How deliciously ironic that Washington’s latest “democracy promotion” initiative involves formally legitimizing the very terrorist networks it spent decades attempting to dismantle. Syria’s post-Assad transition has devolved into a fascinating case study of how political pragmatism can transform state-building into state-sanctioned extremism, all while maintaining the veneer of international respectability.
Ahmed al-Sharaa, Syria’s freshly minted president, represents the quintessential modern Middle Eastern strongman—a former Al-Qaeda operative who has successfully rebranded himself as a statesman through the simple expedient of winning. His transformation from Abu Mohammad al-Jolani, the $10 million bounty target, to presidential material occurred with remarkable speed following his December 2024 offensive that toppled Bashar al-Assad. The United States, demonstrating its characteristic flexibility regarding terrorist designations when geopolitical convenience demands it, promptly removed al-Sharaa from its terrorist lists and lifted the bounty on his head.
This rebranding exercise reached its apotheosis during al-Sharaa’s May 2025 meeting with President Trump in Riyadh, where the former jihadist leader secured comprehensive sanctions relief in exchange for vague promises of moderation and Israeli normalization. The speed of this diplomatic transformation—from designated terrorist to presidential partner in less than six months—would be impressive if it weren’t so transparently cynical.
The Integration Gambit: Formalizing Extremism
The centerpiece of al-Sharaa’s state-building strategy involves the systematic integration of approximately 3,500 foreign fighters into Syria’s reconstituted military, primarily through the newly established 84th Division. This is not mere military reorganization—it represents the institutionalization of transnational jihadism within a sovereign state’s armed forces.
The majority of these fighters belong to the Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP), a predominantly Uyghur organization that maintains direct operational ties to Al-Qaeda’s central command in Afghanistan. Despite Syrian officials’ claims that TIP has “disbanded” and its fighters have renounced previous affiliations, the organization’s leadership structure remains intact. Abdul Haq al-Turkistani, TIP’s overall leader and a member of Al-Qaeda’s Shura Council, continues directing Syrian operations from Afghanistan.
The promotion of TIP’s Syria branch leader, Abdulaziz Khudaberdi, to brigadier general in December 2024 exemplifies this institutionalization process. Audio recordings reveal his “unwavering obedience” to al-Turkistani, demonstrating that Syria’s new military leadership includes officers who maintain direct command relationships with Al-Qaeda’s executive structure.
More concerning is the elevation of Saifuddin Tojiboyn, leader of Katibat al-Tawhid wal-Jihad (KTJ), to colonel rank. KTJ remains officially designated as a terrorist organization by the United States, meaning Washington has effectively endorsed the promotion of individuals from its own terrorism blacklist to senior military positions.
Washington’s Strategic Amnesia
The Trump administration’s endorsement of this integration program represents a remarkable departure from established counterterrorism doctrine. Thomas Barrack, Trump’s special envoy to Syria and former ambassador to Turkey, has openly championed what he terms “participatory containment”—a euphemism for legitimizing extremist organizations through state institutions.
“It’s better to keep the fighters—many of whom are very loyal to the new administration—within a state project than to exclude them,” Barrack explained, apparently oblivious to the contradiction of describing designated terrorists as “loyal” to a government Washington simultaneously seeks to support. This policy shift occurred following Trump’s Middle East tour and his meeting with al-Sharaa in Riyadh, where the president agreed to lift Assad-era sanctions in exchange for promises of Israeli normalization.
The administration’s justification for this approach reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of extremist organizational dynamics. U.S. officials argue that integration represents a pragmatic solution for fighters who cannot be repatriated and might otherwise drift toward ISIS or other extremist groups. This logic conveniently ignores the fact that many of these fighters are already operational components of Al-Qaeda’s network, making the choice between different extremist affiliations somewhat academic.
The Trump administration’s support for Syria’s integration strategy reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of how extremist organizations operate and evolve. The assumption that institutional inclusion will moderate extremist behavior ignores the ideological foundations that drive these organizations and the historical evidence that such strategies typically fail.
The administration’s justification for this approach—that it represents the “least bad option” for dealing with fighters who cannot be repatriated—accepts the premise that the United States lacks the capability to address extremist networks through traditional counterterrorism methods. This represents a significant retreat from previous U.S. counterterrorism doctrine and creates dangerous precedents for future conflicts.
The speed with which Washington embraced al-Sharaa’s government, despite its extremist foundations and ongoing human rights abuses, demonstrates the extent to which geopolitical considerations have superseded counterterrorism priorities in U.S. Middle East policy.
The Sectarian Reckoning
The consequences of this integration strategy became horrifically apparent during the March 2025 Alawite coast massacres, which demonstrated the fundamental impossibility of moderating extremist organizations through institutional inclusion. Following Assad loyalist attacks on government forces on March 6, Syria’s transitional government deployed thousands of security personnel to the coastal regions, including significant numbers of foreign fighters.
The subsequent violence revealed the sectarian character of Syria’s new military apparatus. Between March 6-17, 2025, at least 1,084 people were killed in sectarian violence, with the Syrian Network for Human Rights documenting that 639 civilians and disarmed combatants were killed by forces aligned with the transitional government. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that over 1,470 Alawites were extrajudicially executed during this period, with the director noting that “Every hour we discover a new massacre on the Syrian coast”.
Eyewitness accounts from Baniyas, a coastal city in Tartus Governorate, describe systematic targeting of Alawite civilians by mixed forces including Syrian Ministry of Defense personnel and foreign fighters “of purported Turkmen and Chechen origin”. The typical pattern involved armed gunmen asking civilians whether they were “Alawite or Sunni” before executing them based solely on their sectarian identity.
A Reuters investigation documented 40 distinct massacre sites during the three-day period, with approximately 1,500 Alawites killed in systematic sectarian violence. The scale and coordination of these attacks demonstrate that foreign fighters retained their sectarian motivations and operational methods despite formal military integration.
The March massacres exposed the fundamental flaw in Syria’s integration strategy: extremist organizations cannot be moderated through institutional inclusion when their ideological foundations remain unchanged. Despite al-Sharaa’s Interior Ministry directive that “all pro-government forces should adhere to procedures used during the offensive against the Assad regime, namely, no targeting of civilians,” the killings continued unabated.
The involvement of foreign fighters in these massacres was extensive and systematic. Multiple witnesses described these fighters as “everywhere” during the violence, participating in summary executions and systematic targeting of Alawite communities. The fact that these atrocities occurred under official military command demonstrates that integration has legitimized rather than contained extremist violence.
The Syrian government’s response to these massacres has been characteristically inadequate. While al-Sharaa announced the formation of an “independent committee” to investigate the killings, this investigation remains incomplete months after the violence. The failure to hold perpetrators accountable has created a precedent for impunity that undermines any pretense of institutional control over extremist elements.
The pattern of sectarian violence has extended beyond the Alawite community to target other minorities, most notably the Druze population in southern Syria. In July 2025, sectarian clashes between Druze militias and Sunni Bedouin clans resulted in over 100 deaths and required Israeli military intervention to protect Druze communities.
The escalation of anti-Druze violence followed the misuse of “nafir aam”—a religious call to arms that extremist groups have weaponized to justify attacks on minority communities. The same sectarian mobilization mechanisms used against Alawites in March were deployed against Druze populations, demonstrating that Syria’s integration strategy has created systematic tools for minority persecution.
Al-Sharaa’s administration has consistently argued that integration provides greater control over extremist elements than exclusion, but the evidence suggests the opposite. The March 2025 massacres demonstrated that formal military integration provides extremist organizations with state resources and legitimacy while preserving their operational autonomy and ideological coherence.
The Syrian government’s inability to prevent or adequately respond to sectarian violence reveals the fundamental weakness of the integration approach. Rather than controlling extremist behavior, integration has provided these organizations with institutional protection and expanded operational capabilities.
The continuing violence against minority communities, the failure to hold perpetrators accountable, and the persistent sectarian character of Syria’s security apparatus all indicate that integration has strengthened rather than weakened extremist networks within the Syrian state.
The Normalization of Extremism
The most disturbing aspect of Syria’s current trajectory is how quickly the international community has normalized the integration of designated terrorist organizations into state institutions. The Trump administration’s endorsement of this process has created a dangerous precedent that could encourage similar arrangements elsewhere in the region.
The National Integration Program, as Syrian officials term it, offers foreign fighters Syrian citizenship, military academy training, and formal military ranks in exchange for loyalty oaths and “renunciation” of previous affiliations. This process represents the bureaucratization of extremism—transforming jihadist networks into civil service positions while maintaining their operational capabilities and ideological orientations.
The establishment of the 84th Division as a dedicated unit for foreign fighters creates a parallel command structure within Syria’s military that operates according to different rules and loyalties than regular Syrian forces. This institutional arrangement ensures that extremist networks maintain their coherence while gaining state protection and resources.
The Regional Implications
Syria’s integration experiment has broader implications for regional stability and international counterterrorism efforts. By legitimizing the inclusion of Al-Qaeda-affiliated organizations in state institutions, Damascus has created a model that other governments might emulate when dealing with extremist groups within their territories.
China has expressed particular concern about the protection afforded to Uyghur militants in Syria, viewing this as a direct threat to Chinese national security. The presence of TIP fighters in Syria’s military creates a safe haven for anti-Chinese extremist activities while providing these organizations with state-level protection from international counterterrorism efforts.
The precedent of integrating designated terrorist organizations into state militaries also undermines the entire framework of international terrorism designations. If governments can transform blacklisted organizations into legitimate military units through administrative procedures, the deterrent effect of terrorism designations becomes meaningless.
The Path Forward
Syria’s integration experiment has created a hybrid state where formal governmental institutions coexist with parallel extremist networks that maintain their operational capabilities and ideological orientations. This model provides short-term stability through the co-optation of potential spoilers, but it fundamentally undermines the long-term prospects for democratic governance and minority protection.
The international community’s acceptance of this arrangement creates a dangerous precedent that could encourage similar approaches in other post-conflict environments. The lesson extremist organizations will draw from Syria’s experience is that maintaining sufficient military capability while expressing rhetorical moderation can lead to international legitimacy and state protection.
The ultimate irony of Syria’s transition is that efforts to contain extremism through integration have instead institutionalized it within the state apparatus. Rather than building sustainable democratic institutions, Syria has created a system where extremist organizations operate under state protection while maintaining their transnational networks and sectarian motivations.
The failure of Syria’s integration strategy serves as a cautionary tale about the dangers of prioritizing short-term stability over long-term institutional development. The international community’s willingness to accept this arrangement demonstrates how quickly democratic principles can be subordinated to geopolitical convenience, creating conditions for future instability and extremist resurgence.




















