Thursday, January 15, 2026

SYRIA

Damascus escalation could undermine gains in fight against ISIS: SDF

7 hours ago
Rudaw


ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - Islamic State (ISIS) cells are exploiting military operations by Damascus-affiliated forces and ongoing threats against northeast Syria (Rojava) to attack prisons holding their militants, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) said Thursday, warning that further escalation could undermine years of counterterrorism efforts.

In a statement on its official Telegram channel, the SDF said that “amid attacks by Damascus-linked factions, military buildups, and continued threats against North and East Syria [Rojava], ISIS terrorist cells are attempting to take advantage of the situation to target prisons holding their members.”

The SDF stressed that their forces remain “fully prepared and vigilant” and “have taken all necessary measures to secure the prisons and prevent any security breaches,” adding that the facilities are “currently under full control.”

However, the Kurdish-led forces warned that the continued “military escalation could lead to widespread instability, posing a serious threat to prison security and risking to return the region to square one after years of sacrifices in the fight against terrorism.”

While the SDF did not name the prisons, it is believed they were referring to jails holding ISIS remnants in Hasaka province in eastern Rojava.

The Kurdish-led SDF serves as the de facto military force in the region. Until Syria joined the US-led Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS in November, the SDF had been the coalition’s sole on-the-ground partner, playing a key role in ISIS’s territorial defeat in Syria in 2019.

Despite its losses, ISIS has continued insurgent attacks against the SDF and its affiliated Internal Security Forces (Asayish), with assaults escalating over the past year amid the instability following the fall of longtime dictator Bashar al-Assad’s regime in December 2024.

In late December, the SDF reported carrying out 163 security and military operations against ISIS cells in 2025, arresting and killing dozens, including three leaders.

The Kurdish-led forces said these operations included at least three large-scale sweeps, 128 raids on ISIS hideouts, and 32 direct clashes, while also defusing 79 improvised explosive devices (IEDs).

During the same period, ISIS carried out 220 attacks in areas under SDF control.

Last week, thousands of Syrian army troops and allied jihadists launched a wide-scale attack on the predominantly Kurdish Ashrafiyeh and Sheikh Maqsood neighborhoods, to take control of northern Aleppo areas that had been secured for nearly 15 years by the Asayish.

The deadly violence claimed the lives of at least 82 people - including 43 civilians - according to a Sunday report by the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR). The fighting also displaced around 150,000 people, the Erbil-based Barzani Charity Foundation (BCF) told Rudaw a day earlier.

Shortly after a ceasefire came into effect in Aleppo’s Kurdish areas on Sunday, the Syrian army’s Operations Command on Tuesday declared additional Kurdish-held areas - this time Deir Hafer, Maskanah, and surrounding areas in eastern Aleppo - as “closed military zones.”

These areas, controlled by the SDF, have in past months been flashpoints for Damascus-affiliated factions, who view seizing them as a way to open a logistical corridor connecting Aleppo to Raqqa province while increasing military pressure on the SDF along the Euphrates River.

The latter push prompted veteran US lawmakers to warn of a “stronger reaction” if Syrian forces advance further against “our Kurdish allies.”

Influential US Senator Graham on Wednesday remarked, “I’m receiving what I believe to be credible reports that Syrian army forces and Turkey may be advancing further against our Kurdish allies - a move that I believe would prompt a strong response from the United States.”

He added, “While I support giving this new Syrian government a chance, I will not tolerate or accept a brazen attack against our Kurdish allies,” concluding, “To the Syrian government and Turkey: choose wisely.”


Turkish state reiterates support for HTS, defending monism

The Turkish state's Ministry of Defense, which participated in the attack on Kurds in Aleppo, reiterated its support for the Al-Qaeda/ISIS coalition HTS.



ANF
NEWS CENTER
Thursday, January 15, 2026, 12:40 PM

Rear Admiral Zeki Aktürk, Press and Public Relations Counselor of the Ministry of Defense, said, "We would like to state once again that we do not see Syria's security separately from our own security, and that we will support Syria's fight against terrorist organizations on the basis of its unity and territorial integrity in line with the principle of 'one state, one army' if they request."

Shortly before the attacks on Kurdish neighborhoods in Aleppo began on January 6, the Turkish Ministry of Defense stated that they were ready to support the Damascus regime if it took the initiative against the Kurds.

During the war crimes committed in Aleppo, the Turkish state and gangs gave open support and expressed their satisfaction. Numerous documents and images show that Turkish state-linked forces are directly involved in war crimes.


How Syria's Aleppo clashes in Kurdish districts are impacting Iraqi Kurdistan

What began as clashes in Aleppo's Kurdish neighbourhoods is now reshaping life in Iraqi Kurdistan, from street protests to media shifts and refugee tensions.


Dana Taib Menmy
Iraq
15 January, 2026
The New Arab

Barzani called for an end to what he described as "illegal campaigns" against Syrian residents in the Iraqi Kurdistan Region. [Getty]

Clashes between Syrian government forces and Kurdish armed groups in Ashrafia and Sheikh Maqsoud, Kurdish-populated neighbourhoods of Aleppo, have notably altered the political and social dynamics within Iraqi Kurdistan.

These developments encompass public demonstrations, shifts in Kurdish media coverage, the cancellation of a Syrian trade fair, and incidents of violence targeting Syrian refugees living in the region.

Masoud Barzani, leader of the ruling Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), condemned the attacks on Syrian refugees and advocated for restraint and peaceful coexistence.

Barzani called for an end to what he described as "illegal campaigns" against Arab Syrian residents in the Kurdistan Region, labelling them as "inappropriate behaviour." He stated that such actions are inconsistent with Kurdish values and the region’s institutional policies.

On Sunday, hundreds of Sulaymaniyah residents protested in the city centre against the displacement of Kurds from Aleppo's Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafia districts. Comparable demonstrations occurred in Erbil on Friday and in Halabja province.


Kurdish-language media, predominantly owned by the KDP and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), have offered extensive coverage of the Aleppo clashes and have been openly critical of both Syrian authorities and Turkey-backed militias.

Responding to public pressure, Erbil Governor Omed Khoshnaw cancelled a Syrian trade fair that was scheduled for later this month.

After the clashes, Shams TV, an Arabic-language channel affiliated with the KDP, abruptly cancelled a televised interview with Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa.

Fethullah Husseini, who represents the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES) in the Kurdistan Region, told The New Arab that after attacks by the Syrian army and Turkey-backed militias on Kurdish-populated areas in Aleppo, several injured individuals are now receiving treatment in hospitals in the Iraqi Kurdistan region, mainly in Duhok province.

He expressed appreciation for the Kurdistan Regional Government's (KRG) position. Addressing reports of mistreatment of Syrian refugees, al-Husseini condemned such actions and emphasised that the KRG should prevent any mistreatment of Syrians in the region.

Husseini also acknowledged the solidarity demonstrated by the people of the Kurdistan region and commended Kurdish media for exposing the "massacre" in the two neighbourhoods. In contrast, he criticised Arabic media channels, including Al Jazeera, Al Arabiya, and Al Hadath, as "very bad" and "unprofessional".

Tensions have also led to isolated attacks on Syrian refugees, most of whom live in camps or major cities.
Kurdish security forces have made several arrests and reported that these incidents were limited to five or six cases throughout the region.

Kifah Mahmoud, media adviser to Barzani, told Al-Araby Al-Jadeed, TNA's Arabic language sister website, that the incidents constituted abuses by Syrian Kurds against Syrian Arabs, noting that many Syrians in the region have family ties to Aleppo. He explained that emotions regarding the events in Aleppo influenced actions and reactions, prompting regional leaders to reiterate calls for coexistence and a zero-tolerance policy toward abuse based on ethnic or national identity.

Mahmoud denied that these reactions represent an official political stance, emphasising that the regional government opposes such violations and will hold perpetrators accountable. He stated that Syrian refugees of all backgrounds are protected by both the government and the Kurdish public, and that incidents of violence and hate are closely monitored.

According to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Iraq hosts approximately 341,000 refugees and asylum seekers, with over 90 per cent being Syrians. Approximately 85 per cent of these individuals reside in the Iraqi Kurdistan Region, while the remaining 15 per cent are located in central and southern provinces.

Barzani's message represents an official effort to reduce inflammatory rhetoric and maintain social unity in the Iraqi Kurdistan Region, which has hosted large numbers of Syrian refugees for over a decade despite ongoing regional tensions.


Syria's Kurdish outreach masks plans for new offensive against SDF in Aleppo - analysis

Syria’s President Ahmad al-Sharaa “affirmed that the injustices witnessed in Syria during the decades of the deposed regime’s rule affected all segments of the Syrian population without exception.”

A member of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) stands guard as Syrian Kurds attend a protest in solidarity with people in Sweida, on July 17, 2025.
(photo credit: REUTERS/Orhan Qereman)

JANUARY 15, 2026
JERUSALEM POST

Syria’s transitional government is trying to do outreach to Kurds as it appears to prepare a new offensive against the Syrian Democratic Forces.

The SDF is backed by the US and is composed mostly of Kurds, controlling eastern Syria.

Syrian security forces recently ejected Kurdish fighters from two neighborhoods in Aleppo, raising concerns about Damascus abusing the rights of Kurds. US officials, who back the new Syrian government, are concerned about attacks on the SDF.

Syria’s President Ahmad al-Sharaa “affirmed that the injustices witnessed in Syria during the decades of the deposed regime’s rule affected all segments of the Syrian population without exception,” Syrian state media said on Wednesday.

“The President stressed that the post-liberation period represents a new beginning based on equal citizenship, the rule of law, and the building of state institutions. This ensures the constitutional rights of all Syrians, preserves the unity of Syrian territory, and strengthens stability and development.”

Security forces affiliated with the Ministry of the Interior stand guard in the Ashrafieh neighbourhood, which they have taken control of, according to the Interior Ministry, following battles with the Syrian Democratic Forces, in Aleppo, Syria, January 9, 2026. (credit: REUTERS/Karam al-Masri TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)

At the same time, Shara’a is conducting an outreach to build support in the region. He spoke to the Emir of Qatar this week.

Meanwhile, Damascus is also trying to show that Kurds displaced from Aleppo in the fighting are returning. “The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said that thousands of displaced residents have begun returning to their homes in the Aleppo neighborhoods of Ashrafieh and Sheikh Maqsoud, following weeks of displacement caused by clashes between the Syrian Arab Army and the SDF organization,” SANA noted.

Syria plans SDF offensive while engaging Kurds for support

Now, Syria is preparing the ground for a new offensive. Syrian state media SANA noted that “the Syrian Arab Army’s Operations Command announced on Wednesday the opening of a humanitarian corridor toward Aleppo city, saying the passage will be opened on Thursday via Hmemeh village on the M15 main road linking Deir Hafer with Aleppo.”

Syrian officials said, “We draw the attention of our people residing in the previously specified eastern Aleppo area, identified via the screens and platforms of al-Ikhbariyah channel, that a humanitarian corridor will be opened tomorrow toward Aleppo city.” The concept of a humanitarian corridor appears to be one of several messaging themes that Syria has borrowed from Israel’s war in Gaza.

Syria has begun to send reinforcements to the Dayr Hafir front near the Euphrates, as the country is opening, saying that it is fighting against “SDF elements, PKK [Kurdistan Workers’ Party] terrorist militants, and remnants of the deposed regime.”

SANA said, “On Tuesday, the Army’s Operations Command declared Deir Hafer and Maskanah, located on the western bank of the Euphrates, a closed military zone due to continued mobilization by SDF groups, PKK militants, and remnants of the deposed regime.” Using “closed military zones” is also language that Damascus appears to have borrowed from Israeli announcements, but it remains unclear whether Syria is using this terminology systematically to appeal to Western audiences.

The accusation that the SDF is linked to the PKK is an accusation often made by Turkey.

Turkey is backing the Syrian government, and the SDF has reported that Turkish drones have been active over the frontline recently. There are concerns in SDF ranks that Ankara may join a Syrian government offensive.

Syria’s government is portraying the SDF as recruiting former Assad regime members, saying that the SDF is working with “criminals are being recruited with support from Iran and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).” A factor that will not go over well with US officials who have worked closely with the SDF for years.

In another move, designed to prepare the way for a new offensive, SANA reported several times that “the Syrian Arab Army Operations Command declared the areas of Deir Hafer and Maskanah, located on the western Euphrates, a closed military zone following continued mobilization by SDF groups, along with PKK terrorists and remnants of the deposed regime in the area.”

Damascus officials published a map of the area being targeted in the upcoming offensive, including Dayr Hafir, Maskanah, Babiri, and Qawas on the western bank of the Euphrates.


Syrian army reinforces Deir Hafir front as tensions escalate in eastern Aleppo

ISLAMIST STATE VS KURDISTAN
Syrian army reinforces Deir Hafir front as tensions escalate in eastern Aleppo
Images showing forces of the central government in Damascus rounding up men. / Syria Doc: CC
By bna Cairo bureau January 14, 2026

The Syrian army has continued to send military reinforcements towards Deir Hafir in eastern Aleppo, amid a sharp escalation on the ground that has intensified over recent days.

According to SANA on January 14, Syrian forces are deploying additional units from Latakia towards the Deir Hafir front east of Aleppo.

The Syrian government has earlier declared areas west of the Euphrates River controlled by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) as a military zone.

A military source said that reinforcements were still arriving in the area, describing Deir Hafir as “a launch point for several suicide drones that have targeted Aleppo in recent weeks.”

The source added that the government aims to reassert control over Deir Hafir and its surroundings, including the city of Maskanah, and to push the SDF east of the Euphrates River.

State broadcaster Syrian TV reported that the SDF shelled Syrian army positions and civilian homes near the village of Humaymah east of Aleppo using heavy machine guns and drones, prompting retaliatory fire by government forces. The channel also said the army thwarted an attempt by the SDF on Tuesday to rig and blow up a bridge linking the villages of Rasm al-Imam and Rasm al-Karoum near Deir Hafir.

The SDF, meanwhile, accused what it described as “Damascus government factions” of targeting infrastructure in Deir Hafir, including the local post office, with artillery and explosive drones, saying no casualties were reported.

The SDF-linked Hawar agency also reported a drone strike near the Tishreen Dam, alleging it was carried out by government forces.

Local authorities in the Safira area east of Aleppo announced the closure of roads leading to Maskanah and nearby areas “for security reasons”, amid warnings of possible military action along the Deir Hafir axis.

A source familiar with the situation told BNE Intellinews,”unless an agreement is reached between the SDF and Damascus, a government offensive on the SDF-held Deir Hafir pocket west of the Euphrates both sides are massing forces along the frontlines, with multiple Syrian army divisions and specialised sniper, drone and artillery units reportedly arriving in the area, while the SDF has moved forward armoured vehicles, artillery and thousands of fighters.”

According to sources involved in talks between Damascus and the SDF, the Syrian government has floated a proposal to integrate the SDF into the army as three territorial divisions, allowing Kurdish forces to manage local security, alongside possible amendments to constitutional arrangements to guarantee cultural rights. Analysts say a deal could avert further bloodshed, while the absence of an agreement risks a wider and more destructive confrontation in eastern Aleppo.


Syrian military tells civilians to evacuate contested area east of Aleppo amid rising tensions


Soldiers in military vehicles on a road, as Syrian state-owned news agency SANA reported on Wednesday that the Syrian army sent reinforcements to "Deir Hafer front". (
FILE)Next

AP
January 15, 2026

Syria’s military has announced it will open a “humanitarian corridor” for civilians to evacuate from an area in Aleppo province


This follows several days of intense clashes between government forces and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces


DAMASCUS: Syria’s military said it would open a corridor Thursday for civilians to evacuate an area of Aleppo province that has seen a military buildup following intense clashes between government and Kurdish-led forces in Aleppo city.

The army’s announcement late Wednesday — which said civilians would be able to evacuate through the “humanitarian corridor” from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday — appeared to signal plans for an offensive in the towns of Deir Hafer and Maskana and surrounding areas, about 60 kilometers (40 miles) east of Aleppo city.

The military called on the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces and other armed groups to withdraw to the other side of the the Euphrates River, to the east of the contested zone.

Syrian government troops have already sent troop reinforcements to the area after accusing the SDF of building up its own forces there, which the SDF denied. There have been limited exchanges of fire between the two sides, and the SDF has said that Turkish drones carried out strikes there.

The government has accused the SDF of launching drone strikes in Aleppo city, including one that hit the Aleppo governorate building on Saturday shortly after two Cabinet ministers and a local official held a news conference there.

The tensions in the Deir Hafer area come after several days of intense clashes last week in Aleppo city that ended with the evacuation of Kurdish fighters and government forces taking control of three contested neighborhoods. The fighting killed at least 23 people, wounded dozens more, and displaced tens of thousands.

The fighting broke out as negotiations have stalled between Damascus and the SDF, which controls large swaths of northeast Syria, over an agreement to integrate their forces and for the central government to take control of institutions including border crossings and oil fields in the northeast.

Some of the factions that make up the new Syrian army, which was formed after the fall of former President Bashar Assad in a rebel offensive in December 2024, were previously Turkiye-backed insurgent groups that have a long history of clashing with Kurdish forces.

The SDF for years has been the main US partner in Syria in fighting against the Daesh group, but Turkiye considers the SDF a terrorist organization because of its association with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, which has waged a long-running insurgency in Turkiye. A peace process is now underway.

Despite the long-running US support for the SDF, the Trump administration has also developed close ties with the government of interim Syrian President Ahmad Al-Sharaa and has pushed the Kurds to implement the integration deal. Washington has so far avoided publicly taking sides in the clashes in Aleppo.

The SDF in a statement warned of “dangerous repercussions on civilians, infrastructure, and vital facilities” in case of a further escalation and said Damascus bears “full responsibility for this escalation and all ensuing humanitarian and security repercussions in the region.”

Adm. Brad Cooper, commander of US Central Command, said in a statement Tuesday that the US is “closely monitoring” the situation and called for “all parties to exercise maximum restraint, avoid actions that could further escalate tensions, and prioritize the protection of civilians and critical infrastructure.” He called on the parties to “return to the negotiating table in good faith.”

Al-Sharaa blasts the SDF

In a televised interview aired Wednesday, Al-Sharaa praised the “courage of the Kurds” and said he would guarantee their rights and wants them to be part of the Syrian army, but he lashed out at the SDF.

He accused the group of not abiding by an agreement reached last year under which their forces were supposed to withdraw from neighborhoods they controlled in Aleppo city and of forcibly preventing civilians from leaving when the army opened a corridor for them to evacuate amid the recent clashes.

Al-Sharaa claimed that the SDF refused attempts by France and the US to mediate a ceasefire and withdrawal of Kurdish forces during the clashes due to an order from the PKK.

The interview was initially intended to air Tuesday on Shams TV, a broadcaster based in Irbil — the seat of northern Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region — but was canceled for what the station initially said were technical reasons.

Later the station’s manager said that the interview had been spiked out of fear of further inflaming tensions because of the hard line Al-Sharaa took against the SDF.

Syria’s state TV station instead aired clips from the interview on Wednesday. There was no immediate response from the SDF to Al-Sharaa’s comments.

Syrians flee Kurdish-controlled area near Aleppo


Displaced Syrians walk to cross at a river crossing near the village of Jarirat al Imam, in the eastern Aleppo countryside, near the front line with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces in Deir Hafer, Syria, Jan. 15, 2026. (AP)

AFP
January 15, 2026


Mahmud Al-Mussa, 30, said “thousands of people have not left,” accusing the US-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces of not letting them leave


Damascus, which has deployed forces to the region, also accused Kurdish forces of barring the civilians from leaving



ALEPPO: Syrians began fleeing an area east of Aleppo city on Thursday after the army gave civilians a deadline to leave amid fears of an escalation in clashes with Kurdish forces.

The government is seeking to extend its authority across the country following the ouster of longtime leader Bashar Assad a year ago.

On Sunday, government troops took full control of Aleppo city over the weekend after capturing two Kurdish-majority neighborhoods.

It reached a deal in March to fold a Kurdish de facto autonomous administration in the north into the state, but progress on its implementation has stalled.

An AFP correspondent near Deir Hafer, one of the Kurdish-controlled towns being eyed by Damascus, saw many cars, trucks and civilians on foot leaving through a corridor set up by the army on Thursday, but the road was due to close at 5:00 p.m. (1400 GMT).

Mahmud Al-Mussa, 30, said “thousands of people have not left,” accusing the US-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces of not letting them leave.

“They want to use civilians as human shields,” he said.

The area targeted extends from near Deir Hafer, around 50 kilometers (30 miles) from Aleppo, to the Euphrates River about 30 kilometers further east, as well as toward the south.

Damascus, which has deployed forces to the region, also accused Kurdish forces of barring the civilians from leaving.

Farhad Shami, spokesperson for the SDF, told AFP the accusations were “unfounded.”

Nadima Al-Wayss, 54, said she, her brother and her niece had to cross a damaged bridge to leave Deir Hafer through a different road.

“Good people helped me cross the bridge... I was afraid I would fall.”

- ‘Join hands’ -

The SDF controls swathes of Syria’s oil-rich north and northeast, much of which it captured during the country’s civil war and the fight against the Daesh group over the past decade.

In a statement on Thursday, the Kurdish-led autonomous administration said they remained open to dialogue with Damascus and called on the international community to prevent a new civil war in Syria.

The SDF warned that the escalation “could lead to general instability, posing a real threat to the security of prisons holding Daesh members,” referring to the Islamic State (IS) group.

Camps and prisons in Syria’s Kurdish-administered northeast hold tens of thousands of people, many with alleged or perceived links to IS, more than six years after the group’s territorial defeat in the country.

Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa said “the ball is in (the SDF’s) court,” calling on the group to “join hands with us... and begin the reconstruction process in Syria.”

He made his remarks in an interview with Iraqi Kurdish channel Al Shams, which then decided not to air it.

Syrian state television and other regional channels have since aired excerpts.

“The agreement signed by Mazlum Abdi does not include federalism, self-administration... it includes a unified Syria,” Sharaa said, referring to the SDF leader.

The Kurds have called for a decentralized federal system as part of their integration process into the Syrian state, but Sharaa has rejected their demands.

Syria’s Kurds faced decades of oppression under former president Assad and his father, Hafez, who preached a Baathist brand of Arab nationalism.

They fear Syria’s new Islamist rulers may take away from them the autonomy they carved out during the civil war that erupted with Assad’s 2011 crackdown on nationwide democracy protests


Syrian president says ‘door remains open’ for YPG to integrate to state


Al Sharaa says renewed clashes with YPG terror group in the Sheikh Maqsoud neighbourhood undermine security and investment in the city.

The continued violence has undercut efforts to promote Aleppo as an economic hub. / AA

Syrian President Ahmed al Sharaa said “the state has not demanded the dismantling of YPG, but has instead called for integrating its forces within state institutions,” Syrian TV said.

According to excerpts from a televised interview aired on Wednesday by Al-Ikhbariya, Al Sharaa said “trust cannot be built overnight,” citing what he described as the terror group’s record during Syria’s uprising.

He said “the YPG did not confront the former government for over 14 years of conflict and maintained direct contacts with it.”

Al Sharaa said, “YPG advances during the liberation phase into areas including Deir ez-Zor and parts of Aleppo hindered the liberation process itself, not the former government.”

He said “all state proposals were presented with broad international awareness, including by the US, the UN, and key regional and European states.”

Al Sharaa said “the YPG chose not to take part in the national conference, government formation, or constitutional declaration,” despite not being barred from participation.

He noted that “the state granted the group nine months to build trust,” and emphasised that invitations were extended without intent to exclude it.

The president added that “the YPG failed to abide by the April 1, 2025 agreement calling for the withdrawal of YPG from Sheikh Maqsoud,” with a limited number of Interior Ministry security personnel remaining, alongside local residents, to manage security and services because of the area’s unique social makeup.

“The YPG announced at the time that the withdrawal had been completed,” he added.

About two months later, however, clashes resumed, and shelling began targeting nearby residential neighbourhoods, including Sheikh Maqsoud, Ashrafieh, and Bani Zaid, areas home to Arabs, Kurds, and Christians, al Sharaa stressed.

He added that “shells landed in markets and civilian districts, directly undermining security across Aleppo.”

The continued violence has undercut efforts to promote Aleppo as an economic hub, given its industrial and agricultural base and its role as a key trade corridor, he added.

Al Sharaa also noted that “the state cannot attract global investment while shells are fired from a residential neighbourhood every few months,” emphasising that protecting Aleppo and ensuring its stability remain a national priority that cannot be compromised.

In March 2025, the Syrian presidency announced an agreement for the YPG’s integration into state institutions, reaffirming the country’s territorial unity and rejecting any attempts at division.

In April 2025, Syrian authorities signed a separate agreement concerning the Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafieh neighbourhoods, stipulating that both districts remain administrative parts of Aleppo city while respecting their local particularities.

The agreement included provisions banning armed manifestations, restricting weapons to internal security forces, and requiring the withdrawal of YPG terror group to areas east of the Euphrates River in northeastern Syria.

However, authorities said the YPG has failed to comply with the terms of those agreements.

The Syrian Army has recently deployed additional military reinforcements to the eastern countryside of Aleppo, amid rising tensions with the YPG terrorist organisation and remnants of the former regime, according to Syrian media.

The Syrian government has intensified efforts to restore security nationwide since the ouster of the Bashar al-Assad regime in December 2024, after 24 years in power.


Syrian president says ‘door remains open’ for SDF to help build state

Al-Sharaa says renewed clashes with SDF in Sheikh Maqsoud neighborhood undermine security, investment in city

Lina Altawell |15.01.2026 - TRT/AA


⁠Damascus seeks integration, not dismantlement, but questions group’s commitment, president also notes

Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa said “the state has not demanded the dismantling of SDF, but has instead called for integrating its forces within state institutions,” Syrian TV said.

According to excerpts from a televised interview aired on Wednesday by Al-Ikhbariya, Al-Sharaa said “trust cannot be built overnight,” citing what he described as the group’s record during Syria’s uprising.

He said “the SDF did not confront the former government for over 14 years of conflict and maintained direct contacts with it,” while Kurds participated individually in the uprising without an organizational role by the SDF.

Al-Sharaa said “SDF advances during the liberation phase into areas including Deir ez-Zor and parts of Aleppo hindered the liberation process itself, not the former government.”

He said “all state proposals were presented with broad international awareness, including by the US, the UN, and key regional and European states.”

Al-Sharaa said “the SDF chose not to take part in the national conference, government formation, or constitutional declaration,” despite not being barred from participation.

He noted that “the state granted the group nine months to build trust,” and emphasized that invitations were extended without intent to exclude it.

The president added that “the SDF failed to abide by the April 1, 2025 agreement calling for the withdrawal of SDF from Sheikh Maqsoud,” with a limited number of Interior Ministry security personnel remaining, alongside local residents, to manage security and services because of the area’s unique social makeup.

“The SDF announced at the time that the withdrawal had been completed,” he added.

About two months later, however, clashes resumed, and shelling began targeting nearby residential neighborhoods, including Sheikh Maqsoud, Ashrafieh, and Bani Zaid, areas home to Arabs, Kurds, and Christians, al-Sharaa stressed.

He added that “shells landed in markets and civilian districts, directly undermining security across Aleppo.”

The continued violence has undercut efforts to promote Aleppo as an economic hub, given its industrial and agricultural base and its role as a key trade corridor, he added.

Al-Sharaa also noted that “the state cannot attract global investment while shells are fired from a residential neighborhood every few months,” emphasizing that protecting Aleppo and ensuring its stability remain a national priority that cannot be compromised.

In March 2025, the Syrian presidency announced an agreement for the SDF’s integration into state institutions, reaffirming the country’s territorial unity and rejecting any attempts at division.

In April 2025, Syrian authorities signed a separate agreement concerning the Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafieh neighborhoods, stipulating that both districts remain administrative parts of Aleppo city while respecting their local particularities.

The agreement included provisions banning armed manifestations, restricting weapons to internal security forces, and requiring the withdrawal of SDF to areas east of the Euphrates River in northeastern Syria.

However, authorities said the SDF has failed to comply with the terms of those agreements.

The Syrian Army has recently deployed additional military reinforcements to the eastern countryside of Aleppo, amid rising tensions with the YPG/SDF terrorist organization and remnants of the former regime, according to Syrian media.

The Syrian government has intensified efforts to restore security nationwide since the ouster of the Bashar al-Assad regime in December 2024, after 24 years in power.



For Syria’s new rulers, Sunni clans hold the key to stability – and ending sectarian strife


Headed by a close ally of Syria’s President Ahmed al-Sharaa, the recently established Office of Tribes and Clans aims to ease tensions within the country’s Sunni majority, divided between former rebels, those who once sided with the Assad regime, and others in the ranks of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces. FRANCE 24’s Wassim Nasr has gained exclusive access to a crucial link in the Syrian reconciliation process.


Issued on: 15/01/2026 - 
By: Wassim NASR
FRANCE24

A view of Aleppo, Syria's second-largest city, where sectarian tensions underscore the huge challenges facing the country's new rulers. © Wassim Nasr, FRANCE 24

Renewed clashes between Syrian security forces and Kurdish fighters in the Aleppo region are a reminder of the volatile communal and sectarian tensions that continue to roil the country more than a year after the fall of the Assad dynasty.

The latest violence follows weeks of deadly clashes last summer pitting Bedouin tribesmen against Druze militias in the country’s south, and after the massacre of Alawite civilians in their western heartland in March and April of last year. 

Each bout of violence underscores the daunting challenge facing Syria’s new rulers as they grapple with the complex, fragile ethnoreligious mosaic of a country ravaged by more than a decade of civil war and riven with bitter divides. 

While the focus is on Syria’s vulnerable minorities, the country’s Sunni majority  –  itself divided along tribal lines and past opposition or allegiance to the Assads – holds the key to stabilising the country and staving off further sectarian strife. 
With that aim in mind, the Syrian presidency set up an “Office of Tribes and Clans” in September headed by Jihad Issa al-Sheikh, also known by his nom de guerre Abu Ahmed Zakour, a longtime fellow traveller of Syria's rebel-turned-president Ahmed al-Sharaa. 

FRANCE 24’s Wassim Nasr was able to meet with al-Sheikh and other members of the office at its three regional branches in Aleppo, Hama and Idlib, gaining exclusive insight into a body that aims to play a key role in the Syrian reconciliation process. 
In Aleppo, old grudges and shifting alliances

Strategically placed alongside Aleppo's Bureau of political affairs, the local branch of the Office of Tribes and Clans has moved into the former premises of the Baath party that ruled Syria for decades under the Assads.  

Its task is to maintain the non-aggression pact between Syria’s former rebels and the Sunni militias that had previously backed the Assad regime, before switching sides during the lightening offensive led by Sharaa’s Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) in November 2024.  

It was their change of allegiance that led to the fall of Aleppo, Syria’s economic capital, in just three days, hastening the end of Assad rule.  

The largest of these militias, the al-Baqir Brigade, had previously received funding from the Iranian Revolutionary Guards and was entrusted with conscripts from the Syrian regular army. This effectively gave them the power of life and death over local inhabitants. 

“The rebels in Aleppo came from the same (Sunni) neighbourhoods (as the militiamen),” said a witness from the early days of the Syrian revolution in 2011, who traced existing rancours to a notorious incident involving a family accused of siding with the Assads.  

“The discord began when the head of the Meraai family and one of his sons were executed and their mutilated bodies displayed in public for several days,” added the witness, describing their killing as a response to the shooting of anti-Assad demonstrators. 

A lynchpin of the al-Baqir Brigade, the Meraai family was widely seen as a tool of the Assad regime to suppress opponents – not necessarily acting on direct orders from Damascus, but rather to preserve its financial interests and the favours granted by the regime.  

Sitting on a plastic chair amid the ruins, a Meraai family member who was imprisoned at the time had a different take on the incident. He said the executions “were unjustified because we simply don’t know who fired at demonstrators from the rooftops”. 
A destroyed building in the al-Salihin neighbourhood of Aleppo. © Wassim Nasr, FRANCE 24


Fifteen years on from that fateful incident, his brothers Khaled and Hamza would play a key role in the liberation of Aleppo by Sharaa’s rebel coalition. After more than two years of negotiations and a visit to Sharaa’s bastion in Idlib, Khaled al-Meraai was persuaded by his fellow Bagara clansman Jihad Issa al-Sheikh that the time had come to abandon the Assads. 

Seeing the tide turning, Khaled al-Meraai agreed to secretly harbour an HTS commando unit that would attack a strategic command centre of the Syrian army in Aleppo. Months before the battle, scouts had infiltrated the city to prepare the ground, including Jihad Issa al-Sheikh's own brother, Abu Omar. 

But this crucial role in the liberation of Aleppo has not erased, at least in the eyes of the early rebels, the Sunni family’s earlier participation in the Assad regime’s repressive apparatus. As the former inmate put it, “our relatives will flee the city, fearing revenge, if they don't see me sitting in my chair here every day”. 

While the Meraais still own valuable properties, including a stud farm for purebred Arabian horses, they have been forced to return some of the assets that were confiscated from former rebels. The new Syrian authorities are protecting the family, but without publicly acknowledging the deal that helped bring about the capture of Aleppo  –  even though Hamza al-Meraai was recently photographed with an interior ministry spokesperson in Damascus. 

The Meraai family's stud farm in Aleppo. © Wassim Nasr, FRANCE 24


In addition to Sunni reconciliation, the sprawling multi-faith city faces formidable security challenges. On New Year's Day, a member of the internal security forces was killed while preventing a suicide bomber from attacking a Christian celebration. His funeral was attended by senior officials including the interior minister  as well as representatives of Aleppo’s Christian churches. 

A few kilometres north of the city, residents of the Shiite villages of Nubl and Zahra live under heavy protection from the Syrian army. As soon as Aleppo was captured in late 2024, the villages sent representatives to the city to obtain security guarantees. Once again, Jihad Issa al-Sheikh, the presidential adviser, acted as mediator. Since then, “there has been only one murder”, said a local representative in Nubl.  “In the early days, the local (HTS) commander slept here on the floor to ensure that there would be no abuses.” 

But the situation remains precarious for the Shiite villagers, who are mindful that nearby Sunni villages are still in ruins. “Our [Sunni] neighbours see that we are protected, while they are unable to rebuild their villages and are still living in tents,” said the Nubl resident. “One can imagine and understand what they are going through.” 

Clan leaders gather in Damascus 

On December 9, the Damascus home of Sheikh Abdel Menaam al-Nassif, an early supporter of the Syrian revolution,  hosted a high-level meeting of clan representatives from across the country, presenting the Office of Clans and Tribes with an ideal platform to send a message.  

Addressing the assembly of senior clansmen, Jihad Issa al-Sheikh said the office was “not designed to command you or replace you, but rather to serve as a direct line to President Sharaa”. He then issued an advice to clans tarnished by collaboration with the deposed regime. 

“Those clans that were on Assad’s side should keep a low profile and put forward figures who have not been compromised. We need everyone,” he added. “We must turn the page on old quarrels once and for all by supporting the state and not being a source of destabilisation.” 

Jihad Issa al-Sheikh (left), a key Sharaa aide and head of the Office of Tribes and Clans, attends a meeting in Damascus in December 2026. © Wassim Nasr, FRANCE 24

Referring to recent sectarian classes, the top Sharaa aide said it was “unacceptable for clans to take up arms at the slightest incident or to join the ranks of our enemies for one reason or another”. 

He added: “We must rise to the challenges we have faced since the liberation of the country.” 

General Hamza al-Hmidi, the head of operations for the Syrian armed forces, then spoke of the deadly summer clashes in Sweida, which saw Bedouin tribesmen converge on the southern province to fight local Druze militias, and led Israel to intervene militarily with strikes on security forces deployed to quell the bloodshed. 

“We were faced with militiamen firing at us at the front and with killers and looters in our wake. These actions, which do not reflect our values, gave (the Israelis) a pretext to bomb us, forcing us to leave the city in the hands of (Druze) militiamen,” lamented the young general. \

The meeting touched on the sensitive subject of cronyism and political appointments, with clan leaders urged to present qualified candidates for administration jobs and the future National Assembly – and to refrain from promoting themselves or their relatives. The message was that the Baath party ways of coopting tribal and clan leaders through clientelism would no longer be accepted. 

The meeting, attended by two representatives of Syria’s new political bureau, led to animated debate. The idea of a "Council of Elders" composed of clan leaders was put forward – a means to preserve their status and influence while separating their role from that of political institutions.  

It’s a delicate balance for Syria’s new rulers, for whom gaining the support of clans necessarily means making concessions, including material ones, particularly in areas that are still outside Damascus’s control. 


Preventing vendettas in Hama and Homs 

The office’s Hama branch had its baptism of fire in the wake of two particularly grisly murders in nearby Homs, which kicked off attacks on Alawite neighbourhoods. Its primary mission was clear: to ease tensions in Syria’s third most populous city.  

In the days following the murders, representatives of various clans acted quickly to prevent an escalation, under the coordination of Sharaa’s adviser al-Sheikh. The investigation revealed that the murders of a married couple, initially presented as sectarian, were in fact an internal family affair. A joint letter from community leaders helped to tamp down reprisals and narrowly avert bloodshed. 

Sheikh Abu Jaafar Khaldoun, head of the Hama office, stressed the importance of inter-community dialogue. “We need to start from scratch and rebuild neighbourly relations,” he said. “This involves simple gestures, such as attending funerals.” 

Khaldoun said interactions with the Alawite, Ismaili and Christian communities helped to defuse tensions after rebel forces took over Hama and then Homs. 

‘We wasted no time after liberation, for fear of reprisals between communities, and even within each community,” he explained. “The first few months were tense, and some people took advantage of the situation to settle old scores.” 
In Idlib, a laboratory for reconciliation 

A rebel bastion and launchpad for the lighting offensive that toppled Assad, northwestern Idlib province has also served as a model for the type of conflict resolution advocated by Syria's new leaders. 

Starting in 2017, Sharaa’s HTS began to work with local clans with a pragmatic goal:  to resolve conflicts between rival factions in areas outside the regime's control, drawing on clan ties shared both by residents and the province’s large number of internally displaced people. After a series of military setbacks in 2019, the clans were gradually integrated as a supporting force for HTS and the "Syrian Salvation Government" that administered the rebel holdout.  

This dual experience, both military and mediatory, is the foundation of the new Office of Clans and Tribes, whose leaders are largely drawn from the ranks of Idlib’s displaced population. 
A tent used by the head of the office's Idlib branch in the northwestern province. © Wassim Nasr, FRANCE 24

A key role of the office’s local branch is to maintain a link between the new Syrian authorities and displaced people from eastern Syria. The latter include both the clans based in areas controlled by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and displaced people from Raqqa, Hassaka or Deir ez-Zor – populations often buffeted by war, forced displacement and shifting alliances.   

Efforts to tilt the tribal balance have weighed heavily in recent military realignments. Most recently in Aleppo and months before in nearby Manbij, shifts in clan alliances have facilitated the recapture of entire neighbourhoods previously held by Kurdish forces, illustrating the decisive role played by Jihad Issa al-Sheikh and his office in reshaping the balance of power on the ground. 

For the new regime, the stakes are primarily political and security-related. The eastern provinces provide most of the SDF's recruits while at the same time constituting a potential breeding ground for jihadist groups. To alienate them once more would be to repeat the mistakes that in the past pushed certain clans into the arms of the Assad regime, Kurdish forces or the Islamic State (IS) group. 

Reassuring the Sunni majority and healing the deep divides left by years of war is a matter of survival for the new Syrian authorities. Lasting stability can only come from internal dynamics, driven by Syrians themselves. In this context, the Office of Tribes and Clans holds a key place at the intersection of community tensions and the most sensitive security issues. The stated objective is not to marginalise the clans, but to integrate them as actors of stabilisation. 

The authorities are claiming a number of results since the office’s creation, including de-escalation in Homs, the management of protests in coastal areas home to many Alawites, and a gradual decline in assassinations targeting former members of the Assad regime. Despite the recent deadly clashes in Aleppo, the ability to prevent a major escalation in fighting over sensitive neighbourhoods previously held by Kurdish factions is also presented as concrete illustration of this new approach. 



'One religion, one identity' policy targets the peoples in Syria'

Drawing attention to HTS's massacre policies against the Alawite, Kurdish and Druze peoples, activist Kader Uzun said, "One language, one religion, one army and one identity is a fascistic mentality. This mentality aims to destroy both Kurds and Alevis."



DESTINY LONG
ANF
AMED
Thursday, January 15, 2026

HTS, led by Jolani, which seized power after the overthrow of the Assad regime in Syria, continues to increasingly attack minority groups. These attacks, which first started against Alevis and Druze, lastly continued in the Eşrefîye and Şêxmeqsûd neighborhoods of Aleppo, where Kurds live densely.

While war crimes committed against the civilian population in these regions are not followed by international institutions, the country's administration shows its hatred towards different languages and cultures in every field, based on the policy of "one religion, one race and one army". While this hatred, carried out by the gangs under the name of the 'Syrian army', brings with it massacres and forced migration, the displaced Alevi and Kurdish regions are wanted to be Arabized.

Stating that this policy of massacre against different identities continues systematically, Kader Uzun, an activist of the Democratic Alevi Associations (DAD), stated that the peoples in the Middle East are being separated day by day and religious impositions are increasing. Pointing out that the policies implemented in the region are inhumane, Kader Uzun emphasized that Alevis, Druze and all oppressed peoples, especially Kurds, should wage a common struggle.

Kader Uzun stated that the process is a period in which fundamental rights to life are openly violated and said, "In the process of reshaping the Middle East, global and regional nation states come together and draw maps with a barbaric mentality. At these tables, policies that ignore the Kurds and even aim to eliminate them are produced."

'MASSACRES ARE A COMMON PROBLEM OF ALL PEOPLES'

Pointing out that the policies pursued by nation states, especially in the Middle East and Kurdistan, are based only on interests and interests, Kader Uzun stated that this process is fed by massacres and said: "This orientation towards the Kurdish people, Alevis, Druze and other oppressed peoples is inhumane. This is a historical responsibility that no one with a conscience can remain silent about. This issue is not only the common problem of the Kurds, but also of all the peoples living in the region. What the Kurds are experiencing is not a destiny. What is happening is related to the artificial border policies of nation states and the capitalist system's colonization of the Middle East. This picture is the realization of a barbaric understanding reminiscent of the ISIS mentality in the region through the subcontracting of colonial structures. The only way to stop this process is to build a common line of struggle with the peoples."

'WE HAVE TO BE THE SUBJECT OF THE STRUGGLE'

Reminding that the Kurdish people have been waging an honorable resistance for years, Kader Uzun added that what happened was not limited to the Kurds and said, "The massacres against Alevis and Druze deeply wound the conscience of humanity. We cannot just offer support; We have to be the subject of this struggle. We are deeply ashamed and saddened by what happened. A common stance must be taken against these massacres and the monolithic state projects imposed in the Middle East."

'ONE RELIGION AND ONE LANGUAGE IS IMPOSED IN THE REGION'

Stating that they want to create a single religion, one nation and one flag structure in the region, Kader Uzun said, "One language, one religion, one army and one identity is a fascistic mentality. This mentality aims to destroy both Kurds and Alevis. However, the Middle East is a geography that has historically existed with its differences. The peoples resist these impositions, even if the price is their lives. Because a future cannot be built with monism, fascism and tyranny."

'SOLIDARITY AND ORGANIZATION CAN STOP MASSACRES'

Emphasizing that it is vital for the Alevi, Kurdish and Druze peoples to establish a common line of struggle, Kader Uzun said, "Peoples become easier targets when they are left apart. As long as there is no solidarity and organized unity, the massacres continue. This cycle of violence cannot be broken without unified coordination. Therefore, this line needs to be strengthened both in Iran, Syria and Rojava today. These fascistic and massacring mentalities cannot survive any longer with the imposition of language or religion."

'THE MIDDLE EAST CANNOT BE PAINTED IN ONE COLOR WITH FASCISTIC PROJECTS'

Pointing out that the support given to Rojava is of vital importance, Kader Uzun finally said: "Today, Rojava, tomorrow another geography will become a target. We express this situation not out of fear, but in the name of shame and human dignity in the face of the atrocities. It is not enough to just condemn; We have to be the active subject of the struggle. The Middle East cannot be painted in one color with fascistic projects drawn at the table. The peoples of this geography will continue to exist with their own differences and defend this richness."


The Ishtar Assembly called on the reactionary mentality to look at the traces left by revolutionary women in history

The Ishtar Assembly said, "We condemn the mentality that sees women as 'property belonging to the home' and declare that women are revolution, life and freedom. No power can stand against the will of a conscious and conscious woman."


ANF
MAXMÛR
Wednesday, January 14, 2026

The Ishtar Assembly, which operates in the Martyr Rustem Judi Refugee Camp in Maxmûr, made a written statement about the words of the imam named Mehzer about the female fighter who was martyred while resisting the attacks on the Şêxmeqxûd and Eşrefiyê neighborhoods of Aleppo and whose body was tortured by HTS gangs.

Referring to the fact that religious scholars should be an example of mercy, justice and respect, the statement said, "Unfortunately, sometimes we see that some people use this duty to humiliate and disregard women. The humiliated woman is a mother, sister, wife, revolutionary and above all a human being. Therefore, no belief or idea allows a person's dignity to be trampled on. Because beliefs are based on 'wisdom and morality'. The fact that an imam, who should be in a position of wisdom, freely expresses his anger and hatred towards a woman who defends his land and his people, shows that this person has moved away from his real mission. We know that the use of hate language against women leads to an increase in violence against women in families and on the streets."

The statement continued: "As history has shown, women are not only beings responsible for their homes, but also builders of life and protectors of social dignity. Undoubtedly, the labor given at home is also sacred, but limiting and squeezing women only to housework is nothing but attempts to leave women without willpower. Women who are involved in the fields of war and science have shown that their borders today are much further than the limits drawn for them by the dominant mentality.

The reactionary mentality that wants to rule society only under sexism; We call on them to look at the traces left in history by all revolutionary women, from the Rindêxans to Adîle Xanim, Leyla Qasim, Sara, Arîn, Denîz, Leyla Qasim and Gerîla Amara, who sacrificed their lives for their country and people in the Şêxmeqxûd and Eşrefiyê neighborhoods, in order to get rid of the sexist mentality.

On this basis, we condemn the mentality that sees women as 'property belonging to the home' and declare that women are revolution, life and freedom. No power can stand against the will of a conscious and conscious woman."

Halide Türkoğlu: It is a duty of humanity to protect Rojava

DEM Party Women's Assembly Spokesperson Halide Türkoğlu stated that the gangs that attacked in Aleppo should be held accountable at the first Women's Assembly meeting of the year and said, "It is everyone's human duty to protect Rojava."


ANF
NEWS CENTER
Wednesday, January 14, 2026

DEM Party Women's Assembly Spokesperson Halide Türkoğlu made the opening speech of the Women's Assembly meeting held at the Headquarters in Ankara.

At the first Women's Assembly meeting of 2016, Halide Türkoğlu said that 2025 was a year in which the struggle was increased in every aspect and the hope for peace grew.

Halide Türkoğlu said, "The Peace and Democratic Society Process, which started with Mr. Öcalan's February 27 call, has been a process that has increased the struggles for hope and freedom in every field, and this process continues. We, women, took action from the first moment the call was made. We said that women are the subject of the struggle for peace and democracy."

Halide Türkoğlu, who explained the struggle of women to spread the call, also drew attention to the developments in the Middle East.

Halide Türkoğlu said, "The developments in the world, the Middle East and the country are of course one of the agendas that affect the lives of us women the most."

Pointing to the attacks on Kurds in Aleppo, Halide Türkoğlu said, "Turkish-backed forces affiliated with the jihadist, misogynistic HTS have committed crimes against humanity and women in these neighborhoods. Once again, the female body was seen as a battlefield. A female resistance fighter was tortured to death in front of the eyes of the whole public. We know very well that the gains of the Kurdish people and women were targeted with these attacks. It was made for the free and equal life of peoples, women and beliefs together."

Halide Türkoğlu said, "These gangs that commit crimes against humanity and women should be held accountable," and added: "The fate of women and young people who were kidnapped while leaving the neighborhoods due to the attacks should be investigated; International rights organizations and women's organizations should step in on this issue. Syria does not need a monist, racist, sectarian and sexist understanding of the nation state. The real need of the peoples, women and youth in Syria is a common and equal life together with their multi-identity structure and beliefs. Turkey's Syria policy should be shaped by defending this life. The resistance put forward in the neighborhoods has once again shown the whole world that neither the Kurdish people nor women have pledged allegiance to this jihadist genocidal mentality, and they will not do so."

Stating that it is everyone's human duty to be a voice for Rojava, Halide Türkoğlu said, "Because Rojava is our existence. Rojava is our female identity, our honor, our line! We will show this in every field! This struggle is not only the struggle of Kurdish women, but also the struggle of all humanity and women. We call out to all women, women's organizations and the international public: It is everyone's humanitarian duty to be a voice for Rojava."

Recalling the march of the Peace Mothers Assembly to Ankara to be a voice for Rojava, Halide Türkoğlu said: "I would like to share with you the words of the Peace Mothers: 'An inhumane war is being waged in Rojava. We condemn those who are waging this war. Turkey trained those gangs and sent them to war. They are planning on the blood of Kurdish children. This is a war against humanity. We want peace. The Minister of Foreign Affairs should resign. We are calling out to the international community. Colani is ISIS. Turkey supports them. Once again, we say peace. We don't want to negotiate over the blood of Kurds.' The demand and word of the Peace Mothers is also our word."

Noting that the life built in North and East Syria is not a danger for Turkey, Halide Türkoğlu emphasized, "As those who pay the heaviest price of war, we warn: The language and policy that will be dominant both inside and outside is the language of peace, and the implementation of policies that will serve peace."

Referring to the rising resistance in Iran and Eastern Kurdistan, Halide Türkoğlu said, "Every policy carried out with the mind of a monist, sexist, militarist, sectarian nation-state will hit the struggle of peoples and women wherever they are. The actions against the practices of the fascist mullah regime in Iran, which are the continuation of the 'Jin Jiyan Azadi' rebellions, are an indication of this."

Halide Türkoğlu also reacted to misogynistic policies in Turkey, reminding that nearly 300 women were murdered by men in 2025. Stating that women's lives are stolen by judicial packages, Halide Türkoğulu emphasized the importance of women's struggle and joint meetings against all these attacks and pointed out that this struggle "worries the mentality that insists on war the most".

Halide Türkoğlu reacted that serving the women's rally in Ankara as a DEM Party rally was also a conscious perception operation. Halide Türkoğlu said, "With these perception operations, it is aimed to overshadow the demands of independent women's organizations, which are the real founders of the rally, for equality, freedom and peace."

Halide Türkoğlu finally stated the following: "Dear women; Although our job is more difficult than ever, our belief in our struggle, the memories of our comrades we lost for this cause, the resistance of our female comrades who were captured in prison, and the determined stance of the Peace Mothers are our greatest source of morale and motivation. Yes, we are angry, but we are never hopeless! We will continue our work with this motivation. We will not leave a single area where we are not organized. We will build an honorable life in these lands against this corrupt, male-dominated order. They should have no doubt that no woman will swear allegiance to their dark order. The truth and history of women in the Middle East continue to give hope and courage to all women and peoples in this century. This is where strength, faith and courage lie. 2026 will be a year in which we will grow our organization and solidarity, unite around the Peace and Democratic Society Process in the most tight way, and build honorable peace. With this belief, I greet you all. Long live the women's struggle! Jin Jiyan Azadi!

Rojava is facing the massacre, everyone is resisting!

DBP Co-Chair Keskin Bayındır said, "The attacks in Aleppo and Dêr Hafir today are an attack on Pîrsûs, Mahabad, Hewlêr, Silêmanîyê. Rojava is facing a massacre today. Everyone stand up," he said.



ANF
RIHA
Thursday, January 15, 2026

Riha Democratic Institutions Platform marched from Pirsûs (Suruç) district to Kobanê border with the slogan "The people of Rojava are not alone". Leader Apo's brother Mehmet Öcalan, Democratic Regions Party (DBP) Co-Chair Keskin Bayındır and Peoples' Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party) Spokesperson Ayşegül Doğan participated in the march.

The people gathered in Cumhuriyet Square in the district center and marched with the banner "Rojava is conscience, freedom, resistance, it cannot be surrendered". People marching on Aligor Street chanted slogans such as "Bê Serok jiyan nabe", "Evder Kurdistan e ciyê egîda ne", "Bijî berxwedana Rojava", "Bijî Serok Apo", "Bijî berxwedana QSD'ê", "Jin, jiyan azadî" and "Şehîd namirin". The people who came in front of the DEM Party district building made a statement here.

In his speech, Human and Freedom Party (PIA) Chairman Ahmet Kaya said: "Hello to the people who wrote history with resistance. 15 years ago, the civil war started in Syria. The aim of those who started that war was to send the so-called anti-democratic Baath regime and build a democratic regime. Turkey also supported that regime. Is the regime that is being tried to be built today at the stage reached after the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people more democratic than it was then? With what motives do you support the actions that make the Baath regime look like it? You support it just so that the Kurds do not own anything there. If Nimrod came there, they would still support him.

I have a few words for those who support these Muslims with religious motives. While the religion of Islam, which we actually believe in but you do not believe in, prohibits the killing of people, you make a justification for the killing of those religious people? Is killing the only solution of Islam to problems? Believing in the prophet you are subject to does not happen by growing 3 inches of beard."

DBP Co-Chair Keskin Bayındır said, "It is the attacks in Aleppo that make us stand up in Kurdistan and the whole world. Our emotions were revolted by 2 neighborhoods, Ziyad was Aleppo. It was Kurdish women and youth who lifted us up. Today, the whole of Kurdistan is standing in their footsteps. Ziyad Aleppo apologized to his people on his way to martyrdom. We apologize to him. Our apology will be our struggle. Our people will stand until the Kurdish people win their struggle."

Stating that the ISIS mentality wants to destroy the status of North and East Syria with their ties, Bayındır said, "Since they do not have the power to do this, there are statements of support from Ankara every day. They are making statements of support for HTS. They should know very well that; The people of Kurdistan will not allow this dirty mentality. The Kurdish people, the geography of Kurdistan will be a grave for this dirty mentality."

Keskin Bayındır silenced his speech as follows: "Now Dêr Hafir and Tîşrîn are leaving. They are trying to draw the Kurds to the east of the Euphrates. But the Kurds will live freely in their entire geography. There are those in Turkey who are against this process. They appeared in the attacks in Aleppo, Tîşrîn and Dêr Hafir. They make statements of support on television every day. There have been many processes in the past, these processes have been disrupted by the TAF. Today, the Ministry of Defense, MIT and Foreign Affairs ministers are trying to disrupt the process. They say they are brothers of HTS. We say it from Suruç; SDF is our brother, we are with them.

For this, come to your senses and do not be hostile to the Kurds. Kurds have extended their hands for peace. Those who want HTS's victory should look at Kobane. The HTS mentality is a scourge on the entire Middle East. For this reason, we will be on the streets and squares until these attacks are over. No one should say stay at home. Did you say that no one should sit down against the massacre in Aleppo? We will never sit down. It is my call to the Kurdish people; This issue is a Kurdistani issue. They want to take the gains in Rojava. The attacks in Aleppo and Dêr Hafir today are attacks on Pîrsûs, Mahabad, Hewlêr, Silêmanîyê. Rojava is facing a massacre today. Everyone stand up."

Drawing attention to the past 10 years of the Kobanê resistance victory against ISIS brutality, DEM Party Spokesperson Ayşegül Doğan said, "What we have been going through for 100 years has caused the anger of the Kurdish people. The Kurds are not only angry. The Kurds do not want to remain silent. The hearts of the Kurds are being targeted. Because the issue is not a matter of two neighborhoods. The issue is the revival of a 100-year-old history of denial, extermination, massacre, massacre, migration, pain and tears."

The statement ended after the speeches.

The people of Hesekê, Hol and Til Temir react to the massacre in Aleppo


Thousands of people from the cities of Hesekê, Hol and Til Temir condemned the massacres carried out by the Interim Government gangs in Şêxmeqsûd and Eşrefiyê and called on the international community to fulfill its responsibilities and punish the criminals.



ANF
NEWS CENTER
Thursday, January 15, 2026

Demonstrations were held with the participation of thousands of people in the cities of Hesekê and Hol in order to condemn the massacres carried out by the Syrian Interim Government gangs against the people in the Şêxmeqsûd and Eşrefiyê neighborhoods of Aleppo. In the city of Til Temir, the Democratic Union Party (PYD) Women's Assembly made a statement.

HESEKÊ

The march started from the Kevok Junction in the Til Hecer District and continued to the Şehit Serhed Junction in the Muftî District. Here, Hesekê City Council Advisor Kilara Efrîn and Internal Security Forces Command Spokesperson Ciwan Hesekê made speeches. The speakers reacted to the attacks on the people of the region and the massacres in the neighborhoods of Aleppo.

The march ended with slogans saluting the Asayish and SDF resistance.

HALL

Hundreds of citizens from the city of Hol and its countryside reacted to the massacre in Aleppo's Şêxmeqsûd and Eşrefiyê neighborhoods with a mass march. The march continued to the Education Association in the city.

Speaking here, Hol City Council Co-Chair Elaa El Sebahî said, "The blood of Syrians is forbidden to each other. What is happening in Aleppo is a clear violation of international law."

Autonomous Administration Economy Council Co-Chair Mihemed Henşol and PYD Hall Co-Chair Emar Musa also made speeches. In the speeches, the attacks of the Transitional Government's gangs directly on the people were condemned and it was stated that these attacks were to strike a blow to the Syrian mosaic and cause sedition.

The march ended with slogans in support of the SDF.

TIL TEMIR

PYD Til Temir Women's Assembly made a statement in front of its headquarters and condemned the attack on the people of Şêxmeqsûd and Eşrefiyê.

The statement was read by PYD Co-Chair Ronaz El Yunis.

The Assembly stated that the attacks were a violation of the signed agreements and against the Autonomous Administration project.

Finally, the council reiterated its commitment to the martyrs of the Şêxmeqsûd and Ashrafiyê Resistance and called on the international community and human rights organizations to protect the people of Aleppo.

 

The POUM in the Spanish Civil War

Sunday, January 25, 2026, 1:00 pm Eastern Standard Time

“THE POUM, REPUBLIC, REVOLUTION AND COUNTERREVOLUTION”


Speaker: Book author Andy Durgan


The Spanish Civil War, 1936-39 was a pivotal moment in the 20th century history of revolutionary hope, failure and betrayal. It is also the story of fascism’s rise and ultimately the beginning of World War II. Andy Durgan, author of a newly translated book on the Party of Marxist Unification (POUM), will outline the development of this distinctive revolutionary movement and the role it played in the Spanish revolution.


Durgan has previously authored The Spanish Civil War (2007), Comunismo, revolución y movimiento obrero en Cataluña 1920-1936. Los orígenes del POUM (2016) and Voluntarios por la revolución. La milicia internacional del POUM en la Guerra Civil española (2022). He was historical advisor on Ken Loach’s 1995 award-winning film, Land and Freedom.


Following Durgan’s presentation there will be time for discussion.


Sponsored by the U.S. socialist organizations International Marxist Humanist Organization, Solidarity, Socialist Horizon, Tempest & Workers Voice.

Facebook icon
Instagram icon
Twitter icon


Opinion

Economic hegemony as a doctrine: A reading of current US foreign policy




People gather outside Downing Street to protest against the US military attack on Venezuela, calling on the British government to condemn the forced removal of Nicolás Maduro and demanding his return to Venezuela in London, United Kingdom on January 05, 2026. [Wiktor Szymanowicz – Anadolu Agency]

by Dr Sania Faisal El-Husseini
January 11, 2026 
Middle East Monitor.

After months of US military pressure on the Maduro regime, American forces carried out a raid on Caracas in the early hours of 3 January, abducting Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife and airlifting them out of the country. They are now being held in New York City, where Maduro faces charges related to narcotics trafficking and weapons offenses.

At a press conference held last Saturday, US President Donald Trump confirmed that Washington would administer the country for an indefinite period. He also hinted at launching a further military operation should Venezuela’s vice president refuse to cooperate with the United States.

Trump’s handling of Maduro marks a dangerous turning point in US foreign policy, one that openly tramples state sovereignty, particularly when read alongside his threats toward Iran, Lebanon, Gaza, Cuba, and Greenland.

This moment inevitably recalls events from twenty-three years ago, when the United States invaded Iraq to overthrow President Saddam Hussein on the basis of flimsy public justifications and under a broader American strategy branded as the “war on terror.” That framework was activated and sustained for an entire era in the Middle East, exacting a devastating toll on Iraq, Afghanistan, and other countries, measured in the blood of their peoples, the erosion of their security and social fabric, and the destruction of their economic resources.

US foreign strategies, at their core, are driven by the pursuit of American self-interest, often with little regard for the costs borne by the societies caught in their path. Today, a growing number of countries appear to be confronting the risk of absorbing the consequences of Trump-era American strategy, one that threatens to push beyond already dangerous boundaries, especially for those on the receiving end.

Economic objectives were never absent from past US strategic thinking, even when they operated alongside broader geopolitical and security goals, often without being openly highlighted or overstated. What is new, however, is that Trump makes these economic–strategic aims explicit. He articulates them without hesitation, presumably a reflection of a background that treats commercial deals and financial returns as the overriding priority.

Trump has stated that the United States will “administer Venezuela,” regardless of what role Venezuelans themselves may play, in order to extract and sell its oil through American companies. Venezuela holds the world’s largest proven oil reserves, the majority of which consist of heavy crude, accounting for roughly 17–18 per cent of global reserves. Incorporating Venezuelan oil into US production would give Washington greater leverage over global oil prices, while equipping it with a powerful bargaining tool across energy markets, sanctions regimes, and regional alliances

The commercial impulse in US foreign policy is not new. What has changed under Trump is that it has become openly declared, and far more brazen. This orientation has shaped American policy since the dawn of the twenty-first century, as the United States emerged as the world’s sole superpower and then consolidated that position within the post–Cold War international order.

In a 2001 report published by the US national security establishment in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, the invasion of Afghanistan was framed as a means of achieving regional stability that would enable the future passage of energy corridors from Central Asia. This, of course, was presented alongside other core objectives: neutralising terrorist threats, preventing Afghanistan from serving as a base for future attacks, and reshaping the security environment of Central Asia

As for Iraq, US Department of Defense assessments from 2002 and 2003 asserted that, following the invasion, Iraq would emerge as a stable state and an open market, that its reconstruction would be self-financed through oil revenues, and that the United States would not bear a long-term financial burden. A report circulated at the time under the title America in the New Millennium went further, arguing that American control over Iraq would redraw the map of the Middle East, secure global energy flows, and strengthen US economic dominance worldwide.

In the aftermath of the invasion, however, official reports acknowledged that assumptions about rapid stabilisation, self-funded reconstruction, and limited costs were either deeply flawed or grossly overstated.

The pattern appears even more clearly in the context of the Western war, initiated and fueled by the United States, against Russia in Ukraine. Prior to the outbreak of the Russian–Ukrainian war in February 2022, Russia and the European Union were bound by an exceptionally close commercial relationship, one that had long unsettled Washington. In 2017, the EU accounted for roughly 44 per cent of Russia’s total foreign trade, while Russia stood as the EU’s fourth-largest trading partner.

Russian gas alone supplied close to 40 per cent of the European Union’s gas imports, a remarkably high share within Europe’s overall energy mix. Before 2022, Russia was also the EU’s largest supplier of both oil and natural gas

It is not difficult to trace the effects, and beneficiaries, of that war. Following the war, transatlantic trade between Europe and the United States surged to more than $1.5 trillion, while energy emerged as a central pillar of the relationship. The United States became Europe’s largest supplier of liquefied natural gas, accounting for more than half of European imports, effectively displacing Russia and surpassing its former role.

Now that Washington has secured these deals in its favor, the continuation of the war appears to hold diminishing strategic value, an assessment reflected in Trump’s desire to close the file. This comes despite the likelihood of prolonged instability and the risk that the countries involved may slide into deeper crises. The consequences of US-led wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and now Ukraine bear witness to this pattern.

This helps explain the centrality of energy, and of energy-rich states, to US strategy more broadly, and especially under a president who approaches politics as commerce. It is here that the discussion returns to Gaza, and to Trump’s own statements about his economic ambitions and future projects there. By positioning himself as the head of a proposed “peace council,” Trump signals his intention to preside over Gaza’s reconstruction, an outcome that appears less incidental than deliberate, and likely central to his broader design. During Trump’s first term, and throughout his reelection campaign, he appeared to challenge the very foundations of America’s grand defense strategy. He complained openly about the size of the US defence budget, questioned the utility of NATO and the US–Korea alliance, and cast doubt on Ukraine’s relevance to American interests.

In his second term, however, Trump seems to have discovered the strategic value of profitable foreign ventures, particularly those tied to energy markets. His policy trajectory shifted toward expansion. He confronted Iran in ways that went beyond the approach of his predecessors, orchestrated the abduction of Venezuela’s president in a military operation that was both lucrative and low-cost, and moved to place Gaza under his administration, financed by Arab donors. Rather than dismantling alliances he once derided, Trump preserved them and began actively supporting increased US defence spending, deploying military power as a means to advance ventures he views as commercially rewarding.

The history of US foreign policy and grand defense strategy has been marked by a broad, sustained expansionist impulse. For 101 years, from the inauguration of George Washington as the first president in 1789 to the Battle of Wounded Knee in 1890, which effectively brought armed conflict with indigenous peoples to an end, the United States pursued a sweeping strategy of territorial expansion. In doing so, it transformed itself from a narrow strip of land along the Atlantic coast into a continental power.

In the eras that followed, US policy continued to operate within a strategic framework rooted in that same logic, albeit shaped by different contexts and calculations.


The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

US House lawmaker to introduce bill to abolish Immigration and Customs Enforcement

'We must reform ICE, but it looks at this stage, folks, ICE is beyond reform. ICE is totally out of control,' says Shri Thanedar

Diyar Guldogan |15.01.2026 - TRT/AA



WASHINGTON

US Rep. Shri Thanedar said Wednesday he will introduce a bill to abolish the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency.

"We must reform ICE, but it looks at this stage, folks, ICE is beyond reform. ICE is totally out of control, and this week I intend to introduce a bill to abolish ICE. We need to make ICE go away," the lawmaker from the state of Michigan told reporters.

His announcement came after an American woman and mother, Renee Nicole Macklin Good, 37, was fatally shot last week in the state of Minnesota by an ICE agent in Minneapolis, sparking widespread public and political backlash and demands for investigations at the local, state and federal levels.

Thanedar, separately, said in a statement that he "fully" supports the impeachment of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.

Noem "has lied to Congress and to the American people. Under her leadership, ICE agents have wreaked havoc on communities across this country. She has disgraced our democracy," he said.

Congresswoman Robin Kelly, along with 70 House Democrats, moved three articles of impeachment Wednesday, targeting Noem.



57% of voters disapprove of US immigration agency’s enforcement methods: Poll


53% viewed fatal shooting involving ICE agent in Minnesota unjustified


Ayse İrem Cakır and Selcuk Uysal |15.01.2026 - TRT/AA



Republicans overwhelmingly believe shooting justified at 77%; large majority of Democrats, 92%, Independents, 59%, say it was not justified

ANKARA

A nationwide poll showed 57% of registered American voters disapprove of how the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency is enforcing immigration laws.

The poll by Quinnipiac University in Connecticut was conducted between Jan. 8 and 12, with approximately 1,000 registered voters.

The findings, released roughly six months after a similar survey in July, reflect little meaningful change in public sentiment.

On the question about a recent fatal shooting involving an ICE agent in the state of Minnesota, 53% viewed it as unjustified, 35% saw it as justified, and 12% offered no opinion.

Republicans overwhelmingly believe the shooting was justified at 77%, while a majority of Democrats, 92%, and Independents, 59%, said it was not justified.

Men are divided, with 42% believing the shooting was justified and 44% saying it was not. Among women, 30% think the shooting was justified, while 61% believe it was not.

The results said 82% of respondents reported having seen footage of the shooting in Minneapolis.

Homeland Security Secretary Noem's approval

The survey also revealed declining approval for Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.

Thirty-six percent approve of her job performance, 52% disapprove and 12% offered no opinion -- a slight drop from 39% approval and 50% disapproval in the July poll.

Republicans strongly back Noem at 77%, while Democrats disapprove overwhelmingly at 85% and Independents were at 57%.

Noem has faced criticism for her handling of ICE operations, including accusations of displaying a cold demeanor and only partial empathy in statements following high-profile incidents.

Minneapolis ICE shooting

The shooting occurred Jan. 7, when ICE agent Jonathan Ross fatally shot 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good, an American, during an immigration enforcement operation in south Minneapolis.

Good, who had recently moved to the area and lived with her partner and young child, encountered agents while reportedly supporting neighbors amid an immigration sweep.

Videos from multiple angles, including bodycam and bystander footage, showed Good in her SUV, stopped diagonally on a residential street, before the encounter escalated.

Public reactions to the videos have varied significantly. Some viewers interpret certain angles as showing the agent in a vulnerable or overpowered position immediately before the confrontation, while others emphasize the sequence of events and Good's non-aggressive demeanor before the gunfire.

The shooting has triggered widespread protests, memorials and demands for accountability, with local leaders condemning ICE actions and federal officials defending the agent's response as self-defense.