Syrian conflict (2024–present)
| Syrian conflict (2024–present) | |||||||
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| Part of the aftermath of the Syrian civil war and the Middle Eastern crisis (2023–present) | |||||||
Military situation as of 10 October 2025 at 20:00 AST Syrian transitional government: De facto entities: Foreign occupations: (full list of factions, detailed map) | |||||||
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The Syrian conflict refers to a series of military conflicts in Syria after the fall of the Assad regime. Since Assad's fall, conflicts have been ongoing between the current Syrian government with Assad loyalists (mainly Alawites) and Druze insurgents, between the ex-Syrian National Army and Syrian government with Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, and an Israeli invasion.
Background

On 27 November 2024, a coalition of opposition groups called the Military Operations Command,[12] led by Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham, launched a major offensive[13] against the Syrian Army and other pro-government forces in Aleppo, Idlib, Hama and Homs Governorates.[14] This was followed by other rebel offensives from the Southern Operations Room, the SDF and the Syrian Free Army which all began seizing Syrian government territory in the country's south and east.[15][16][17][18] On 29 November, rebel forces entered Aleppo as Syrian Army positions collapsed across the country.[19] On 7 December, rebel forces entered Damascus and the next day, on 8 December, Bashar al-Assad was reported to have fled the capital.[20] The Syrian Army confirmed Assad was no longer in power and had fled the country,[21][22][23] resulting in the collapse of his regime and ending over 60 years of Ba'athist rule under the Assad dynasty.[24][25][26][27][28] Assad and his family fled to Moscow and were granted asylum in Russia.[21][29][30][31] The fall of Assad has been said to mark the end of the Syrian civil war.[32]
Syrian Prime Minister Mohammad Ghazi al-Jalali recognized the transfer of power to the Syrian Salvation Government, which established a caretaker government in Damascus with Mohammed al-Bashir serving as the prime minister.[33] Ahmed al-Sharaa, the leader of the Syrian Salvation Government and emir of Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham, became de facto leader of Syria.[34]
On 8 December 2024, the day that the Assad regime fell, Israel invaded southern Syria, subsuming the Golan Heights buffer zone and capturing Quneitra, the Syrian portion of Mount Hermon, and surrounding towns and villages, while also carrying out a bombing campaign against Syrian military bases. Israel has maintained a military occupation of the buffer zone.[35][36] The Turkish-backed SNA launched an offensive against the SDF, which ended with the capture of Manbij on 11 December.
At the Syrian Revolution Victory conference held in Damascus on 29 January 2025, the new government appointed al-Sharaa as president of Syria during the transitional phase and announced the dissolution of several armed militias and their integration into the Syrian Army under the Syrian Ministry of Defense.
Events by theater
Western Syria
Southern Syria
North and East Syria
SDF–SNA clashes
Clashes broke out between SDF and SNA forces as SDF forces began to enter government-controlled towns in northern Aleppo, which government forces were retreating from due to the HTS-led offensive on Aleppo from Idlib.[37] On 1 December 2024, SNA captured the towns of as-Safirah, Khanasir and the Kuweires airbase, while clashes occurred between SNA and SDF in the Sheikh Najjar district of Aleppo city.[38]
On 6 December 2024, the SNA launched an offensive targeting the SDF-controlled city of Manbij.[39] As the last SDF-controlled area west of the Euphrates, Manbij represented a crucial strategic point for Turkey's goal of pushing the SDF eastward beyond the river to enable the SNA to advance toward Kobani.[40] According to the SOHR and the pro-SDF thinktank Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), Turkey conducted drone strikes on SDF positions in Manbij.[40] On 9 December 2024, the SOHR reported, the SDF withdrew from most of Manbij after intense fighting with the SNA and Turkish airstrikes on Qarqozaq bridge.[41] On 11 December, Mazloum Abdi, commander-in-chief of the SDF, announced that SDF soldiers "will be withdrawn from the area as soon as possible" following a US-brokered ceasefire agreement.[42] On 12 December 2024, a truce mediated by the United States was announced, though it was ended days later.[43] On 17 December 2024, the truce was extended by a week.[44] Turkish Armed Forces launching airstrikes in the vicinity of Kobani later that month.[45]
On 23 December 2024, the SDF's Manbij Military Council launched an offensive in the eastern countryside of Aleppo to regain control of positions around the Tishrin Dam and to gain further territory along the Euphrates River.[46][47]
SDF–Syrian government clashes
On 10 March 2025, the SDF signed an agreement with the Syrian caretaker government to join Syria's new state institutions.[48]
Direct clashes have also occurred between the SDF and Syrian government. The first clashes were reported on 2 August 2025 near Dayr Hafir and al-Khafsah.[49][50] On 12 August, one Syrian Army soldier was killed in clashes with the SDF near Dayr Hafir.[51][52][53] In addition the government's Ministry of Information claimed that two civilians were killed and three injured.[54] Coinciding with the clashes the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) warned of a 'wider conflict' if the US does not remain fully engaged in preventing the collapse of the March agreement.[55]
On 6 October 2025, clashes erupted between forces affiliated with the Syrian Democratic Forces and government troops in the neighborhoods of Ashrafiyah and Sheikh Maqsoud. Following the confrontation, government forces closed all roads leading into the two neighborhoods, effectively restricting movement and access.[56][57] Residents protested the closures, demanding freedom of movement, and some demonstrations were met with tear gas and live fire by security forces.[58]
Heavy exchanges of fire, including small arms and medium weapons, were reported in the neighborhoods, resulting in casualties on both sides and displacing some families.[59] Kurdish authorities accused the government-aligned forces of attempting to infiltrate the neighborhoods and targeting civilians.[60] The Syrian Ministry of Defense stated that army movements in northern and northeastern Syria respond 'to repeated SDF attacks on civilians and security forces'.[61] Calm returned to the Kurdish-majority neighborhoods of Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafiyah after a preliminary agreement between Syrian government forces and the Syrian Democratic Forces.[62][63]
See also
Notes
- ^ Including ex-Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham & ex-Free Syrian Army.
- ^ Includes the former Syrian National Army factions.[1][better source needed][2] Although the SNA as a coalition was disbanded at the Syrian Revolution Victory Conference,[3] its affiliated armed groups still fighting with the SDF. The Syrian Ministry of Defense is integrating forces that were previously part of the Syrian Interim Government.[4][5]
- ^
- ^ Israel occupied the Golan Heights after 1967, but this is not recognized by the United Nations or any member states except Israel and the United States. Israel launched a new invasion of Syria on 8 December 2024 during the fall of Damascus, taking advantage the power vacuum created by the fall of the Assad regime to increase the amount of territory it controlled by several hundred square miles.[9]
- ^ Russia retains control of its Tartus naval base and Khmeimim Air Base.
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14 years of war and brutality that ended with the fall of President Bashar Al-Assad
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toppling former president Bashar al-Assad as his army simply melted away. The rout abruptly ended a 13-year conflict
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On 8 December 2024, armed militias toppled the brutal dictatorship of the Assad family, ending a nearly fourteen-year civil war in Syria.
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Syria's 13-year civil war ended abruptly in December
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- Religion-based civil wars
- Iran–Israel conflict during the Syrian civil war
- Wars involving Egypt
- Wars involving France
- Hezbollah involvement in the Syrian civil war
- Iraqi involvement in the Syrian civil war
- Jordanian involvement in the Syrian civil war
- Qatari involvement in the Syrian civil war
- Russian involvement in the Syrian civil war
- Saudi Arabian involvement in the Syrian civil war
- British involvement in the Syrian civil war
- American involvement in the Syrian civil war
- Turkish involvement in the Syrian civil war
- Syrian civil war spillover in Lebanon
- Wars involving the Popular Mobilization Forces
- Wars involving the Circassians
- Aftermath of the fall of the Assad regime