Syria’s long-anticipated cabinet reshuffle was finally announced over the weekend, ending weeks of speculation over possible changes within the transitional government. It was the first since the ouster of President Bashar al-Assad in December 2024 and comes more than a year after the transitional government was formed in March 2025.
The appointments were unveiled through a series of late-night presidential decrees published by the state news agency SANA on Saturday, 10 May. Despite widespread rumours of a sweeping overhaul, the reshuffle fell way short of public expectations. Only the ministers of media and agriculture were replaced, signalling a preference for continuity over major political disruption at a time of mounting economic and administrative pressure.
The reshuffle also included the appointment of four governors and the removal of Maher al-Sharaa, the brother of interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa, from the presidential office. But rather than signalling a broader opening, the moves appear aimed at tightening administrative control and recalibrating influence within the emerging post-Assad order.
Information Minister Hamza al-Mustafa was replaced by Khaled Fawaz Zaarour, formerly dean of the Faculty of Media at Damascus University. Agriculture Minister Amjad Badr was also removed and replaced by Bassel Hafez al-Sweidan, who had served as deputy agriculture minister.
The appointments also included Abdul Rahman Badreddine al-Aama, the former governor of Homs, who replaced Ahmed al-Sharaa’s brother Maher as secretary-general of the presidency. Al-Sharaa also named new governors for the provinces of Homs, Quneitra, and Deir ez-Zor.
No official explanation was provided for the ministerial changes, though they come amid mounting criticism over the government’s poor performance. Sources in Damascus say the changes are less an effort to broaden the administration than a recalibration of al-Sharaa’s inner circle.