
A Kurdish-led militia alliance which controls north-eastern Syria has signed a deal to integrate all military and civilian institutions into the Syrian state, the country’s presidency says. The agreement, which includes a complete cessation of hostilities, says the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) will hand over control of the region’s border posts, airport, and vital oil and gas fields. It also recognises the Kurdish minority as “an integral part of the Syrian state” and guarantees “the rights of all Syrians to representation and participation in the political process”. SDF commander Mazloum Abdi called the deal a “real opportunity to build a new Syria”. “We are committed to building a better future that guarantees the rights of all Syrians and fulfils their aspirations for peace and dignity,” he wrote on X after signing the deal in Damascus on Monday alongside interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa.

The deal represents a major step towards Sharaa’s goal to unify the fractured country after his Sunni Islamist group led the rebel offensive that overthrew president Bashar al-Assad in December and ended 13 years of devastating civil war. It could also de-escalate the SDF’s conflict with neighbouring Turkey and Turkish-backed Syrian former rebel factions allied to the government, which are trying to push the alliance out of areas near the border. There were celebrations welcoming the announcement of the deal on the streets of several cities on Monday night, with many people expressing relief at a time when Syria is facing several other threats to its stability.
The recent mass killings of Alawite civilians in the western coastal region during clashes between security forces and Assad loyalists have sparked calls for international protection for Syria’s religious and ethnic minorities and amplified voices promoting division. There is also concern about the south, where some Druze militias in Suweida province have been reluctant to lay down their arms. However, Suweida residents said representatives met Sharaa in Damascus on Monday and a deal like the SDF’s was expected soon. Israel has also threatened to intervene to protect the Druze from the government, which it considers a threat. It has also carried out an air campaign to destroy much of Syria’s military capabilities and seized a demilitarised buffer zone next to the occupied Golan Heights.

The SDF, which has tens of thousands of well-armed and well-trained fighters, was not aligned with either Assad’s regime or the opposition during the civil war. It currently controls more than 46,000 sq km (18,000 sq miles) of territory in the north-east, where it defeated the Islamic State (IS) group in 2019 with the help of a US-led coalition. The SDF plays a major role in the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES), which governs the region also known to Kurds as Rojava. About 10,000 IS fighters are being detained in SDF-run prisons spread across the region and about 45,000 other people linked to IS, mostly women and children, are held in several camps. Since the fall of Assad, the SDF has warned that attacks from Turkish-backed factions are forcing it to divert fighters away from guarding the prisons and paving the way for an IS resurgence.
The Turkish government views the biggest militia in the SDF, the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), as a terrorist organisation. It says it the YPG is an extension of the banned Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) group that waged an insurgency in Turkey for decades but whose imprisoned leader recently declared a ceasefire. There was no immediate comment from Turkey in response to Monday’s agreement. However, Turkish officials have previously called for all Kurdish-led groups in north-eastern Syria to dissolve and integrate with the new government. Several Arab countries welcomed the deal, with Saudi Arabia and Qatar both describing it as an important step towards maintaining “civil peace”.
Between 25 and 35 million Kurds inhabit a mountainous region straddling the borders of Turkey, Iraq, Syria, Iran and Armenia. They make up the fourth-largest ethnic group in the Middle East, but they have never obtained a permanent nation state. Syria’s Kurds, which make up about make up about 10% of the population, were suppressed and denied basic rights during the Assad family’s rule.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cedlx0511w7o
Comment: Well son of a gun. This is big. And it comes at a time when Syria appears to be on the verge of falling back into violent civil war. This not only doubles the territory now under control of Damascus, but also doubles the size of the SAA, or whatever it will eventually be called. Wladimir van Wilgenburg, a long time watcher of the Kurds and especially the Syrian Kurds reported about an interview on 17 February with Mazloum Abdi, the commander of the SDF. In that interview Abdi stated that “the fundamental principle we agree on is that there should not be two separate armies, but rather a single, unified military force.” He also dismissed speculation that the SDF aims to replicate the Iraqi Kurdistan model: “Syria is not Iraq, nor is northeastern Syria equivalent to Kurdistan”, he said. The general also confirmed that the US had been actively mediating to facilitate dialogue between the SDF and Damascus.
So we finally arrive at the final stage of a US sponsored resistance, phase VII- transition meaning demobilization of the resistance force or transition to national control. Odd that we waited until Assad was gone before we moved to the transition phase, although the agreement was the outcome of months of negotiations mediated by the US. Perhaps we were talking with the Assad government before he fell. All this should mean that our withdrawal from Syria is on the horizon. We should be getting out of al Tanf as well.
In addition to this Damascus – SDF deal, the Al Sharaa government has also come to a similar agreement with the Druze of Suwayda. The Druze militias of Suwayda Military Council will be merged into the Syrian Ministry of the Interior. Both these agreements should give Damascus some breathing room to defuse the fighting on the coast and address the massacres committed mostly by the Turkish affiliated militias, but also HTS forces. Bringing the YPG under the control of Damascus may entice Türkiye to assist rather than hinder this effort.
TTG
The signature came the day after Kurilla’s visit and was welcomed by the US. As to why not earlier, I think the SDF tried several times, but Assad’s Syrian Arab Republic was -according to what I hear – too nationalistic to provide a formal deal. Practically, the large presence of Iranian elements always grated on the Kurds, too and was showstopper for the US.
What is envisaged now is first to achieve the kind of loose integration that HTS managed in Idlib with the other groups that included also the Iraqi Kurds belonging to Ansar al-Islam (Viking Hammer). All aligned units will remain how they are, there will be some platoon-sized HTS element in each unit. We saw just over last weekend how quickly the units which were already “integrated” (Hamza and Sultan Sulayman) reverted to autonomous operations.
I foresee some HTS border police officers and liaison elements rolling up soon in NE Syria, but then not much else changing for a long time. They will number in the dozens at most and be completely dependent on the hospitality of the Kurds. Prison and camp guard ops will likely be still run by the same Kurds, and hopefully get their US funding restored. Syria in the short term lacks the resources to integrate the Kurds and the other groups.
Yes, this is a Big Deal, and *probably* a Good Thing.
I assume that Al Sharaa has also come to some kind of (sub rosa?) agreement with Israel, who want to cut off all supply routes to Hezbollah. Citizens of Syria might be war-weary enough to go along with that, but Al Sharaa will have to walk a fine line to avoid being seen as supporting Israel.
Now that we have eliminated the only Arab government that had equal rights for women and separation of church and state we can bring our soldiers home.
Job well done, boys.
Also today, al-Sharaa issued a decree on to form Syria’s national security council.
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/syrias-interim-president-sharaa-forms-national-security-council-2025-03-12/
Let’s hope Abdi, or one of his close colleagues will get to be a member.
Turkey, or Turkish-backed SNA mercenaries, were still attacking SDF forces at Tishreen Dam as of yesterday Tuesday the 11th. Will they stop now, doubtful.
And what of the Turkish controlled areas of Syria that are still occupied? i.e. The Districts of Afrin, Azaz, Al-Bab & Jarabulus in Aleppo Governate; the Tell-Abyad District of Raqqa; and the Ras al-Ayn District of Al-Hasakah. That’s a huge bite of Syrian land. Is Erdogan going to turn them into Turkish provinces like what happened to Hatay 85 years ago?
When the US is out I see a future with lots of Turkish military bases around Syria. Notice there is no self-governing Kurdish zone like in Iraq. So expect the Kurds to get new “friends” in their area of Syria over the next couple of decades.
Considering the recent pogrom against religious minorities I’d wonder why the Kurds would want to be associated with the national military of Syria? I know ash-Sharaa. Has contended that the Syrian Army was not involved in the pogrom which saw some 1,000 religious minorities slaughtered, entire families butchered in their homes. He has said it was his former jihadi allies, mostly foreigners, who did the attacks, but even if taken at face value it means that the Syrian Army was unwilling, or unable to stop the violence. I have friends who live near Latakia and they have said members of the Syrian Army most certainly WERE involved.
His response was something along the lines of “these things will be expected.” But when you also consider that ash-Sharaa also appointed foreign jihadis into top positions in the new Syrian Army I tend to think that he allowed it to happen as a nod to his old comrades amoungst the head chopper/takfiriyeen fighters.
This detente with the Kurds wont last long if the foreign jihadis decide to get some pay back and start mowing down Kurdish families in their homes.
The fools who say “give ash-Sharaa a chance” are the same fools that said to give the Taliban a chance when the US withdrew.
FYI….(The ash in the name instead of the “al” is because the ش letter in Arabic, the SH in Sharaa is a Shamsiya letter, thus the article of al is assimilated into the “sh” sound. Just a pet peeve of mine when Arabic is slaughtered in the west. The Colonel would have known this.)
Sunni Muslim Kurds have more room for an ethnic Kurdish identity in the new Syria than people with the wrong religion.
But we will see what the future will bring. Syria is still an Arab Republic.
https://x.com/joshua_landis/status/1900294515526951408
HTS goes for Sharia Law as the basis for Syria’s new constitution so we will see what happens.
https://x.com/joshua_landis/status/1900292761628065816
More on the on-going pogrom along the coast.
https://twitter-thread.com/t/1899944417563468065
https://x.com/joshua_landis/status/1900285311202050512
https://x.com/joshua_landis/status/1900319243473678529
New Syria is like Old Syria in many ways.
https://x.com/joshua_landis/status/1900575162384150977
“The President is supreme and unchecked by either parliament or the judiciary, which is appointed by the President.
The President has the right to propose laws and issue decrees with the force of law. The president can veto laws passed by the legislature.”