Western governments confront a defining moment that will determine the future trajectory of international law and democratic governance. The rapid diplomatic recognition and systematic support of Ahmed al-Sharaa’s extremist-backed administration in Syria represents not merely tactical accommodation but a fundamental betrayal of the international legal order. This analysis examines how Western powers have abandoned foundational principles of human rights protection, minority safeguards, and counterterrorism doctrine in favor of short-term geopolitical calculations, thereby creating dangerous precedents that institutionalize extremism while fragmenting state sovereignty into hybrid governance structures.
The Syrian case demonstrates the convergence of three critical phenomena: the Obama Doctrine’s strategic restraint paradigm, Trump’s radical reversal of established counterterrorism policy, and Western creation of hybrid states that fundamentally undermine the international legal system’s coherence. These developments collectively represent what may constitute the most consequential abandonment of democratic principles in post-Cold War international relations, establishing a template whereby extremist movements can achieve legitimacy through persistence and strategic accommodation with major powers.
From Obama to Trump: The Evolution of Western Accommodation
The intellectual foundations for contemporary Western accommodation with extremist governance can be traced to Barack Obama’s Middle Eastern doctrine, which explicitly prioritized pragmatic stability over principled governance. Obama’s strategic vision involved “rightsizing” the United States’ footprint in the region while “challenging allies to take greater responsibility for their own security.” This approach, characterized by “exercising restraint diplomatically” and accepting imperfect arrangements, created the conceptual framework for tolerating authoritarian and extremist governance structures.
Obama’s foreign policy represented what critics termed a “leftist response to 9/11 and the Iraq war” driven by “his aversion to military force, his realist-idealist vision of a post-American world, and his inability to prioritize and reconcile strategic interests.” Consequently, his administration progressively moved toward regional disengagement, creating power vacuums that extremist movements would eventually exploit. The doctrine’s most significant manifestation was Obama’s maxim that “sometimes the perfect is the enemy of the good” in Middle Eastern policy—a realpolitik calculation that has now been extended to its logical extreme with the normalization of jihadist-led governments.
However, the Trump administration’s endorsement of Syria’s extremist integration program represents an unprecedented departure from seventy years of established counterterrorism doctrine. Thomas Barrack, Trump’s special envoy to Syria, has openly championed what he euphemistically terms “participatory containment”—a policy framework that legitimizes designated terrorist organizations through state institutional incorporation. “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 fundamental contradiction of describing individuals on international terrorism watch lists as “loyal” to a government Washington simultaneously seeks to support.
This policy crystallized following Trump’s historic meeting with al-Sharaa in Saudi Arabia in May 2025—the first encounter between American and Syrian leadership in twenty-five years. The meeting culminated in Trump’s announcement that he would lift Assad-era sanctions against Syria, representing a dramatic reversal that occurred despite Israeli opposition and traditional alliance considerations. Under Trump’s National Integration Program, approximately 3,500 foreign fighters, primarily Uyghurs from China and Central Asia, are being incorporated into the newly formed 84th Division of the Syrian army, receiving Syrian citizenship, military academy training, and formal military ranks in exchange for loyalty oaths and purported renunciation of previous affiliations.
Syria as Laboratory: The Creation of Hybrid Governance
Syria’s post-Assad transition exemplifies the creation of hybrid states—political entities where power is nominally centralized but in practice fragmented among competing militias, warlords, and non-state actors. These arrangements create oligopolies of violence where various state and non-state actors develop security capabilities loyal to themselves rather than the state. Moreover, hybrid political orders are characterized by governance arrangements where “diverse and competing claims to power and logics of order co-exist, overlap and intertwine, namely the logic of the ‘formal’ state, of traditional ‘informal’ societal order, and of globalisation.”
The establishment of the 84th Division as a dedicated unit for foreign fighters hybrid security governance where there exists “a huge variety of peace, security, and justice providers that straddle the state/non-state boundary.” Significantly, TIP commander Abdulaziz Dawud Hudaberdi was promoted to brigadier general in the Syrian military, demonstrating how hybrid states provide institutional protection for designated terrorist organizations while maintaining their transnational networks.
Contemporary Syria exemplifies a “virtual state collapse”, characteristic of hybrid states, where political authority becomes indistinguishable from private commercial operations. The country has effectively split into three distinct parts, each with its own flags, security agencies and judicial system, leading observers to conclude that “as a distinct single entity, Syria has ceased to exist.” This fragmentation creates “wartime governance” arrangements where different actors adopt various strategies in controlled areas, some resulting in fairly stable political control while others perpetuate systematic violence against minority populations.
The March 2025 Massacres: When Integration Fails
The March 2025 Alawite coast massacres provided horrifying empirical evidence of hybrid state structures’ inherent instability and extremist integration’s fundamental impossibility. Between March 6-17, 2025, at least 1,084 people were killed in sectarian violence, with the Syrian Network for Human Rights documenting 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 monitoring organizations discovering “a new massacre every hour” on the Syrian coast.
The systematic nature of this violence revealed the “fragmentary rule” characteristic of hybrid states, where multiple witnesses described foreign fighters as being “everywhere” during the violence, participating in summary executions and systematic community targeting despite their formal integration into state military structures. Armed gunmen would show up at civilians’ doors, ask if they were Alawite or Sunni, and kill them based solely on their answer. A Reuters investigation documented forty distinct massacre sites during the three-day period, with approximately 1,500 Alawites killed in systematic sectarian violence.
Furthermore, the pattern extended beyond Alawites to other minorities, with the June 2025 suicide bombing at Mar Elias Greek Orthodox Church in Damascus killing at least 25 people. Christians face regular intimidation and harassment at checkpoints, while Druze communities have faced systematic attacks including “forced shaving of beards from Druze elders”—considered a profound cultural insult. These atrocities occurred under official military command, proving that hybrid state integration legitimizes rather than contains extremist violence while preserving oligopolistic violence structures.
Global Implications and Legal Collapse
Western accommodation of Syria’s hybrid state systematically undermines international legal norms, creating the “legitimacy collapse” of humanitarian law. The Rome Statute, Geneva Conventions, and UN principles on the Responsibility to Protect become meaningless when perpetrators receive diplomatic recognition and financial support instead of prosecution. Additionally, the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine, adopted unanimously by UN member states in 2005, has become increasingly marginalized as major powers prioritize strategic interests over civilian protection, creating a “knock-on effect on the norm’s validity” through repeated “applicatory contestation” of its core principles.
By legitimizing groups with documented jihadist pedigrees, Western governments create a “revolving door for extremism” that fundamentally undermines global counterterrorism efforts. The UN Security Council has designated various non-state armed groups involved in terrorist activities through the 1267 sanctions regime, yet these same designations are being selectively ignored through political expediency. This signals that violence and sectarian persecution can be pathways to power if perpetrators align with Western strategic objectives.
Syria represents part of a broader global trend of “jihadist diplomacy” where governments engage with extremist elements under pragmatic justifications. The Taliban’s re-emergence as a recognized power in Afghanistan demonstrated that “countries that once waged war against the Taliban are now working with them under the rationale of stability.” This pattern extends beyond Afghanistan and Syria to Africa, where terrorist groups like Boko Haram and Al-Shabaab have engaged in dialogue with various governments, while the accommodation occurs within a broader context of democratic backsliding where surveys reveal that most citizens across the Arab world are losing faith in democracy as a system of governance.
Academic research consistently demonstrates that hybrid governance structures relying on decentralized militias and local strongmen are inherently unstable, creating oligopolies of violence where various actors develop security capabilities loyal to themselves, resulting in political fragmentation that closely mirrors fragmented military-militia reality. The militarization of politics in fragmented societies creates self-reinforcing dynamics that prevent genuine state consolidation and race toward failed state status, while warlord politics emerges when rulers contract economic roles to outsiders to deny resources to internal rivals, creating “virtual state collapse” where political authority becomes indistinguishable from private commercial operations.
The Path Forward: Restoring International Legal Integrity
Western accommodation of Syria’s hybrid state represents more than tactical expediency—it constitutes systematic betrayal of the international legal order constructed through decades of multilateral cooperation. The legitimacy of international humanitarian law will not survive if this precedent becomes normalized, encouraging extremist movements worldwide to pursue similar strategies of persistence and eventual recognition through hybrid governance arrangements. The inevitable failure of Syria’s Western-supported hybrid governance will produce continued cycles of revenge, displacement, and radicalization while demonstrating to other extremist movements that maintaining sufficient military capability within hybrid institutional structures can lead to international legitimacy.
The Syrian experience demonstrates that Western creation of hybrid states represents a profound strategic miscalculation that transforms temporary expedients into permanent threats to global stability and democratic governance. Rather than continuing this dangerous trajectory, the international community must recognize that accommodating extremist governance through hybrid arrangements fundamentally undermines the rule of law and creates incentives for future insurgencies. The world needs robust and protective laws of armed conflict that can be relied upon to save lives rather than explain away deaths.
Restoring the integrity of international law requires three critical steps: first, abandoning the dangerous fiction that hybrid governance can provide stability; second, returning to principled support for genuine state sovereignty and minority protection; and third, recommitting to accountability mechanisms that ensure perpetrators of mass atrocities face consequences rather than rewards. The choice confronting the international community is stark: abandon this dangerous path of accommodating hybrid governance structures and recommit to principled support for genuine human rights protection or watch the carefully constructed framework of international law collapse under the weight of systematic fragmentation and extremist normalization.
The precedent being established in Syria will determine whether democratic values retain their global relevance or become mere rhetorical artifacts in an increasingly fragmented world order. Unless Western powers reverse course immediately, they will have created a template whereby extremism achieves legitimacy through institutional accommodation, fundamentally altering the international system’s moral foundation and operational effectiveness. The stakes could not be higher, and the window for corrective action narrows with each passing day of continued accommodation with Syria’s extremist-backed hybrid state.




















