Monday, March 30, 2026

THE GUARDİAN - 30 March 2026 Analysis - Islamabad talks signal emergence of new four-nation bloc in Middle East- Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

 

The meeting of foreign ministers (from left): Egypt’s Badr Abdelatty, Saudi Arabia’s Faisal bin Farhan, Pakistan's Ishaq Dar and Turkey's Hakan Fidan. Photograph: Pakistan foreign ministry/AFP/Getty Images
THE GUARDİAN
30 March  2026 

Islamabad talks signal emergence of new four-nation bloc in Middle East

Diplomatic editor

Unlikely grouping of Egypt, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey steps up efforts to broker ceasefire and curb dominance of Iran and Israel

The meeting on Sunday of the foreign ministers of Egypt, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey in Islamabad not only represented the best hope for a ceasefire in Iran but was also the embryo for a new order designed to curb Israeli and Iranian dominance after the war.

Although the four nations have met as a quartet before, the one-day meeting of foreign ministers in Islamabad on Sunday was, in a way, the official opening ceremony of an initiative that is intriguing diplomats.

The group’s first goal, in an increasingly complex web of disputes, is to persuade all sides to stop the escalation and agree a ceasefire. As such, the group will be meeting much more frequently, according to Yasmine Farouk, a Gulf specialist at the International Crisis Group.

“This group of four started becoming very active because this is really a dangerous stage of the war,” Farouk said. “We’ve already seen Israel damage nuclear plants inside Iran and the potential deployment of troops. This is the nightmare … that could make some of the Gulf countries who so far say they don’t want the war to stop to realise that this is getting out of hand.

“Because if you target desalination waters and the power plants, if you have a nuclear leak in the waters of the Gulf, this is when it becomes a nationwide crisis inside those countries.”

The meeting in Islamabad on Sunday made some progress, ending with an Iranian agreement to allow vessels operating under the Pakistani flag to go through the strait of Hormuz, possibly two a day. It is a modest confidence-building measure.

It was also established that the group would act as a primary interlocutor with Iran, so keeping indirect negotiating channels open between Tehran and the US. Iran insists this is the only reliable channel and that Donald Trump’s talk of direct talks with Iran is a fiction designed to lower the oil price.

Immediately after Sunday’s meeting, Ishaq Dar, Pakistan’s foreign minister, flew to China to brief Beijing on the crisis. A role for China as a guarantor of any agreement, something the US would deplore, has been mooted from inside Iran.

At first glance, the quartet’s membership may seem surprising. For instance, Saudi Arabia – repeatedly reported to be, like the United Arab Emirates, privately urging the US to finish off Iran – is an active member. That suggests the Saudis are, at the very least, keeping their options open.

Farouk said: “All the options for the Gulf states are costly. They want to see Iran pay a cost for the attacks on them, and also for taking the strait of Hormuz hostage. On the other hand, they cannot know whether the US will ‘finish the job’ without creating chaos and then leaving, something that Saudi Arabia does not want to see.”

Qatar, a more natural ally of Turkey, was not present in Islamabad. One explanation is that Qatar is still seething at what it regards as Iran’s betrayal by hitting the Ras Laffan liquid gas facility, even though it had already been shut down. One commentator explained: “Doha, unlike the UAE, is advocating an end to the war, but is not in the mood to be an active mediator on behalf of Iran.”

Probably the most committed member of the group, and the one that has invested most in its success, is Turkey. Ankara has long been arguing that talks about Iran’s ballistic missile programme and its support for proxy groups should be conducted with countries in the whole region, not just bilaterally with the US. The issue of Iran’s nuclear programme and the lifting of US sanctions would be negotiated largely bilaterally. The UAE opposes this division.

At the weekend, Hakan Fidan, Turkey’s foreign minister, and İbrahim Kalın, the director of Turkish intelligence, urged the Gulf states to see the war’s wider context and realise the risks they were running if they encouraged an outcome in which Israel emerged stronger.

Kalın said: “Among the intended objectives of this war is not only elimination of Iran’s nuclear capability but something more dangerous, the laying of the groundwork for a conflict that could last decades among the region’s foundational nations – Turks, Kurds, Arabs and Persians. It would pave the way for a prolonged civil war and blood feuds,” he said.

“We know very well that those who started this war are trying to create new facts on the ground in Lebanon, Syria, the Palestinian territories and elsewhere through policies of destruction, annexation and occupation. Attacks by Iran on Gulf countries are unacceptable,” Kalin stressed. “But we must never forget who started the war.”

Fidan, in a lengthy interview with A Haber TV on Friday, argued Israel’s goal was for Islamic countries to fall out with one another, allowing it to broaden the anti-Iran coalition. “Unfortunately, the region is being drawn step by step into a game scripted by Israel,” he said. “Gulf countries should not fall for Israel’s game.”

He argued that American public opinion had turned against the war, and Trump was struggling to explain the war’s objectives, but a structural difficulty in US politics was the absence of a pressure mechanism in Israel.

He added: “If America is going to reach an agreement on negotiations with Iran, it needs to be prepared to exert very serious influence on Israel. We will see who will prevail here. We will see who governs whom and to what extent.”


AlJazeera / AFP and DPA - 30 Mars 2026 - Syria’s al-Sharaa visits Germany to talk reconstruction, return of refugees President Ahmed al-Sharaa is on his first trip to Germany since ousting Syria’s longtime leader Bashar al-Assad in late 2024.

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Syria’s al-Sharaa visits Germany to talk reconstruction, return of refugees

President Ahmed al-Sharaa is on his first trip to Germany since ousting Syria’s longtime leader Bashar al-Assad in late 2024.

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BERLIN, GERMANY - MARCH 30: Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa gives an opening statement as he sits with German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul at a German-Syrian economic roundtable at the Foreign Ministry on March 30, 2026 in Berlin, Germany. Al-Sharaa is on his first visit to Berlin since taking office. He is meeting with German leaders and taking part in an economic round table. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa sits beside German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul as he speaks at a German-Syrian economic roundtable at the German Federal Foreign Office on March 30, 2026, in Berlin, Germany [Sean Gallup/Getty Images]


Interim Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa has been received by German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier in Berlin before talks with Chancellor Friedrich Merz on rebuilding his country and the return of refugees.

“Our interest is in seeing Syria rebuilt as a stable and prosperous nation, including with the help of the many, many Syrians who came here to Germany and Europe during the civil war and found refuge here,” government spokesman Stefan Kornelius said before Monday’s talks.

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Speaking at a Federal Foreign Office forum in Berlin on Monday, al-Sharaa said: “We want to put this difficult time behind us and now catch up with the rest of the world.”

He pointed to investment opportunities in Syria’s energy, transport and tourism sectors, describing his homeland as diverse and with “a great wealth of people”.

“We stand with Syria,” German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said, pledging to support reconstruction efforts. “The Syrians deserve a chance, and we want to help ensure that this opportunity is well utilised.”

Al-Sharaa also suggested that he would like to see some of the Syrians who fled to Germany return to help with its reconstruction.

“These are Syrians who have studied at German universities, acquired German expertise and are now working in German companies,” he said. “Through investments in Syria, they can then bring this expertise back to Syria.”

Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa and German Foreign Minister, Johann Wadephul, pose for a family photo with Syrian Minister of Emergency and Disaster Management, Raed al-Saleh, Member of the Executive Board of the Federation of German Industries, Wolfgang Niedermark, Syrian Foreign Minister, Asaad Hassan al-Shaibani, Syrian Economy Minister, Mohammad Nidal al-Shaar, Syrian Energy Minister, Mohammed Al-Bashir and German Economy and Energy Minister, Katherina Reiche, in Berlin, Germany, March 30, 2026. REUTERS/Nadja Wohlleben
Al-Sharaa, third from left, makes his first visit to Germany since leading opposition fighters to oust Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in December 2024 [Nadja Wohlleben/Reuters]

Al-Sharaa was initially planning to visit Germany in January, but the trip was postponed as he sought to end fighting between Syrian government forces and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces in the country’s north.

Refugee issue

A demonstration against the plan to send refugees back to Syria has been registered in Berlin on Monday under the slogan “No deportation deals with human rights abusers”.

About one million Syrians fled their war-torn country for Germany in recent years, many of them arriving at the peak of the influx in 2015-2016 to escape the war.

The conservative Merz, who took power in May, has stepped up a drive to limit irregular immigration as he seeks to counter the rise of the far-right Alternative for Germany party.

Merz said last year that with Syria’s war over, Syrians now have “no grounds for asylum in Germany”.

The government in December resumed deportations to Syria although only a handful of cases have gone ahead so far.

Merz also said he assumed many Syrians would return home voluntarily, drawing criticism from campaign groups who cited continued instability and rights abuses in Syria.