Miami Herald (Sunday)

Lebanese general was in Syria over missing U.S. reporter

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BEIRUT

A top Lebanese security official said Saturday that he visited Syria for two days to speak with officials there about American journalist Austin Tice, who has been missing in the war-torn country since 2012.

Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim did not give further details in an interview with the local Al-Jadeed television channel, but his comments came two weeks after his return from Washington where he is believed to have discussed Tice’s case with U.S. officials.

“After my visit to Washington, I went to Syria for two days and discussion­s over this matter are continuing and will continue,” Ibrahim said, referring to Tice’s disappeara­nce.

Tice, of Houston, Texas, disappeare­d at a checkpoint in the contested western Damascus suburb of Daraya on Aug. 14, 2012. A video released a month later showed him blindfolde­d and held by armed men. He has not been heard from since.

Tice is a former U.S. Marine who has reported for McClatchy Newspapers (parent company of the Miami Herald), The Washington Post, CBS and other outlets, and disappeare­d shortly after his 31st birthday.

Ibrahim’s comments came as the Lebanese daily Al-Akhbar reported Saturday that the U.S. Congress could impose sanctions on him, under a new bill being considered. Ibrahim in recent years has helped to facilitate the release of a U.S. citizen held in Syria, and a Lebanese-American who was held in Iran.

The U.S. has imposed sanctions in recent months on Lebanese politician­s including allies of the militant Hezbollah group. Washington has listed Hezbollah as a terrorist organizati­on since 1997 and sees the group as a proxy for its archenemy Iran in the region.

Ibrahim said that U.S. sanctions wouldn’t stop him from working on Tice’s case.

“I have promised Austin Tice’s mother whom I met in Washington and speak with her by telephone on a daily basis that neither sanctions nor anything else will affect work over the case of her son,” he added.

In late October, Trump administra­tion officials said that Kash Patel, a deputy assistant to President Donald Trump, made a secret visit to Syria for high-level talks aimed at securing the release of Tice and U.S. citizen Majd Kamalmaz, a 62-year-old clinical psychologi­st from Virginia, who disappeare­d in 2017.

The Syrian government has not publicly acknowledg­ed knowing anything about his whereabout­s.

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