Syrian Security Convoy Enters Key Kurdish City Under US-Backed Deal
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by Reuters and Algemeiner Staff

Members of the Kurdish Internal Security Forces wait for the arrival of the security forces of the Syrian government during the curfew, following an agreement between the Syrian Democratic Forces and the Syrian government, in Qamishli, Syria, Feb. 3, 2026. Photo: REUTERS/Orhan Qereman
Syrian government security forces entered the Kurdish-controlled northeastern city of Qamishli on Tuesday, security sources and witnesses said, implementing a US-backed deal to bring Kurdish-run regions back under central government control.
The accord, declared on Friday, staved off the risk of more conflict between Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa’s government and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, which lost swathes of eastern and northern Syria to government troops in January.
Reuters journalists said the convoy headed straight to a security zone inside Qamishli for talks with senior Kurdish officials at the de facto political center of the Kurdish-led administration that took shape during Syria’s 14-year civil war.
The government forces are expected to be stationed in several Syrian state buildings in Qamishli and also at the city‘s airport, a Syrian official and a Kurdish security source told Reuters ahead of the deployment.
On Monday, Interior Ministry vehicles entered the city of Hasakah, about 80 km (47 miles) south of Qamishli.
The Jan. 30 accord foresees a phased integration of Kurdish fighters with Damascus forces. The US has hailed the agreement as a milestone towards unity and reconciliation after the war that fractured the country into rebel fiefdoms.
The SDF was once Washington’s main Syrian ally, playing a vital part in the fight against Islamic State terrorists.
But its position took a major hit as US President Donald Trump cultivated relations with Sharaa, a former al Qaeda commander who has now brought almost all of Syria back under the authority of Damascus.
Earlier, Reuters witnesses saw hundreds of Arab villagers lining the route to Qamishli, welcoming the arrival of government forces along the highway toward the city outskirts.
Many Arab villages in Hasakah province have welcomed the end of SDF control over their areas, saying the Kurdish-led authorities had deprived their communities and marginalized them during their rule.
Those accusations are denied by the SDF leadership of Syrian Kurds, who were an oppressed minority under the Assad family’s 54-year rule and established de facto autonomy during the civil war in a largely Arab-populated region.
The SDF, which controlled Syria’s main oil fields and a basket of key commodities during its rule, says it sought to redress injustices by creating a system of governance that represented all ethnic groups and minorities.
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