What next for Syria after tenuous Aleppo ceasefire?

It remains unclear if Damascus's move to kick the Kurds out of Aleppo will pressure the SDF to implement the 10 March deal to integrate its forces into the Syrian army or harden its resolve to resist

Government forces patrol the Sheikh Maqsoud neighbourhood after taking control of the area, following the collapse of an agreement between the Syrian government and the SDF, in Aleppo, Syria, on 10 January 2026.
REUTERS/Khalil Ashawi
Government forces patrol the Sheikh Maqsoud neighbourhood after taking control of the area, following the collapse of an agreement between the Syrian government and the SDF, in Aleppo, Syria, on 10 January 2026.

What next for Syria after tenuous Aleppo ceasefire?

Syrian Democratic Forces have left the city of Aleppo, following a ceasefire deal that allowed evacuations after days of deadly clashes.

SDF commander Mazloum Abdi said the group had reached an understanding through international ⁠mediation on a ceasefire and the safe evacuation of civilians and fighters.

“We have reached an understanding that leads to a ceasefire and securing the evacuation of the dead, the wounded, the stranded civilians and the fighters from the Ashrafieh and Sheikh Maqsoud neighbourhoods to northern and eastern Syria,” he said in a post on X.

“We call on the mediators to adhere to their promises to stop the violations and work towards a safe return for the displaced to their homes,” he added.

The announcement came after days of clashes between Syrian government forces and Kurdish-led SDF fighters in Aleppo, which killed 30 and displaced more than 150,000. It was the most serious confrontation between the two sides since the fall of the Assad regime.

But why did things get to this point?

After months of tit-for-tat skirmishes, Damascus appeared to have concluded that its dispute with the de facto Kurdish authorities in Aleppo’s predominantly Kurdish neighbourhoods would not be resolved through political engagement.

A military confrontation was always a possibility, and despite the ceasefire, an even larger confrontation cannot be ruled out. Damascus may have gone for low-hanging fruit as the small contingent of Kurdish fighters, confined to two fully encircled districts, stood little chance against government forces with their overwhelming advantages in manpower and firepower. That imbalance was quickly laid bare as government troops seized the contested neighbourhoods within days.

The more consequential question, therefore, is what the Aleppo escalation means for Syria’s broader political trajectory. Will the fighting derail the 10 March integration agreement signed by Syria’s interim president and the leadership of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF)? Or was it intended to jolt a stalled process back into motion by force?

From deal to deadlock

The escalation did not emerge in a vacuum. On 1 April 2025, Damascus and the Kurdish authorities in Aleppo reached an agreement to integrate the neighbourhoods of Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafieh into the central state. Under its terms, SDF-affiliated fighters were to withdraw; Kurdish internal security forces would remain in place; and existing local councils would continue to administer the areas in coordination with Aleppo’s provincial institutions.

The deal was widely seen as a pragmatic compromise and a potential confidence-building measure. Implementation, however, soon faltered. Deadlines slipped, mutual accusations mounted, and skirmishes grew more frequent. As trust eroded, the agreement lost much of its stabilising effect. The latest round of fighting was triggered by yet another exchange of fire, which both sides blamed on the other, while the absence of independent monitoring mechanisms made impartial verification difficult.

OMAR HAJ KADOUR / AFP
This picture taken on January 8, 2026, shows columns of smoke rising from Aleppo's Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafieh neighbourhoods amid intense clashes between government forces and the Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).

Unlike previous incidents, however, the violence did not end with an immediate ceasefire. This time, Damascus appeared determined to impose a military solution and send a message. Government forces moved swiftly, capturing Ashrafieh and Sheikh Maqsoud within days. The advance unfolded with relatively limited fighting, reportedly facilitated by a deal the government brokered with elements of the Bakkara tribe that had been fighting alongside Kurdish forces.

The operation also reflected a shift in tactics. Rather than relying on indiscriminate or overwhelming firepower, government forces conducted targeted strikes against designated military positions, advancing in stages with announced ceasefires in between. Authorities publicly identified areas to be targeted and urged civilians to evacuate in advance, an apparent effort to limit casualties. Civilian deaths and displacement still occurred, but the approach contrasted with earlier operations that resulted in widespread violations.

Bakr ALkasem / AFP
Buses wait to enter the Sheikh Maqsoud neighbourhood to evacuate US-backed Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) force fighters from two districts of the city of Aleppo, northern Syria, on 9 January 2026.

Pressure at gunpoint

For analysts close to the Syrian government, the Aleppo offensive carried a clear political message—it was meant to signal that Damascus’s patience had run out—and that it was prepared to use force when negotiations stall. In this reading, Aleppo was less a strategic pivot than a warning shot, intended to pressure the SDF to implement the 10 March integration agreement.

Some go further, suggesting that efforts to limit civilian harm were also aimed at reassuring Western governments. Many have repeatedly warned against the human cost of military action against SDF-held territory, particularly after serious abuses followed clashes along the coast and in Sweida last year.

By showcasing a more controlled operation in Aleppo, Damascus may be seeking to demonstrate that integration by force would not necessarily entail mass civilian casualties—and to signal that such a move is not off the table. Analysts sympathetic to Damascus argue that the escalation may convince Kurdish leaders that stalling negotiations is no longer viable, and that continued resistance risks triggering a military solution that would forfeit the many advantages offered by the March agreement.

Increased mobilisation by both government and SDF forces around Raqqa and Deir ez-Zor points to an increasingly volatile landscape

A risky bet

Kurdish officials see the situation very differently. They insist the clashes were initiated by Damascus as part of a deliberate plan to retake the neighbourhoods by force, with deeply damaging consequences. While stopping short of declaring the 10 March agreement dead, they describe it as "in a coma"—a telling reflection of the mistrust now defining relations.

Sources close to the SDF leadership argue that the Aleppo operation has set integration talks back rather than pushed them forward. Any remaining goodwill, they contend, has largely evaporated, making compromise harder, not easier. No actor is inclined to negotiate from a position of perceived weakness. The SDF is therefore unlikely to accept the new military realities in Aleppo and may continue pressing for implementation of the 1 April deal, adding another sticking point to already complex talks. Damascus, having altered the balance of power on the ground, is unlikely to accept that demand—an impasse that risks further unravelling the process.

Meanwhile, rising tensions and reports of increased mobilisation by both sides around Raqqa and Deir ez-Zor point to an increasingly volatile landscape. Despite the ceasefire holding at the time of publication, further skirmishes cannot be ruled out, and a single miscalculation could trigger a broader confrontation.

Unlike Aleppo, however, a conflict in northeastern Syria would neither be swift nor contained. SDF-held areas are far larger, and their forces are better trained and equipped, with thousands of ideologically committed fighters. Tribal actors have also shown a strong desire to join any confrontation with the SDF, raising the risk of counter-mobilisation, intercommunal fighting, and large-scale abuses.

OMAR HAJ KADOUR / AFP
Residents of the Sheikh Maqsoud neighbourhood, react as they are escorted out of the harms way by the members of Syrian government security forces, in Aleppo on 10 January 2026, following their clashes with Kurdish forces.

In such a scenario, the question would no longer be how easily Damascus could capture the northeast, but what lasting damage another escalation would inflict on Syria's fragile transition and on relations among its ethnic and religious communities. As Sweida has already demonstrated, such confrontations rarely produce resolution. More often, they entrench deadlock—leaving everyone worse off, including the side that prevails on the battlefield.

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