In Syria’s second-largest city, Aleppo, there were no unintended clashes between the Syrian government forces and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).
As the SDF’s inclusion in the Syrian armed forces’ end-of-year deadline approaches, there are high angsts between the two parties.
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The fighting broke out on Monday afternoon during a visit by Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, but it had already come to an end when the two parties had agreed to stop firing.
According to analysts, the Syrian government and the SDF, under the leadership of military leader Mazloum Abdi (also known as Mazloum Kobani), are at a negotiating table over how to integrate the Kurdish fighters into the new state military structure, and that failing to arrive at a serious agreement could cause the two parties to resume fighting or military hostilities.
The Turkiye/Damascus conflict is strikingly incompatibily, according to Thomas McGee, the Max Weber Fellow specialising in Syria at the European University Institute in Florence.
Negotiations
A historic agreement between the SDF and the new Syrian government in Damascus, led by Ahmed al-Sharaa, and on March 10 announced the inclusion of the latter group into Syria’s new armed forces by 2025.
The People’s Defense Units (YPG), the military branch of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), make up the majority of the SDF. The PKK is labeled a “terrorist” by Turkiye, the European Union, and the United States.
A potentially explosive conflict between Damascus and the US-trained SDF was viewed as a result of the agreement. However, despite the agreement’s ability to prevent conflicts between the two parties, little has changed in the last ten months.
One side would have to concede otherwise, McGee said, so that the status quo would continue to exist.
Conflict appears to exist between the SDF’s preferred position, which is to integrate their existing battalions into Syria’s armed forces with some autonomy, and Damascus’ preferred position, which is to allow individual SDF fighters to be integrated.
These two positions were likely untenable, according to analysts, and an agreement didn’t seem likely to be in sight, according to Al Jazeera.
In the event of a compromise, Turkiye has backed Damascus and even threatened unilateral military action.
We only hope that negotiations, dialogue, and peaceful resolutions occur. We don’t want to see another instance of using military force. However, SDF should be aware that the relevant actors are unable to maintain their patience, according to Turkish Foreign Minister Fidan.
The PKK has been engaged in an armed rebellion for decades, and Turkiye has reached an agreement to disarm and dispose of its weapons. Analysts said Fidan’s strong words were unlikely to cause it to want to sabotage those discussions by engaging militarily with the SDF.
Self-administration in Kurdistan
Millions of Syrians were reunited with their nation on December 8 after more than five decades of the Assad regime’s rule ended. This was especially true in SDF-controlled areas during the Syrian civil war, when many Kurds claimed they were treated as second-class citizens under Bashar al-Assad’s rule.
However, the SDF gained autonomy in the northeast during the uprising and the ensuing nearly 14 years of civil war under the direction of the Arabs. The group is hesitant to renounce that authority, according to analysts.
According to Robin Yassin-Kassab, a Syrian writer and co-author of the book Burning Country: Syrians in Revolution and War, “they believe they have achieved something they’ve never had before, and they don’t want to give it up.”
Asaad al-Shaibani, the country’s foreign minister, claimed on Monday that the SDF “showed no willingness” to reintegrate into Damascus.
However, according to analysts, Damascus and the SDF share a deep mistrust and that the government could have acted to bolster this trust.
According to McGee, “the government has not taken advantage of some opportunities to demonstrate good faith in the implementation of the agreement.”
He added that there were other options open to the government, including acknowledging the rife Kurdish statelessness that persisted under the Assad regime or recognizing Newroz as a national holiday.
Many locals also commented on the lack of access to services like civil documentation that had been provided by the Assad regime through the Security Squares of Qamishli and Hasakah since December last year, according to McGee.
Little improvement
The new administration of Syria could have gained more confidence in its dealings with the SDF given its significant international and regional support.
In recent months, al-Sharaa made a historic appearance at the White House and appeared to have won US President Donald Trump’s approval.
In addition, the US provided training and supplies to the SDF in its fight against ISIL (ISIS). However, Tom Barrack, Trump’s special representative in Syria, has stated that the US opposes the SDF from disbanding to form an autonomous or even semi-autonomous state like Iraqi Kurdistan. The government’s “reasonable options” were also praised by Barrack for their recommendations to the SDF.
Wladimir van Wilgenburg, an analyst of Kurdish politics based in Erbil, stated on Al Jazeera that the US wants the SDF to join the new Syrian transitional government but doesn’t want the SDF to enter conflict because it will give ISIL more opportunities to manifest in vacuums.
As long as Damascus cedes some chains of command and opens its territory to other Syrian army units, the SDF “expressed openness to the SDF reorganizing its roughly 50, 000 fighters into three main divisions and smaller brigades,” according to a Reuters news agency report from Friday.
However, officials also disclosed to Reuters that more discussions were required and that a deal didn’t appear to be imminent.
However, according to analysts, the March 10 agreement between al-Sharaa and Abdi in Damascus did help to lessen clashes.
According to McGee, “It is notable that there hasn’t been a single direct conflict between the Syrian government and self-administration since the signing of the agreement,” which suggests that at least the “peace clause” has been widely accepted. However, it is obvious that “other provisions have not made much progress.”
Analysts believe that it’s unlikely that SDF fighters will join government forces before the end of 2025, but it’s still unclear how the clashes on Monday might impact the deal.






