JERUSALEM, Nov. 21 (Xinhua) -- Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke over the phone with Russian President Vladimir Putin about Syria on Tuesday night, a day after Putin's meeting with Syria's President Bashar al-Assad, local media reported.
According to the Hebrew-language Ynet news site, an Israeli official said that Netanyahu and Putin spoke over the phone for "about half-an-hour" and discussed Iran's attempts to gain a foothold in Syria.
Putin held several talks over the phone with leaders to update them on his Monday meeting with al-Assad, including with U.S. President Donald Trump and King Salman of Saudi Arabia.
The talks came a day after al-Assad held a surprising visit to the Russian city of Sochi to discuss political process in Syria.
According to the Kremlin, that joint military operations in Syria are "coming to an end," with the focus shifting to a political process.
Israel has been lobbying Russia and the U.S. against the establishment of permanent Iranian bases in Syria. However, according to local media reports, a ceasefire agreement promoted by the U.S. and Russia does not include a ban on Iranian military presence in Syria.
Israel and Syria share a disputed border in the Golan Heights, a territory that Israel seized from Syria in the 1976 Middle East War and annexed it later, in a step never recognized by the international community.
Israel has been carrying out occasional airstrikes against Syrian army positions, usually in response to errant fire from the six-year war between the Bashar Assad regime and rebel groups.
















