Topic: Syrian Civil Conflict and Kurds
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Syrian Civil Conflict and Kurds

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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.
U.S. Policy in Syria Syrian Civil Conflict and Kurds