist project, it aims to re-divide the region and weaken the axis of resistance, as the Prime Minister of the Zionist entity expressed in his statements about “redrawing the map of the Middle East”.
Sheikh Al-Khazali pointed out that the priority of this project is to focus on dividing pivotal countries such as Lebanon, Palestine, Syria, Iraq, Iran and Yemen, adding that Jordan is also included in this plan, as evidenced by the publication of new maps indicating that the biblical borders of Israel include part of Jordanian territory.
His Eminence explained that the Zionist entity’s motives are more ideological than political, as it seeks to achieve its biblical vision in the region.
His Eminence added that the project to divide the region, which is adopted by the American-Zionist alliance, aims to transform countries into “cantons, federations and regions,” noting that if this project succeeds in Syria, the next step will be to transfer the experience to Iraq.
Regarding the situation in Syria, Sheikh Al-Khazali stressed that the countries supporting the change project there, namely Turkey and Qatar, are playing a pivotal role in supporting what he described as the “Brotherhood” project, noting that this project represents an existential threat to the Arab countries, as the UAE, Jordan, Egypt, and even Saudi Arabia are concerned about the Turkish-Qatari influence.
His Eminence added that the situation in Syria has witnessed positive changes, including the end of the Shiite-Sunni conflict, but the current conflict has become a “Sunni-Sunni” conflict, with its repercussions extending to Iraq, explaining that the Sunni political leadership in Iraq fears that what is happening in Syria will spread to the Iraqi interior, which poses a threat to their political projects.
His Eminence pointed out that the concerns experienced by Arab countries regarding what is happening in Syria also apply to Iraq, where the majority of Sunni political leaders feel that the transfer of the Syrian project to Iraq may impose an existential threat on them.
Sheikh Al-Khazali also stressed the need to be aware of these transformations, pointing out that the current stage requires national unity in confronting projects that aim to tear the region apart and redraw its map in a way that serves foreign interests.