Up First from NPR - Syrian Minorities Fear Retribution, Israel-Hamas Talks, ABC Settles Trump Lawsuit
Episode Date: December 16, 2024Some people in Syria aren't so sure what the fall of Bashar al-Assad's government means for them. We hear from Syrians who ask if the collapse of the old regime might bring retribution against them. S...ecretary of State Antony Blinken is trying one more time for a ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas. What could make this time any different? ABC News settled a defamation lawsuit with President-elect Trump. The network will donate millions to his presidential library, even though experts felt ABC had a strong legal defense.Want more comprehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.Today's episode of Up First was edited by Arezou Rezvani, Carrie Kahn, Emily Kopp, HJ Mai and Mohamad ElBardicy. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Taylor Haney, Nia Dumas and Kaity Kline. We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott, and our technical director is Zac Coleman.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Some people aren't sure how much to celebrate the fall of Syria's government.
We've heard people dance in the streets.
Now we hear from Syrians who ask if the collapse of the old order might bring retribution against
them.
I'm Leila Fadl in Damascus with Steven Schiepp in Washington and this is Up First from NPR
News.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken is trying one more time for a ceasefire deal between
Israel and Hamas.
This is a moment to bring this to an end.
Which is something American diplomats have said many times before.
What makes this time any different?
Also ABC News settled a defamation lawsuit with President-elect Trump.
The network will donate millions to his presidential library, even though experts felt ABC had a strong legal defense. This message comes from Made In Cookware.
Did you know that many popular dishes in Tom Calicchio's craft restaurant are made in
Made In Cookware?
Their carbon steel cookware combines the best of cast iron and stainless clad, gets super
hot and is tough enough for grills or open flames.
Remember what great dishes on menus worldwide have in common.
They're made in made in.
For full details, visit madeincookware.com.
That's M-A-D-E-I-N cookware.com.
This message comes from BetterHelp, working to make therapy more convenient, flexible,
and affordable. BetterHelp is committed to helping people manage their well-being and
mental health through therapy. Visit betterhelp.com slash NPR for 10% off your first month.
Support for this podcast and the following message
come from Autograph Collection Hotels
with over 300 independent hotels around the world,
each exactly like nothing else.
Autograph Collection is part of the Marriott Bonvoy portfolio
of hotel brands.
Find the unforgettable at autograph collection.com.
The fall of Syria's longtime president means different things to different
people there. In the past few days we've watched many Syrians break into
impromptu dance parties in the street.
But in that joy over their newfound freedom there is also grief and
desperation for the
families of the tens of thousands of people who disappeared under Bashar al-Assad's rule
and the hundreds of thousands killed in a civil war.
And then there are people who are worried what the new leadership might do to them.
Okay, Leila, let's follow up on this.
Who would be concerned about life not improving or even getting worse after this regime is
gone?
Yeah, I mean, Assad really leaned on religious and ethnic minorities and marginalized communities
to shore up support against the opposition, stoking fears that they would be even more
oppressed if the most extreme within his opponents rose
to the top. And because Alawites are of the same sect as Assad, it's an offshoot of
Shia Islam, they dominated the top ranks of the military and intelligence, there's
this assumption that the community was more loyal to Assad than others in Syria. So now
they feel like they could pay the price for Assad and his top
loyalist crimes against Syrians when they lived under the same oppression that other
Syrians lived under.
Well since you raise it, let me ask if people did anything that they now need to be worried
about. Did people in that Alawite sect lead a life of privilege under the old regime?
In short, no. I mean, the elite are a tiny sliver of an otherwise really poor community.
And Assad's loyalists, the elite in Syria, were Sunni, were halawik, were Christian.
And it's evident this poverty, as soon as you drive into the Meza 86 neighborhood in
Damascus that's in the shadow of Bashar al-Assad's palace, right away you see the cinderblock
homes, the electric wires tangled and hanging in the narrow alleysar al-Assad's palace. Right away, you see the cinder block homes,
the electric wires tangled and hanging in the narrow alleys,
the potholed streets.
A lot of families here say Alawite stayed
in military service because the Assad family
gave them no other economic choices.
Listen to what Ibrahim Issa,
who runs a perfume shop in the area, said.
The regime would make us poor. They wouldn't give us food or drink or jobs. in the area said.
The regime would make us poor. They wouldn't give us food or drink or jobs.
They would make us poor by burning our agriculture,
our forests, so we wouldn't work in agriculture,
forcing us into the army.
And if you could see Isa, I mean, he was so excited
that Assad is gone.
He had this twinkle in his eyes and what seemed like
an incurable smile because he can finally leave his neighborhood. He was evading military
service for two years because he didn't want to fight fellow Syrians. That military service
is mandatory. And because conscripts are paid next to nothing to fight for this regime,
that gave them next to nothing. So he couldn't risk getting snatched up at a checkpoint.
Okay. So he's against the old regime. He's still worried about being targeted by the
new regime. Are people where you were being targeted?
I mean, in a word, no, not in this neighborhood. When the rebel fighters first came to their
neighborhood, they were polite and peaceful people in the area told me. They took away
weapons from soldiers and told them, go home. Now you're civilians. The new leadership
has said they will be protected and part of a new Syria, but they're still
scared.
This is a community that had both soldiers in Assad's army and people fighting with
the rebels.
They've bled in this country's civil war on both sides.
The community was also targeted with bombings by extremists, including in this neighborhood.
And now they're starting to see threats on Facebook
warning Alawites that revenge killings are coming.
One showed me a video of an Alawite shrine
that he said was recently burned outside of Damascus.
And it is showing up, not from leadership,
but in their daily lives.
I met a man who is engaged to a Sunni Arab woman,
and the family loved him until Assad
fled.
Now, some have turned on him and don't want him in the family because of his religious
sect.
And another woman is having a neighborhood dispute about the pipes leaking in her apartment
from the apartment above.
And that neighbor is Sunni and now she leans out the window and taunts them saying, where
are the Alawites?
The tables have turned.
So there's definitely apprehension and concern
that they'll become scapegoats, but they hope that fear
is just that, fear of the unknown.
Leila, thanks for all the subtleties.
Really appreciate it.
You're welcome, Steve.
There's renewed hope for a ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas.
Senior Biden administration officials have been in the region pushing the negotiations,
which they say have been intense lately.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken is just back from his latest trip to the Middle East.
This is a moment to bring this to an end and bring this to an end in a way that gets the hostages home and finally brings relief to people who suffered and continue to
suffer every single day. Israeli airstrikes in Gaza continue with the
Palestinian death toll climbing to nearly 45,000. NPR's diplomatic
correspondent Michelle Kellerman joins us now from Tel Aviv. Good morning Michelle.
Good morning Leila. Good morning, Leila.
So we've heard many, many times that negotiations are underway, are intense, and there's optimism
that a possible deal is afoot, and then no deal.
What are you hearing from US officials that makes it different this time?
Well they say the whole context in the region has changed.
Hamas has been degraded to the point where it can't carry out another October 7-like
attack.
Israeli strikes and assassinations have degraded the Iranian Bactez Bala in Lebanon, and there's
a ceasefire there now.
And Iran lost its client state in Syria with the fall of Bashar al-Assad.
So many say that Hamas is now being more flexible.
A source close to the negotiations also told NPR
that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants a deal
because he wants to focus more on Iran.
So what do we know about this deal that's emerging
and the sticking points?
Well, it would be a lengthy ceasefire up to two months.
Hamas would release some hostages
in exchange for Palestinian detainees released from Israeli jails but exactly who is being
debated and there are a lot of big open questions about Hamas's future role
about who runs Gaza and how to secure Gaza to get vital aid in so this deal
would really just be a start. And you're there in Israel what are you hearing
from family members
of some of the 100 hostages still being held in Gaza?
Are they optimistic?
Well, I woke up this morning skywriting planes,
painting huge ribbons in the sky to draw attention
to the hostages.
Families are cautious.
You know, they've been here before, only to be disappointed
by Netanyahu.
I met Efrat Machikawa in central Tel Aviv
on Saturday night at a rally for the hostages. She said only diplomacy can get her uncle,
who turned 80 in captivity, out of Gaza. War has only sad endings. We cannot talk of a
victory to neither side. And a lot are really worried about the talk of a victory to neither side.
And a lot are really worried about the talk of a partial deal. They want Netanyahu to bring everyone back.
What have you heard from Palestinians in Gaza who are living under these airstrikes and in this war about a possible ceasefire and hostage-detainee exchange?
Well, I mean, they're desperate for an end of the relentless Israeli strikes that have destroyed hospitals and schools. The Israeli
military says it's targeting Hamas fighters, but we're hearing from Gaza
health officials that many women and children have been killed in these
strikes, as well as medical staff. You know, Laila, over 100 were reported killed
this weekend alone, and these strikes continue months after the US and others
said that Israel had already reached
its military goals in Gaza.
NPR's diplomatic correspondent, Michelle Killerman.
Thank you, Michelle.
Thank you.
Why did ABC News settle a lawsuit with President-elect Trump?
The TV network is making a $15 million donation to Trump's future presidential library and also posting a statement of regret. That
is the settlement over remarks by anchor George Stephanopoulos during an interview. The settlement
comes just as an incoming administration talks of using the power of government and the legal system to penalize news coverage they don't like.
NPR media correspondent David Falkenflich is covering all this.
David, good morning.
Good morning, Steve.
What was the lawsuit about?
So let's go back to March.
Donald Trump, former president surging in the Republican primaries.
Stephanopoulos on the Sunday public affairs show this week, he was speaking with Nancy Mace.
She's a Republican Congresswoman from South Carolina, used to be a real critic of Trump, became a supporter of him.
She had talked poignantly about how she'd been raped as a teen.
And George Stephanopoulos is saying, well, then why do you support Donald Trump?
And he kept saying relentlessly, look, he was found liable in a civil suit of rape.
Well, that's not actually quite right.
He was found guilty of sexual abuse and the jury in that civil trial did not find him
liable of rape.
What the judge said in the case, pointedly, however, was that what he was found liable
for did fall under the definition of what everybody in America in common conversation
might understand to be rape, but that it didn't fit under the definition of what everybody in America in common conversation might understand
to be rape, but that it didn't fit under the precise technical definition of rape under
New York state law.
I'm just thinking about that. So according to the judge, this is something of a subtlety
and it's involving a public figure where normally you can have very, very wide latitude to say
all sorts of things. What had legal experts said about the merits
of Trump's case against ABC News?
Sure. I spoke to six First Amendment media lawyers over this weekend, and they kind of
agreed with my gut instinct on this. They said what George Stephanopoulos did was a
screw up, and a number of them said they would have expected ABC and Stephanopoulos to clarify
the distinction pretty promptly. But they also said this should have been a pretty easy call to defend in court because what Stephanopoulos said was close to what
the judge said, but in precise, there's kind of a case law defense of something being substantially
true. And as you point out, you know, public figures, you know, under a major court case
decided by the Supreme Court called New York Times v. Sullivan, 60 years ago, they gave great protections to what people say in the press and in public about public
officials to allow for sort of a rolling and roiling freedom of speech about politicians
that you don't have to be perfect. And so you can say things that are critical about
public figures and they can't just use the courts against you. A president or a former
president or a future president would be somebody at the very top of the pyramid of public figures.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely. It matters who you are.
If you're totally a private citizen,
maybe if somebody says something terrible about you, you can sue.
It gets harder when you get more famous.
So why, in this case, did ABC News settle?
Well, it remains a mystery why they didn't clarify,
but why did they settle? They say they're happy to be past it.
We don't know exactly, but this is a major amount of money, particularly for a public figure. It also
comes at a time as a number of news organizations and a number of owners and leaders of news
organizations appear trying to make peace with Trump. You think of the killed endorsements
of Vice President Harris in the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post. You know, a top
executive over ABC News
was seen at Mar-a-Lago meeting with a key incoming figure
in the new Trump administration.
And finally, this is all, of course,
at a time when incoming president-elect Donald Trump
and the officials around him have suggested
a strong, not only willingness, but intent
to use the powers of government against the press,
the powers of regulation, desire to go after reporters
and publishers over printing government secrets, and now very much the courts as well.
And press David Falkenflick, thanks so much.
You bet.
And that's Up First for this Monday, December 16th.
I'm Steve Inskeep.
And I'm Leila Falken.
We here at Up First give you three big stories of the day.
Our Consider This Colleagues take a different approach.
They dive into a single news story and what it means to you in just 15 minutes.
Listen now on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.
NPR's Team Damascus for Up First includes Arzu Resvani and Taylor Haney.
Today's episode was edited by Kerry Kahn, Emily Kopp, H.J. Mai and Mohammed El-Bardisi.
It was produced by Ziad Bach, Nia DeMass and Katie Klein.
We get engineering support from Arthur Laurent and our technical director is Zach Coleman.
Join us tomorrow.
Hey, it's Peter Sagal, the host of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Now, if you like Wait, Wait and you're looking for another podcast where the hosts take self-deprecating
jabs at themselves and invite important guests on who have no business being there, then
you should check out NPR's How to Do Everything.
It's hosted by two of the minds behind Wait, Wait, who literally sometimes put words in
my mouth.
Find the How to Do Everything podcast wherever you are currently listening to me go on about it.
You care about what's happening in the world.
Let State of the World from NPR keep you informed.
Each day we transport you to a different point on the globe
and introduce you to the people living world events.
We don't just tell you world news, we take you there.
And you can make this journey
while you're doing the dishes or driving your car.
State of the World podcast from NPR.
Vital international stories every day.