Syria-Tunisia détente: Will it divulge Ennahda's support to terrorism in Syria?
Syrian Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad arrived in Tunisia in the evening of April 17, for a three-day official visit, having arrived from Algeria where he spent two days.
The visit comes within the framework of keenness
to bring bilateral relations to their normal course, the Tunisian Foreign
Ministry said in a statement.
Tunisian desire
This visit follows a statement by Tunisian
President Kais Saied last week, in which he said there is no justification for
the absence of a Tunisian ambassador in Damascus, and a Syrian ambassador in
Tunis.
Tunisia, President Saied said, would not accept Syria's
partition.
Following a meeting with Tunisian Foreign
Minister Nabil Ammar, President Saied added that a decision had to be made
regarding diplomatic representation in Damascus.
"The issue of the regime in Syria concerns
only Syrians," the Tunisian president said.
"We are dealing with the Syrian state and
the choices of the Syrian people," he added.
In response, the foreign ministries of Syria and
Tunisia announced in a joint statement on April 12 that Damascus decided to
reopen its embassy in Tunisia and appoint an ambassador to head it.
Tunisia's efforts to restore relations date back
to last March, when the Tunisian president expressed a desire to see his
country's representative accompanied by the representative of Syria.
This was the first time President Saied spoke
openly and officially about the restoration of relations with Syria.
In early April, the Tunisian president directed
his country's Foreign Ministry to begin procedures for appointing an ambassador
to Tunisia in Damascus.
"We need to adhere to the principles of the
foreign policy of Tunisian diplomacy," President Saied wrote on social
media.
"Tunisia's foreign policies derive from the
will of the people," he added.
Why now?
Syria is witnessing a political opening to the
countries of the region after a break that began against the backdrop of the
Syrian war, in which thousands of people have died since 2011.
With the coming to power in Tunisia of President
Saied, known for his Arab nationalist inclinations, he had a tendency towards
maintaining a unified Syrian state, and an understanding of the Syrian official
point of view.
This poses, however, questions about the reasons
for restoring relations at this particular time.
Stain
Tunisian political analyst Nizar Jlidi said
Tunisia and Syria re-establish their relations after the devastation that
lasted for ten years during the rule of former Tunisian President Moncef
Marzouki and Ennahda movement, the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood in
Tunisia.
"Tunisia was explicitly on the side of
extremist currents during the rule of Ennahda and Marzouki," Jlidi told The
Reference.
He referred to a conference in Tunisia about
Syria, where Tunisia voiced support to militias in Syria.
"This conference was a disgrace in the
history of Tunisia," Jlidi said.