A fragile ceasefire between Syria's government and Kurdish-led forces has temporarily eased tensions in the country's northeast.
For minority groups in the northeast, the fragile ceasefire comes with more profound questions over their future in Syria.
A resident of Kobane said, “We are in a dire condition. We are melting snow through fire, but we do not have [enough] fire to ...
Syria’s government and Kurdish-led forces in the country’s northeast have clashed as President Ahmed al-Sharaa seeks to ...
Syria’s tribes, sensing it was time to split from the Kurds and ally with Syria’s government, mobilised. That spelled the end ...
The rapid turn of events has brought almost all of Syria back under the authority of the central Damascus-based state ...
The Syrian government's rapid takeover of territory long held by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces took shape in a ...
A Kurdish force that helped defeat the Islamic State is collapsing as the Trump administration turns to back the new Syrian ...
Jan 21 (Reuters) - The Syrian government has seized swathes of northern and eastern Syria from Kurdish forces, consolidating President Ahmed al-Sharaa's rule nearly 14 months after Bashar al-Assad was ...
Kurdish-led SDF accepts truce but reports continued attacks by government-allied forces, despite the agreement.
On Sunday, Syrian officials announced they had seized Omar, Syria's largest oilfield, on the eastern side of the Euphrates.