Syrian army continues advance against Kurdish-held towns despite US calls against it

Members of the Kurdish forces gather at the entrance to the city of Tabqa in the northern Syrian Raqa province. (AFP)
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Updated 18 January 2026
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Syrian army continues advance against Kurdish-held towns despite US calls against it

  • Kurdish forces say Syrian army breached withdrawal deal
  • US envoy meets with Kurdish leaders in Irbil

DEIR HAFER, Syria: The Syrian army continued its push into Kurdish-held territory on Saturday, despite US calls to halt its advance in towns in the area in Syria’s north.

State media said the army took over the northern city of Tabqa and its adjacent dam, as well as the major Freedom dam, formerly known as the Baath, west of the Syrian city of Raqqaa.

Syrian Kurdish authorities had not acknowledged their loss of control over those strategic points, and it was unclear if fighting was still ongoing.

For days, Syrian troops had amassed around a cluster of villages that lie just west of the winding Euphrates and had called on the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces stationed there to redeploy their forces on the opposite bank of the river. They have been clashing over strategic posts and oilfields along the Euphrates River.

SDF fighters withdrew from the area early on Saturday as a gesture of goodwill — but then accused Syrian troops of violating the agreement by continuing to push further east ‌into towns and oilfields not ‌included in the deal.

Brad Cooper, who heads the US military’s Central Command, said in ‌a ⁠written statement ​posted on ‌X that Syrian troops should “cease any offensive actions in areas” between the city of Aleppo and the town of Tabqa, approximately 160 kilometers further east.

Arab residents rejoice at troops’ arrival

The initial withdrawal deal included the main town of Deir Hafer and some surrounding villages whose residents are predominantly Arab. The SDF withdrew on Saturday and Syrian troops moved in relatively smoothly, with residents celebrating their arrival.

“It happened with the least amount of losses. There’s been enough blood in this country, Syria. We have sacrificed and lost enough — people are tired of it,” Hussein Al-Khalaf, a resident of Deir Hafer, told Reuters.

The Syrian Petroleum Company said that the nearby oilfields of Rasafa and Sufyan had been captured by Syrian troops and could now be brought ⁠back online.

SDF forces had withdrawn east, some on foot, toward the flashpoint town of Tabqa — downstream but still on the western side of the river and near a hydroelectric dam, a ‌crucial source of power.

But when Syria’s army announced it aimed to capture Tabqa next, the ‍SDF said that was not part of the original deal ‍and that it would fight to keep the town, as well as another oilfield in its vicinity.

Syria’s army said four of its ‍troops had been killed in attacks by Kurdish militants, and the SDF said some of its own fighters had been killed, but did not give a number.

US-led coalition planes flew over the flashpoint towns, releasing warning flares, according to a Syrian security source.

The US has had to recalibrate its Syria policy to balance years of backing for the SDF — which fought against the Daesh — against Washington’s new support for Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa, whose rebel forces ousted dictator ​Bashar Assad in late 2024.

Main oilfields are still under Kurdish control

To try to end the fighting, US envoy Tom Barrack traveled to Irbil in northern Iraq on Saturday to meet with both Abdi and Iraqi Kurdish leader Masoud ⁠Barzani, according to two Kurdish sources. There was no immediate comment from Barrack’s spokesperson.

The latest violence has deepened the faultline between the government led by Sharaa, who has vowed to reunify the fractured country after 14 years of war, and local Kurdish authorities wary of his Islamist-led administration.

The two sides engaged in months of talks last year to integrate Kurdish-run military and civilian bodies into Syrian state institutions by the end of 2025, repeatedly saying that they wanted to resolve disputes diplomatically. But after the deadline passed with little progress, clashes broke out earlier this month in the northern city of Aleppo and ended with a withdrawal of Kurdish fighters. Syrian troops then amassed around towns in the north and east to pressure Kurdish authorities into making concessions in the deadlocked talks with Damascus.

Kurdish authorities still hold Arab-majority areas in the country’s east that are home to some of Syria’s largest oil and gas fields. Arab tribal leaders in SDF-held territory have told Reuters they are ready to take up arms against the Kurdish force if Syria’s army issues orders to do so. Kurdish fears have been deepened by bouts of sectarian violence last year, when nearly 1,500 Alawites were killed ‌by government-aligned forces in western Syria and hundreds of Druze were killed in southern Syria, some in execution-style killings.


US plans meeting for Gaza ‘Board of Peace’ in Washington on Feb 19, Axios reports

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US plans meeting for Gaza ‘Board of Peace’ in Washington on Feb 19, Axios reports

  • The Axios report cited a US official and diplomats from four countries that are on the board
  • The plans for the meeting, which would also be a fundraising conference for Gaza reconstruction, are in early stages and could still change, Axios reported

WASHINGTON: The White House is planning the first leaders meeting for President Donald Trump’s so-called “Board of Peace” in relation to Gaza on February ​19, Axios reported on Friday, citing a US official and diplomats from four countries that are on the board.
The plans for the meeting, which would also be a fundraising conference for Gaza reconstruction, are in early stages and could still change, Axios reported.
The meeting is planned to be held at the US Institute of Peace in Washington, the report added, noting that Israeli Prime ‌Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ‌is scheduled to meet Trump at the ‌White ⁠House ​on ‌February 18, a day before the planned meeting.
The White House and the US State Department did not respond to requests for comment.
In late January, Trump launched the board that he will chair and which he says will aim to resolve global conflicts, leading to many experts being concerned that such a board could undermine the United Nations.
Governments around ⁠the world have reacted cautiously to Trump’s invitation to join that initiative. While some ‌of Washington’s Middle Eastern allies have joined, many ‍of its traditional Western allies have ‍thus far stayed away.
A UN Security Council resolution, adopted in ‍mid-November, authorized the board and countries working with it to establish an international stabilization force in Gaza, where a fragile ceasefire began in October under a Trump plan on which Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas signed off.
Under ​Trump’s Gaza plan revealed late last year, the board was meant to supervise Gaza’s temporary governance. Trump thereafter said ⁠it would be expanded to tackle global conflicts.
Many rights experts say that Trump overseeing a board to supervise a foreign territory’s affairs resembled a colonial structure and have criticized the board for not including a Palestinian.The fragile ceasefire in Gaza has been repeatedly violated, with over 550 Palestinians and four Israeli soldiers reported killed since the truce began in October. Israel’s assault on Gaza since late 2023 has killed over 71,000 Palestinians, caused a hunger crisis and internally displaced
Gaza’s entire population.
Multiple rights experts, scholars and a UN inquiry say it amounts to genocide. Israel calls its actions self-defense after Hamas-led ‌militants killed 1,200 people and took over 250 hostages in a late 2023 attack.