US forces to complete withdrawal from Syria 'within a month'

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A US military vehicle moves in a convoy with other trucks transporting military equipment along a highway outside Qamishli in Syria's northeastern Hasakah province on Monday as the US withdraws from Qasrak military base. (AFP)
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A convoy carrying US Army vehicles drives away from Qasrak base in northeastern Syria. (AP)
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A US military vehicle moves in a convoy with other trucks transporting military equipment along a highway outside Qamishli in Syria's northeastern Hasakah province on Monday as the US withdraws from Qasrak military base. (AFP)
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Updated 23 February 2026
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US forces to complete withdrawal from Syria 'within a month'

  • The United States began withdrawing on Monday from a major base in Syria still under the control of Kurdish forces, a Kurdish official who requested anonymity told AFP

QAMISHLI, Syria: US forces that led the coalition against the Daesh group will complete their withdrawal from Syria within a month, three sources told AFP on Monday, as they began leaving a major base.
The withdrawal comes as Syria’s government expanded its control to the country’s northeast, previously controlled by US-allied Kurdish forces, and formally joined the coalition against Daesh.
American forces have already withdrawn from two other bases in the past two weeks, Al-Tanf in the southeast and Shadadi in the northeast.
“Within a month, they will have withdrawn from Syria and there will no longer be any military presence in the bases,” a Syrian government official said, with a Kurdish source confirming the timeline.
The officials who spoke to AFP for this story all requested anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to media.




A convoy carrying US Army vehicles drives away from Qasrak base in northeastern Syria. (AP)

The United States began withdrawing on Monday from a major base in a northeastern region still under the control of Kurdish forces, which agreed last month to integrate their institutions with Damascus.
An AFP team saw a convoy of dozens of trucks loaded with armored vehicles and prefabricated structures on a road linking the Qasrak base in Hasakah province to the border with Iraq.
The United States has about 1,000 troops still deployed in Syria.
It had intervened in the country in 2014 to fight Daesh, which had taken over swathes of Syria and Iraq in a lightning offensive.
With Kurdish forces at the forefront, Daesh was territorially defeated in 2019 but retains sleeper cells and called on jihadists on Saturday to fight Syrian authorities.

'End their presence’

A diplomat from a country allied with both the United States and Syria said the withdrawal should be completed within 20 days.
The US may still carry out airstrikes in Syria from other bases in the region, he said.
The Kurdish source said “the international coalition forces will end their presence, which has lasted for about 12 years, in northern and eastern Syria within a period of three to five weeks.”
“Over the coming days, successive military convoys will transport logistical supplies, military equipment, radar systems, and missiles from the two remaining bases,” he added, referring to Qasrak and Kharab Al-Jir, also in Hasakah province.




 A US military vehicle moves in a convoy with other trucks transporting military equipment along a highway outside Qamishli in Syria's northeastern Hasakah province on Monday as the US withdraws from Qasrak military base. (AFP)

The withdrawal comes as the US, which long backed the Kurds, considered their mission against Daesh to be “largely” over, as Syria joined the international coalition against Daesh.
After the Syrian authorities’ deployment in the northeast last month, the US military said it transferred thousands of Daesh suspects, including many Syrians but also Westerners, to Iraq, after they were held in Kurdish-run prisons for years.
Syrian authorities had transferred remaining families in Al-Hol, the largest camp housing relatives of suspected Daesh fighters, to another site in the north.
Thousands of family members of foreign jihadists had previously fled the camp and they remain unaccounted for.


Syrian authorities repair Deir Ezzor airport runway to prepare for resuming flights

Updated 23 February 2026
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Syrian authorities repair Deir Ezzor airport runway to prepare for resuming flights

  • Airport has been out of service for more than a decade because of civil war

LONDON: Syrian authorities are repairing key infrastructure at Deir Ezzor Civil Airport ahead of flights being resumed. Government forces have been in control of northeastern Syria since January.

Syria’s General Authority of Civil Aviation and Air Transport announced on Monday that technical and engineering teams are repairing the runway, essential facilities, and rebuilding the airport’s perimeter fence to meet international safety and security standards.

The airport has been out of service for more than a decade due to the civil war in the country, which damaged infrastructure, including several bridges in northeastern Syria, where towns are next to the Euphrates River.

The Syrian government regained control over the region from the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces through an agreement in January that established a ceasefire and outlined a phased integration of military and administrative structures.

On Sunday, Syrian authorities took over security responsibilities at Qamishli airport in Hasaka Province, northeastern Syria, as part of the agreement with the SDF.