CW Note

Photo Source:
   NIAS Course on Global Politics
National Institute of Advanced Studies (NIAS)
Indian Institute of Science Campus, Bangalore
For any further information or to subscribe to GP alerts send an email to subachandran@nias.res.in

CW Note
Syria: The State victory over the Syrian Democratic Forces

  Brighty Ann Sarah
23 January 2026

The note below was first published as part of NIAS-IPRI Conflict Weekly. See, "Trump’s “Board of Peace” in Gaza I Escalation/De-escalation in Greenland," Conflict Weekly #316, 23 January 2026, Vol 7, No. 3

What happened this week?
On 21 January, Turkey’s President Tayyip Erdogan stated that Kurdish forces in northern Syria must “lay down weapons and disband” now to avoid further bloodshed, and that any provocation would be a “suicide attempt.” The US envoy Tom Barrack also stated that the offer of integration into the central Syrian state was the "greatest opportunity" the Kurds have. He added that the original purpose of the SDF of battling the Islamic State had “largely expired,” and that the US had no long-term interest in retaining its presence in Syria. On the same day, Syria's government accused the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces of drone attacks that killed 11 soldiers, threatening to violate the four-day ceasefire between the government and the SDF. 

On 20 January, Syria's defence ministry announced a four-day ceasefire following a new agreement with the SDF and the government, and that it has seized swathes of territory in the northeast, including major oil fields. 

On 19 January, Syria and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) struck a deal to bring Kurdish civilian and military authorities under central government control. The deal ended days of fighting and the Syrian forces captured key territories of SDF control including Deir al-Zor, the country’s main oil- and wheat-producing area, and Raqqa, home to key hydroelectric dams along the Euphrates. The 14-point deal published by Syria's presidency featured the signatures of both Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa and SDF head Mazloum Abdi. 

What are the issues?
1.  The terms of the US-brokered ceasefire deal
The 14-point agreement of ceasefire and the full integration of the SDF into the state military apparatus was aimed to end hostilities and reassert central state authority over north-eastern Syria. Major provisions of the agreement include an immediate and nationwide ceasefire across all fronts and the dissolution of the SDF and the individual integration of its fighters into Syria’s Ministries of Defence and Interior after security vetting, granting them appropriate ranks, and benefits. Further, full administrative and military handover of key territories of SDF control including Deir ez-Zor and Raqqa will be implemented. The handover also includes control over critical oil and gas fields, hydroelectric dams. The SDF will also transfer control over ISIS prisons, detention centres, and camps to the Syrian government, and withdraw its military and security forces east of the Euphrates River as a preliminary step.

2. Turkey’s interests and investments in Syria and the SDF factor
Ankara’s interests in post-Assad Syria hinge on eliminating the major security concerns posed by the SDF’s affiliation with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), regarded as a terrorist organisation that has waged armed insurgency in Turkey since 1986. Integrating the SDF will ensure the neutralisation of the PKK elements in the SDF along the Syria-Turkey border to and prevent cross-border attacks. Following the fall of the Assad regime, Turkey had made significant investments in Syria’s reconstruction, securing over USD 11 billion in power and aviation contracts. The investments largely aim to utilise the vast natural-gas resources in the north-eastern regions under the SDF control. For Turkey, the integration of the SDF into the central command and the expulsion of YKK elements unlocks the resource-rich areas under Syria’s centralized control and potential Turkish-backed development, while bolstering bilateral ties, and regional influence in a unified Syria.

3. The endgames for the government and the military
For the al-Sharaa government, the dissolution of the SDF is a step towards the reestablishment of a unified, centralized Syrian state under Damascus' sovereign control and eliminating separatist threats. This would involve dismantling the long-standing semi-autonomous Kurdish administration in the northeast, including the Democratic Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria, eliminating parallel military establishments, and reintegrating all territories and populations into the folds of centralized decision-making. Al-Sharaa has framed this as ending Syria's “state of division” to achieve “unity and progress for all,” and consolidating his authority post-Assad by extending state institutions everywhere,

For the Syrian military, this agreement signals the objective of creating a unified, professional national army under exclusive central command, free of factional or autonomous units that could challenge its command. This mandates the dissolution of the SDF as an independent entity and the individual integration of its approximately 100,000 fighters, ensuring no SDF units or parallel command structures remain active. By absorbing vetted SDF personnel and reclaiming strategic sites the military also benefits additional forces and neutralised threats. Further, neutralising a key adversary like the SDF also positions the army as the sole defender of a reconstituted, sovereign Syria while reducing risks of internal fragmentation. 

What does it mean?
Eliminating the SDF is a monumental political win for President Ahmed al-Sharaa as the government stabilises from the fall of the previous regime. The move has dismantled the Kurdish administration in north-eastern Syria, diminishing separatist forces an  bringing roughly one-third of the country, including resource-rich regions and key Arab-majority provinces like Deir ez-Zor and Raqqa under direct state control. This grants al-Sharaa more cohesive territorial authority, enabling centralized resource management for reconstruction and state-building. It also strengthens the new regime by establishing the Syrian state's control over ethnic lines and limiting Kurdish separatist efforts, minimizing internal fragmentation risks.

The event also underscores the regime’s growing ties with the US, as Washington, the most critical backer of the SDF due to the shared threat of ISIS, withdrew its support for the group and urged its integration into the state forces. It also facilitates closer ties with Turkey, strengthening the al-Sharaa government's regional standing and prospects of wider bilateral and economic cooperation. 

Print Bookmark

PREVIOUS COMMENTS

December 2025 | CWA # 1931

Padmashree Anandhan

NATO Summit 2025
December 2025 | CWA # 1924

Padmashree Anandhan

NATO Summit 2025
August 2025 | CWA # 1801

R Preetha

28 August 1963
August 2025 | CWA # 1780

Abhiruchi Chowdhury

Trump tariffs:
August 2025 | CWA # 1778

Lekshmi MK

28 July 1914
June 2025 | CWA # 1694

Aashish Ganeshan

The US:
May 2025 | CWA # 1689

Padmashree Anandhan

Ukraine
May 2025 | CWA # 1688

Ayan Datta

Gaza
May 2025 | CWA # 1675

Lekshmi MK

Turkey:
May 2025 | CWA # 1673

Padmashree Anandhan

Ukraine:
May 2025 | CWA # 1667

R Preetha and Brighty Ann Sarah

East Asia:
March 2024 | CWA # 1251

NIAS Africa Team

Africa This Week
February 2024 | CWA # 1226

NIAS Africa Team

Africa This Week
December 2023 | CWA # 1189

Hoimi Mukherjee | Hoimi Mukherjee is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science in Bankura Zilla Saradamani Mahila Mahavidyapith.

Chile in 2023: Crises of Constitutionality
December 2023 | CWA # 1187

Aprajita Kashyap | Aprajita Kashyap is a faculty of Latin American Studies, School of International Studies at the Jawaharlal Nehru University New Delhi.

Haiti in 2023: The Humanitarian Crisis
December 2023 | CWA # 1185

Binod Khanal | Binod Khanal is a Doctoral candidate at the Centre for European Studies, School of International Studies, JNU, New Delhi.

The Baltic: Energy, Russia, NATO and China
December 2023 | CWA # 1183

Padmashree Anandhan | Padmashree Anandhan is a Research Associate at the School of Conflict and Security Studies, National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangaluru.

Germany in 2023: Defence, Economy and Energy Triangle
December 2023 | CWA # 1178

​​​​​​​Ashok Alex Luke | Ashok Alex Luke is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science at CMS College, Kottayam.

China and South Asia in 2023: Advantage Beijing?
December 2023 | CWA # 1177

Annem Naga Bindhu Madhuri | Annem Naga Bindhu Madhuri is a postgraduate student at the Department of Defence and Strategic Studies at the University of Madras, Chennai.

China and East Asia
October 2023 | CWA # 1091

Annem Naga Bindhu Madhuri

Issues for Europe
July 2023 | CWA # 1012

Bibhu Prasad Routray

Myanmar continues to burn
December 2022 | CWA # 879

Padmashree Anandhan

The Ukraine War
November 2022 | CWA # 838

Rishma Banerjee

Tracing Europe's droughts
March 2022 | CWA # 705

NIAS Africa Team

In Focus: Libya
December 2021 | CWA # 630

GP Team

Europe in 2021
October 2021 | CWA # 588

Abigail Miriam Fernandez

TLP is back again
August 2021 | CWA # 528

STIR Team

Space Tourism
September 2019 | CWA # 162

Lakshman Chakravarthy N

5G: A Primer
December 2018 | CWA # 71

Mahesh Bhatta | Centre for South Asian Studies, Kathmandu

Nepal
December 2018 | CWA # 70

Nasima Khatoon | Research Associate, ISSSP, NIAS

The Maldives
December 2018 | CWA # 69

Harini Madhusudan | Research Associate, ISSSP, NIAS

India
December 2018 | CWA # 68

Sourina Bej | Research Associate, ISSSP, NIAS

Bangladesh
December 2018 | CWA # 67

Seetha Lakshmi Dinesh Iyer | Research Associate, ISSSP, NIAS

Afghanistan