Syrian Regime Forces Seize Deir Hafer, Maskana as U.S.-Backed Kurds Withdraw
Syrian government troops entered the northern towns of Deir Hafer and Maskana on Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026, after the U.S.-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces agreed to evacuate the area to avoid further clashes, but both sides are already accusing the other of violating the withdrawal deal. State media says SDF fighters attacked an army patrol near Maskana, killing two soldiers and wounding others, while the SDF says Damascus sent forces into the towns before Kurdish units had fully pulled out, creating what it called a 'highly dangerous' situation. An Associated Press reporter on the ground saw Syrian tanks and armored vehicles moving into Deir Hafer and, hours later, a convoy entering Maskana, as officials said more than 11,000 civilians fled the two towns in the previous two days via side roads to government-held areas. The pullback followed a decree by interim President Ahmed al‑Sharaa that, for the first time, recognizes Kurdish as a national language alongside Arabic and makes the Newroz festival an official holiday—concessions Kurdish leaders say still fall short of constitutional guarantees—while U.S. military officials visited Deir Hafer Friday and SDF commander Mazloum Abdi prepared to meet U.S. Syria envoy Tom Barrack in Irbil to contain the crisis. The episode illustrates how the Assad-successor government is trying to reassert control over territory held by America’s main partner against ISIS even as Washington attempts to broker calm between two forces it works with in different ways.
📌 Key Facts
- On Jan. 17, 2026, Syrian government forces moved into Deir Hafer and Maskana with tanks and armored vehicles after fighting earlier in the month with the SDF in Aleppo.
- Syrian state agency SANA reported two soldiers killed and others wounded when SDF fighters allegedly attacked an army patrol near Maskana, while the SDF accused Damascus of entering the towns before its fighters had fully withdrawn under an agreement.
- Over 11,000 people fled Deir Hafer and Maskana in the two days before the regime advance, according to government figures, as shelling targeted SDF positions.
- Interim President Ahmed al‑Sharaa issued a decree on Friday recognizing Kurdish as a national language and Newroz as an official holiday, moves viewed by Kurdish authorities as insufficient without constitutional guarantees.
- U.S. military officials visited Deir Hafer on Friday for talks with SDF commanders, and SDF leader Mazloum Abdi is scheduled to meet U.S. special envoy Tom Barrack in Irbil as the SDF shifts fighters east of the Euphrates River starting Saturday morning.
📊 Relevant Data
In 1962, a special census in the al-Jazira region stripped approximately 120,000 to 150,000 Kurds of their Syrian citizenship, rendering them stateless and denying them basic rights, a policy that persisted under the Baath regime with effects lasting into recent years.
Revisiting the Erasure of Kurdish Identity in Syria — New Lines Magazine
The Baath regime implemented the 'Arab Belt' project in the 1970s, displacing Kurdish families from border areas and resettling Arab populations to alter demographics and weaken Kurdish territorial claims, a policy of ethnic engineering that continued to influence regional dynamics.
Continuities of Exclusion: Anti-Kurdish Ideologies from Ba'athist Regimes to Syrian Islamist Opposition — Polar Journal
As of 2026, Kurds number approximately 2.5 million in Syria, constituting about 10% of the population, a figure that has remained relatively stable despite the civil war's displacements.
Kurdish Population by Country 2026 — World Population Review
The Syrian civil war has led to significant demographic changes, with the population decreasing from 21 million in 2011 to around 19.5 million by 2018, driven by forced displacements and migrations, particularly in conflict zones like Aleppo province where regime policies aimed to alter ethnic compositions.
Demographics of Syria — Wikipedia
In areas controlled by the Kurdish-dominated SDF in northeast Syria, a 2025 census recorded a population of 2,488,818, with demographic compositions reflecting a mix of Kurds, Arabs, and other groups amid ongoing autonomy efforts.
To help build the new Syria, the US needs to better understand the Kurds and Arabs of the northeast — Atlantic Council
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