Syriacs and Arameans
There is no difference between Syriacs and Arameans. Arameans is a name given by the Akkadians to the inhabitants of the west of the Euphrates, and its first Akkadian pronunciation was Amrum, meaning the Westerners, in reference to the direction of the west. Which corresponds to Asrum, which means the Easterners. The Aroum were the ones who founded Babylon and the first Babylonian dynasty and changed the name to Araman to call it their mother country, between the Euphrates and the Mediterranean. They themselves became known as Syriacs, after the name of their country, Syria. Syrians, i.e. citizens of Syria, Assyria, the country of the East.
The Arameans are not Arabs. The Arabs did not assimilate with them, nor were they Arabized. Rather, the Arabs are one of their branches. The Syrians among them are related to the name of a country. The word Arab itself is a Syriac word, a name for one of the states of the Assyrian Kingdom, meaning the west. The word “Arab” that the Syriacs used meant the residents of the Western Province and did not mean a people other than the Syriacs. Because most of the inhabitants of the Arab state are Bedouins, the meaning of “Arab” came to mean the Bedouins, not the agricultural people, over time.
Aram Syriac Babylonian Arabs are all words attributed to places and geographical destinations and are not names of peoples or nations. It is not derived from the names of ancestors, etc. They are all a legacy of the first Akkadian empire. They are all Akkadian, and the Akkadian language is the ancient Arabic language, and everything that has evolved from it is dialects that people today call languages, as we say today: Iraqi, Syrian, Jordanian, and Lebanese... Other than that, it is all nationalist myths and delirium.
Source: websites