US-mediated negotiations between Israel and Syria for a security agreement, modeled on the 1974 disengagement accord, continue amid stalls over Israeli withdrawal from buffer zones seized after Assad's late-2024 ouster. Syrian Foreign Minister Muhammad al-Ahmad stated on April 13 that a draft exists, emphasizing non-interference and full pullback from those areas, but progress halted due to changes in Israel's negotiation team. Earlier January Paris talks yielded a joint intelligence-sharing mechanism for de-escalation, yet recent Israeli airstrikes and incursions have fueled Syrian grievances. President al-Sharaa cited last-minute Israeli shifts derailing prior rounds, with potential Paris resumption looming; disputes exclude Golan Heights, focusing on border security amid regional volatility.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedIsrael x Syria security agreement by...?
Israel x Syria security agreement by...?
$767,006 Vol.
June 30
12%
$767,006 Vol.
June 30
12%
This market refers only to agreements which directly address border security and demarcation, normalization, or diplomatic recognition or otherwise creates a formalized security framework between the two states.
Ceasefire announcements or other announced de-escalations such as those relating to the July 16-18 skirmishes with the Druze, or any other future military engagements, which do not address the broader security relationship will not qualify.
Only deals which are officially announced will qualify. Informal announcements which do not constitute a formalized agreement will not count.
The primary resolution source will be official statements from the Israeli and Syrian governments. However, an agreement which is announced by only of the parties will qualify if an overwhelming consensus of credible reporting confirms that such a formal agreement has been reached.
Market Opened: Jan 5, 2026, 5:55 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...This market refers only to agreements which directly address border security and demarcation, normalization, or diplomatic recognition or otherwise creates a formalized security framework between the two states.
Ceasefire announcements or other announced de-escalations such as those relating to the July 16-18 skirmishes with the Druze, or any other future military engagements, which do not address the broader security relationship will not qualify.
Only deals which are officially announced will qualify. Informal announcements which do not constitute a formalized agreement will not count.
The primary resolution source will be official statements from the Israeli and Syrian governments. However, an agreement which is announced by only of the parties will qualify if an overwhelming consensus of credible reporting confirms that such a formal agreement has been reached.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...US-mediated negotiations between Israel and Syria for a security agreement, modeled on the 1974 disengagement accord, continue amid stalls over Israeli withdrawal from buffer zones seized after Assad's late-2024 ouster. Syrian Foreign Minister Muhammad al-Ahmad stated on April 13 that a draft exists, emphasizing non-interference and full pullback from those areas, but progress halted due to changes in Israel's negotiation team. Earlier January Paris talks yielded a joint intelligence-sharing mechanism for de-escalation, yet recent Israeli airstrikes and incursions have fueled Syrian grievances. President al-Sharaa cited last-minute Israeli shifts derailing prior rounds, with potential Paris resumption looming; disputes exclude Golan Heights, focusing on border security amid regional volatility.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated



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