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Syria helped convince Iran to release a French researcher and an embassy employee on bail in August who are on trial with more than 100 others for allegedly attempting to mount a "soft" revolution after Iran's disputed presidential election. Syria has also hinted it could mediate between Iran and the West over Tehran's controversial nuclear program.
In exchange for greater cooperation, Syria could demand that the U.S. drop the strong trade and financial sanctions that it has levied against the country. Even more important is Syria's demand that Israel return the disputed Golan Heights in exchange for a peace deal -- something Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he is not willing to do.
Harling, the International Crisis Group analyst, said Saudi Arabia also has something to gain from reaching out to Syria: the reestablishment of its image as a regional leader. The kingdom was closely allied with the Bush administration at a time when it was reviled in the Arab world for its regional policies and perceived bias toward Israel.
Syria's president called Abdullah and other Arab leaders "half men" over their disapproval of Hezbollah's capture of two Israeli soldiers in a cross-border raid in July 2006 -- a move that sparked a deadly 34-day war between the Lebanon-based group and Israel.
Syria also criticized Saudi Arabia and other moderate Arab countries for not being more critical of Israel for its January offensive against Hamas in the Gaza Strip. About 1,400 Palestinians were killed during the three-week operation, which aimed to stop rocket fire into Israel. Thirteen Israelis were also killed.
"A turning point was the Israeli war on Gaza, which caused great embarrassment to the Saudi regime," said Harling. "We've seen the king reasserting himself since and putting his own house in order."
But Harling warned against overestimating how much of a difference reconciliation between Syria and Saudi Arabia would make in a region that remains fundamentally unstable.
"This is just one move in a big game," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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