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On 30 December, HTS leader and the de facto leader of Syria Ahmed al-Sharaa announced that the organisation would be dissolved by 4–5 January 2025, [179] [180] however, this announced deadline of the formal dissolution was delayed until the finalized process took place on 29 January.
Al-Sharaa subsequently became the country's de facto leader as head of the HTS. [84] On 9 December, HTS released a video of al-Sharaa, al-Jalali and Mohammed al-Bashir, the head of the de facto government in Idlib. [85] On 12 December, al-Sharaa met with Turkish officials, which marked the first diplomatic delegation since Assad's overthrow. [86]
Ahmed al-Sharaa, leader of the Syrian Salvation Government, stated on Telegram that Syrian public institutions would not immediately be taken over by force and would instead temporarily be held by Syrian Prime Minister Mohammad Ghazi al-Jalali until the full political transition was completed. Al-Jalali announced in a social media video that he ...
On 27 November 2024, a coalition of Syrian revolutionary factions called the Military Operations Command [46] led by Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) and supported by allied Turkish-backed groups [47] [48] [49] in the Syrian National Army (SNA) launched an offensive against the Ba'athist regime's armed forces in Idlib, Aleppo and Hama Governorates in Syria.
The Syrian Salvation Government (SSG; Arabic: حكومة الإنقاذ السورية, romanized: Ḥukūmat al-ʾInqādh al-Sūriyya) was a de facto unrecognized quasi-state in Syria formed in November 2017 by Hayʼat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) and other Syrian opposition groups during the Syrian civil war. [6]
Syrian Salvation Government: HTS leader Abu Mohammad al-Julani said his forces entered Hama to "cleanse a 40-year old wound," referring to the 1982 Hama massacre by forces of Hafez al-Assad's regime. The rebels vowed to advance further south to Homs and called on the city's inhabitants to rise up in "revolution against oppression and tyranny".
HTS’ precursor organization, Jabhat al-Nusra, was formed in Syria in 2011 as an al-Qaeda affiliate in opposition to Assad, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a ...
The western two-thirds of Syria's Golan Heights region are since 1967 occupied by Israel and were in 1981 effectively annexed by Israel, [259] [260] whereas the eastern third is controlled by Syria, with the UNDOF maintaining a buffer zone in between, to implement the ceasefire of the Purple Line. Israel's 1981 Golan annexation law is not ...