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NextImg:US rabbi and Trump-linked pastor visit Syria, say peace with Israel possible

BEIRUT, Lebanon (Reuters) — Peace between Syria and Israel is “very possible,” a Trump-linked evangelical Christian pastor said after he and a pro-Israel American rabbi held talks this week with Syria’s Islamist leader Ahmed al-Sharaa at the presidential palace in Damascus.

Rev. Johnnie Moore, a White House adviser during US President Donald Trump’s first term, and Rabbi Abraham Cooper, from the Simon Wiesenthal Center, have promoted interfaith dialogue in Arab states for years.

The two men met Sharaa late on Monday during a visit to Syria that they said was not aimed at discussing potential ties with Israel, though the topic came up.

“I think peace is very possible, if not probable, but the first priority has to be Syria focusing on Syria,” Moore told Reuters in a phone interview late on Tuesday, after they had concluded their trip.

Sharaa “articulated issues of concern he has, but also the potential for a very positive future,” Moore added.

A Syrian presidency media official did not respond to a request for comment.

Since ousting former strongman Bashar al-Assad last year, Syria’s Sunni Muslim rulers, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, have rapidly built international ties. But tensions persist with religious minority groups inside Syria, such as Druze and Alawites, as well as with neighboring Israel.

Mourners lift portraits during the funeral of members of Syria’s Druze community who were killed in recent sectarian clashes, in Salkhad village in the country’s southern Suwayda governorate on May 3, 2025. (Shadi AL-DUBAISI / AFP)

Cooper’s visits to nations such as Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates, which had no ties with Israel at the time, are credited by some observers with indirectly paving the way for landmark 2020 deals normalizing relations.

Efforts by the US to bring more Arab states, chiefly Saudi Arabia, into the deals known as the Abraham Accords have faltered amid the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza, sparked by the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led massacre in southern Israel.

Still, Syria’s new rulers have from the outset indicated that they seek calm and even eventual peace with Israel.

Moore and Cooper said they believed Sharaa was uniquely able to deliver on a peace-making agenda.

“The Syrian president is what in Silicon Valley is called a unicorn; he’s one of a kind,” Moore said.

Cooper added: “What’s clear is there is now a window of opportunity to bring about a more positive state of affairs… [though] that doesn’t minimize the scale of the task ahead.”

Last week, Moore was named the new executive chairman of the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which has begun distributing aid to the Palestinian enclave in an operation that uses private US security and logistics companies and has been criticized by the United Nations for failing to meet the Strip’s extensive humanitarian needs.

Moore, who has publicly backed Trump’s proposal for the United States to take over Gaza, said he did not discuss the GHF and its work with Sharaa during their meeting.

Syria’s interim president Ahmed al-Sharaa receives Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister in Damascus, Syria, on May 31, 2025. (SANA / AFP)

Moore and Cooper proposed to Sharaa joint humanitarian projects “to tear down stereotypes and create an unofficial army of goodwill ambassadors.”

They declined to give details.

The two men also met with Syrian Christian leaders and walked freely around Damascus, Cooper wearing his yarmulke without issue, he said.

This contrasted with a 2024 visit to Saudi Arabia, where Cooper was asked by a Saudi official to remove his prayer cap, a request he refused, after which the US-Congress-mandated delegation he was heading cut short its trip.

Israeli officials initially branded Syria’s new rulers “terrorists” due to their al-Qaeda past, and the Israeli Air Force waged a fierce campaign of aerial bombardment on what it says are military targets across the country, which has subsided since mid-May, when Trump turned decades of US policy on its head by lifting sanctions on Syria and meeting Sharaa in Riyadh.

After meeting Sharaa, Trump said the Syrian leader had agreed to a request to normalize ties with Israel, though it would take time.

Reuters has reported that Syria and Israel in the past weeks held indirect and then direct talks aimed at calming tensions.

Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.