In a moment of regional realignment and rising pressure from US-backed alliances, Syria’s border moves signal a deeper struggle over sovereignty, resistance, and the emerging order.

The Cradle's Syria Correspondent
Regional tensions surged following the US-Israeli aggression against Iran that began on 28 February, followed days later by Hezbollah’s entry into the frontline confrontation on 2 March. Almost immediately, speculation intensified over a possible Syrian role in confronting the Lebanese resistance movement along the shared border. These questions gained urgency after the Syrian army dispatched unusually large military reinforcements toward the Syrian–Lebanese frontier. Heavy artillery units, tanks, troop carriers, and substantial numbers of fighters were deployed, including contingents described as foreign nationals such as Chechens and Uighurs.
The concentration of Syrian forces appeared strategically calibrated. Reinforcements were positioned opposite Lebanese regions with Shia majorities that form part of Hezbollah’s social base. The deployment stretched inside Syrian territory from the city of Qusayr in Homs governorate through Asal al-Ward and Zabadani in the Damascus countryside.
This military posture quickly became the focus of regional attention. Observers questioned whether Damascus was preparing to seal the border defensively, or whether it was being drawn into a broader confrontation shaped by external powers seeking to reshape a resurgent Axis of Resistance.
International calls and suspicious incursions
The first official Syrian acknowledgment of the reinforcements emerged after self-appointed President Ahmad al-Sharaa (the former Al-Qaeda leader who went by the nom de guerre Abu Mohammad al-Julani) received a phone call from French President Emmanuel Macron on 6 March. During the conversation, Sharaa framed the buildup as a defensive measure aimed at protecting Syrian sovereignty, preventing arms smuggling, and stabilizing a volatile frontier.
However, events that followed only deepened doubts.
That same evening, Israeli forces carried out an air landing operation involving four helicopters that touched down inside Syrian territory near the town of Serghaya in the Zabadani area. An infantry unit reportedly moved toward the Lebanese town of Nabi Sheet under the pretext of searching for missing Israeli pilot Ron Arad, who was taken captive decades ago.
Two days later, a second landing took place at the same location, but with a larger number of 15 Israeli helicopters, Hezbollah said. This operation had also failed.
Damascus issued no formal condemnation of either incursion. Nor did Syrian officials publicly reject Tel Aviv’s use of Syrian territory for operations targeting Lebanon. The silence raised pointed questions across political circles about whether the Syrian leadership had tacitly accepted these violations, or whether it was navigating a precarious balance under mounting western pressure.
Disarmament rhetoric and internal contradictions
The controversy deepened further when Sharaa voiced support for Lebanese President Joseph Aoun’s efforts to disarm Hezbollah. He made the statement during a video conference with regional leaders convened to discuss military developments and potential de-escalation mechanisms.
For many analysts, the remark marked an unprecedented departure from established Arab political norms. Rarely had an Arab head of state openly endorsed the disarmament of a resistance movement embedded within the political and social fabric of another country. The statement appeared inconsistent with Sharaa’s earlier emphasis on non-interference in the internal affairs of neighboring states.
In a television interview, the Syrian president also revealed that during the “deterrence of aggression” operation that culminated in the collapse of the previous government, he had been offered the opportunity to push forward toward Lebanon and confront Hezbollah directly. He described the proposal as a “trap” and said he had rejected it.
The timing of these remarks fueled speculation.
A source close to Syrian decision-making circles, speaking anonymously due to the sensitivity of the situation, tells The Cradle that Sharaa’s position reflected intense US and Israeli pressure following Syria’s accession to a Washington-led international coalition. According to the source, the Syrian leadership was maneuvering under coercive conditions rather than acting from a position of strategic autonomy.
Shelling claims and contested narratives
On 10 March, the day after the second Israeli landing, the Syrian army’s operations department announced that artillery shells had landed near Serghaya, west of the capital.
Officials claimed the fire originated from Lebanese territory and accused Hezbollah fighters of targeting Syrian army positions.
The statement emphasized that Syrian forces were monitoring developments closely, coordinating with the Lebanese army, and assessing appropriate options, while warning that the Syrian Arab Army would “not tolerate any aggression targeting Syria.”
Yet, doubts quickly emerged regarding the official narrative, with shells reportedly having struck the same area where Israeli helicopters had landed days earlier. Observers questioned how such incursions could occur in zones supposedly secured by Syrian forces.
The proximity of these incidents suggested the possibility of manipulation or provocation by a third party seeking to ignite conflict between Damascus and Hezbollah.
The anonymous Syrian source reinforces this interpretation, arguing that Hezbollah had no interest in opening a second front while already engaged with Israeli forces in the south. The resistance movement’s priorities, he says, lie in confronting the Israel rather than destabilizing Syria.
Neither Hezbollah nor the Lebanese army issued an immediate statement confirming or denying the shelling claims. Hezbollah Secretary-General Naim Qassem also refrained from addressing the issue in his speech marking International Quds Day.
Political researcher Wissam Nassif Yassin tells The Cradle that even if shells had fallen in the disputed areas, such incidents could occur in the context of tense border dynamics. He contends that the more pressing question concerned the security vacuum that allowed Israeli occupation forces to conduct major landing operations from Syrian territory toward Lebanon.
Missiles occasionally crossing borders during clashes were not unusual, he adds, and were typically contained through coordination mechanisms rather than amplified into crises.
Diplomatic moves and regional anxieties
Political contacts intensified in parallel with military developments. On the same day that Damascus accused Hezbollah of shelling Syrian territory, Sharaa held a phone call with President Aoun, reiterating his support for efforts to disarm the resistance movement.
He repeated this position again during a trilateral dialogue that included Macron and Aoun. The frequency of these statements suggested a deliberate attempt to signal alignment with western-backed diplomatic initiatives focused on reshaping Lebanon’s internal balance of power.
Israeli media soon amplified speculation about Syrian involvement. A source linked to the Saudi royal family told the Israel's Public Broadcaster (KAN) that Syria might join Israel and the Lebanese leadership in efforts to restrict Hezbollah’s movements.
According to a senior Arab official, Saudi Arabia fears that a direct confrontation between Hezbollah and Syrian forces along the border could spill into Syrian territory and destabilize the Sharaa administration itself, which currently enjoys backing from Riyadh.
But other voices presented a starkly different assessment.
Mahmoud al-Mawladi, a researcher in international relations, informs The Cradle that information circulating within Syrian power structures pointed to US directives and Gulf funding aimed at engineering intervention inside Lebanese geography. This strategy reportedly involved establishing operations rooms, forming covert cells in border regions, and mobilizing armed factions along the frontier.
In Mawladi’s analysis, Washington seeks to push the Syrian leadership toward fulfilling demands tied to dismantling Hezbollah’s military capabilities. He argues that Sharaa remains hesitant, fearing both domestic backlash and regional repercussions. The pressure, he says, has been intense.
He adds that threats were conveyed to the Syrian leadership through security channels, including Interior Minister Anas Khattab. According to the warnings, any move toward military intervention could expose Damascus to severe retaliation. The messages reportedly referenced the existence of “12 targets” inside Syrian territory that could be struck if such a decision were taken.
Strategic calculations and the risk of wider war
Mawladi believes any Syrian intervention would likely unfold under heavy Israeli fire cover. He warns that Israeli forces could attempt infiltration through the Barouk area, noting prior maneuvers near Qatana and movements toward the eastern mountain range. Such developments could open new operational corridors for military escalation.
He also does not rule out support from certain Lebanese political factions aligned with western or Gulf agendas.
Meanwhile, Yassin offers a broader strategic perspective on Hezbollah’s thinking. In his view, the resistance movement has anticipated the possibility of confrontation with Syrian forces since the fall of the previous Syrian government. Hezbollah’s leadership, he says, has long factored such scenarios into its calculations.
Yassin notes that the current reality is surrounded by a number of complexities that should be taken into account before talking about the possibility of Syrian forces entering Lebanon or opening a front with Hezbollah.
Syria’s internal landscape remains fragmented, with competing factions and unresolved security threats, including the continued presence of ISIS cells. Opening a new front against Hezbollah could stretch Syrian capabilities and risk destabilizing fragile state structures.
Regional dynamics further complicate the picture. Yassin describes Lebanon as falling within Saudi Arabia’s sphere of Sunni regional influence, while Syria is shaped more heavily by Turkish and Qatari leverage. Any decision of this magnitude would likely involve coordination among these actors rather than resting solely in Damascus.
He also highlights the role of Iraqi resistance factions and the Iraqi state itself. Iraq remains crucial to Syria’s economic survival through energy supplies, wheat shipments, and security coordination along the shared border. A Syrian move against Hezbollah could reverberate across this network of interdependence.
At the same time, the regional mood is defined by widespread mobilization against Israeli aggression. Sunni and Shia forces alike have rallied around Gaza, where Hezbollah has paid a heavy price in fighters and resources. Against this backdrop, a confrontation with the Lebanese resistance could deepen sectarian fault lines and undermine broader anti-occupation momentum.
Leadership legitimacy and unresolved tensions
Yassin ultimately interprets Sharaa’s support for Hezbollah’s disarmament through multiple lenses. One reading suggests that the Syrian president has yet to consolidate his authority fully and is seeking external legitimacy through alignment with western priorities.
Another interpretation points to personal or factional motivations shaped by past conflicts and rivalries rather than a coherent Syrian national strategy.
Whatever the underlying drivers, the trajectory remains uncertain. Field developments and diplomatic maneuvering in the coming days are likely to determine whether tensions ease or escalate into a wider confrontation.
For now, Damascus is confronting coordinated pressure from Washington-backed regional actors as it seeks to consolidate authority at home and resist efforts to drag it into a clash with Hezbollah.