Syria’s interim president has signed a landmark agreement with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), paving the way for the integration of Kurdish fighters into state military and civil institutions.
The deal aims to strengthen government control over northeastern Syria while addressing Kurdish demands for greater autonomy and political representation.
This significant shift could reshape the dynamics of Syria’s ongoing conflict and its relations with both domestic and international powers.
The Kurdish-led and U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces, which controls much of Syria’s oil-rich northeast, signed a deal with the Damascus government on Monday to join Syria’s new state institutions, the Syrian presidency said on Monday.
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Photos showed interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa and SDF commander Mazloum Abdi shaking hands in Damascus on the agreement that provides for SDF-controlled civilian and military institutions in northeast Syria to be integrated with the state.
The accord came at a critical moment as Sharaa grapples with the fallout from mass killings of Alawite minority members in western Syria – violence that he said on Monday threatened his effort to unite Syria after 14 years of conflict.
In December, insurgents toppled the regime of former President Bashar al-Assad, a member of the country’s Alawite minority who fled to longtime supporter Russia.
The agreement signed Monday calls for SDF-controlled border crossings, an airport and oil and gas fields in eastern Syria to become part of the Damascus administration.

Implementation is due by the end of the year, but the accord does not say specify how SDF’s military operation will be integrated into Syria’s defence ministry, a major sticking point in talks thus far.
The deal also commits the SDF to combating remnants of Assad’s regime. The Islamist-led authorities in Damascus have accused Assad loyalists of sowing civil strife in western Syria.
The violence in the west was Sharaa’s biggest test since he seized power. A war monitor reported hundreds of civilians killed in Alawite villages since Thursday as government forces sought to crush what they described as an insurrection.
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“The massacres have weakened Sharaa. He has a lot of trouble internally and with the United States. It could help him show that he is not hostile to all minorities,” said Aron Lund, a fellow at U.S.-based thinktank Century International, describing the agreement as vague.
Sharaa promised to punish those responsible, including his own allies if necessary.
For Abdi, the agreement is a hedge against the risk of U.S. President Donald Trump suddenly withdrawing U.S. forces, which have supported the SDF for a decade to counter Islamic State in Syria, Lund added.
Abdi had wanted the SDF to join the defence ministry as a bloc rather than individuals – an idea the interim government rejected.
The SDF has been in conflict with Turkey-backed Syrian armed groups in northern Syria for years – a conflict that has rumbled on since Assad was toppled.