트럼프, 시리아에 헤즈볼라 타격 요청하며 레바논·이스라엘에 충격
Trump presses Syria to take on Hezbollah, raising alarm in Lebanon and Israel - ABC News - Breaking News, Latest News and Videos
지역 갈등이 심화되고 있지만 아직 시장에는 명확한 영향을 미치지 않아 중립적인 입장을 유지하는 것이 적절합니다.
핵심 요약
트럼프가 시리아가 헤즈볼라를 타격할 것을 제안하며, 레바논에서 4,000명 이상이 사망했습니다.
핵심요약
- 헤즈볼라가 3월 2일 이스라엘을 공격한 이후, 레바논에서 4,000명 이상이 사망했습니다.
- 트럼프 대통령이 시리아가 헤즈볼라를 타격할 것을 제안하며 레바논과 이스라엘에 충격을 주었습니다.
- 시리아 알샤라 대통령은 이 제안을 거부하며 트럼프의 발언이 오해되었다고 주장했습니다.
- 이스라엘은 알샤라 정부를 의심하며 남부 시리아를 장악하고 있습니다.
- 이스라엘과 터키 간의 시리아에서의 영향력 경쟁이 고조되고 있습니다.
도입
이 기사는 중동 지역의 지정학적 변동성과 국제 관계에 미치는 영향을 이해하는 데 중요한 의미를 possess합니다. 특히, 트럼프 대통령의 제안이 시리아와 레바논, 이스라엘 간의 관계를 어떻게 변화시킬지, 그리고 이 지역의 안보 환경에 어떤 영향을 미칠지 분석하는 것이 필요합니다.
본문 1: 트럼프의 제안과 그 배경
트럼프 대통령이 시리아가 헤즈볼라를 타격할 것을 제안한 것은, 이스라엘의 헤즈볼라와의 전쟁이 길어지고 있는 상황에서 나온 것입니다. 트럼프는 이스라엘의 전쟁이 너무 길어지고 너무 많은 사람들이 죽고 있다고 불만을 표했습니다. 그러나 시리아 정부는 이 제안을 거부하며, 트럼프의 발언이 오해되었다고 주장했습니다. 이 제안이 실제적으로 실행될 가능성은 낮지만, 중동 지역의 안보 환경에 미치는 심리적 영향은 크다고 분석됩니다.
본문 2: 레바논과 이스라엘의 반응
레바논과 이스라엘은 트럼프의 제안에 대해 강하게 반응하고 있습니다. 레바논에서는 시리아의 개입이 새로운 갈등을 초래할 수 있다고 우려하고 있습니다. 이스라엘은 알샤라 정부의 이슬람주의 성향을 의심하며, 남부 시리아를 장악하고 있습니다. 이스라엘과 터키 간의 시리아에서의 영향력 경쟁이 고조되고 있는 것도 주목할 점입니다. 이 경쟁이 지역 안정성에 미치는 영향은 장기적으로 고려해야 할 사항입니다.
결론
트럼프의 제안은 중동 지역의 안보 환경에 새로운 변수를 가져올 수 있습니다. 그러나 실제적으로 실행될 가능성은 낮으며, 심리적 영향이 클 것으로 예상됩니다. 향후 시리아와 레바논, 이스라엘 간의 관계 변화를 주시해야 할 필요가 있습니다. 특히, 이스라엘과 터키 간의 영향력 경쟁이 지역 안정성에 미치는 영향에 대해 지속적으로 분석해야 합니다.
Original Article
Trump presses Syria to take on Hezbollah, raising alarm in Lebanon and Israel - ABC News - Breaking News, Latest News and Videos
The White House has soured on Israel’s war with Hezbollah in Lebanon
BEIRUT -- As the White House has soured on Israel’s war with Hezbollah in Lebanon, U.S. President Donald Trump has shocked many in the region by pushing an alternative: Let Syria fight the Iran-backed militant group instead.
He has suggested that the battle-hardened and Islamist-led insurgents who overthrew Syria's autocratic President Bashar Assad a year and a half ago and formed a new government would do a better job of rooting out Hezbollah than the Israeli army.
Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa has said he has no interest in doing so, and has asserted that Trump’s comments were misconstrued. But Trump has doubled down on the idea.
Although it remains unclear how serious the White House is about the proposal, the prospect of a Syrian invasion has raised alarms in Lebanon — and also in Israel, which regards al-Sharaa's Islamist-led government with suspicion and has seized control of a strip of southern Syria since he took power.
Syria has also become the site of rising tensions between Israel and Turkey — a main backer of al-Sharaa's government — with each seeking to limit the other's influence in the neighboring country.
Top Israeli security officials convened a meeting on the subject on Wednesday, according to an official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
On the sidelines of the G7 summit earlier this month, Trump complained that Israel’s war with Hezbollah is dragging on too long and “too many people are being killed.”
More than 4,000 people have been killed by Israeli strikes in Lebanon since Hezbollah joined the wider Iran war with a March 2 attack on Israel, including hundreds of women and children. Israel says its strikes target Hezbollah and that it takes measures to protect civilians.
“You don’t have to knock down an apartment house every time you’re looking for somebody, because there are a lot of people in those apartment houses and they’re not all Hezbollah,” Trump said.
“I suggested to Israel to let Syria take care of Hezbollah. ‘Cause to be honest with you, I think they’d do a better job.”
Days later, on the first day of U.S.-Iran talks in Switzerland, Fox News’ Trey Yingst said that, during an interview, Trump had expressed disappointment that Israel can’t “put Hezbollah away” and said that he is “close to giving it to Syria” because he thinks al-Sharaa would be more precise.
The White House declined to comment and referred to Trump’s previous statements.
Syrian officials scrambled to do damage control.
In a speech in Damascus on June 13, al-Sharaa said, “There are people spreading rumors that Syria will intervene in Lebanon. This is not true. We are calling for a permanent end to the war and the strengthening of institutions and for there to be economic ties and a calming of the situation in Lebanon.”
In a June 21 interview with the Emirati network Al Mashhad, al-Sharaa said Trump’s remarks had been misunderstood.
Trump “spoke about Syria’s role in finding a safe and peaceful solution, but the statement was misinterpreted as if Syria were going to invade Lebanon tomorrow morning,” al-Sharaa said.
He said Syria had “presented our vision for a solution to the United States, which is to stop the war and address the negative effects on Lebanon and Syria, and to find different economic, political and social solutions.”
Hezbollah, along with Iran, intervened on the side of Assad during Syria’s 14-year civil war, while al-Sharaa was the leader of an insurgent group seeking to overthrow him.
But the new leaders in Damascus have said since taking power in December 2024 that they are focused on rebuilding the country, are not seeking to settle scores, and want to remain outside of any regional conflict.
After Israel and the U.S. launched their war against Iran — which triggered a wider regional conflict — Syria made a point of remaining on the sidelines .
In the first weeks of the war, the Syrian military sent reinforcements to the border with Lebanon, which officials said aimed to stop cross-border weapons smuggling or any spillover of the conflict. At one point in March, Syria accused Hezbollah of launching artillery shells across the border toward Syrian army positions, which Hezbollah denied. The escalation stopped there.
Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan told The Associated Press in March that Turkey had interceded to defuse the tensions .
Al-Sharaa told Al Mashhad that “the decision of (Hezbollah) to enter into the Syrian conflict was wrong,” but that he was willing to hold a “dialogue” with the militant group and even to mediate between different Lebanese factions as they debate the future of Hezbollah’s weapons .
In March, U.S. envoy to Syria Tom Barrack denied reports that Washington had floated the idea of Syria intervening against Hezbollah.