UN How Syria’s ‘Diversity-Friendly’ Jihadists Plan on Building a State - Their leader joined both al-Qaeda and the Islamic State (IS), before splitting from both groups and rejecting their “extreme” tactics.

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In the chaos of Syria’s war, it was a moment of bureaucratic ceremony. Three men in camouflage combat fatigues met a handful of suited civilians within the captured city of Aleppo. At the meeting on Monday, fighters of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) formally passed over responsibility for the city to the jihadist group’s proto-government.

With the administration of Bashar al-Assad ousted from Aleppo, HTS now has responsibility for a city of two million people. The symbolic ceremony, published on HTS’s social media channels, was meant to assure the public that the group was ready to govern as well as fight.

In Western capitals, there is clear—and understandable—ambivalence about the jihadist group that has captured swathes of north-west Syria over the past week. Abu Mohammad al-Jolani, the HTS leader, has a $10 million US bounty on his head. He joined both al-Qaeda and the Islamic State (IS), before splitting from both groups and rejecting their “extreme” tactics. Human rights groups have documented torture of political opponents in the region of Idlib, which HTS has controlled since the battle lines against the Assad regime froze during the Covid pandemic in 2020.

On Monday, the US, Britain, Germany, France and the UK released a non-committal statement calling on “all sides” to “de-escalate.” While the brutality of the Assad regime’s war on the opposition saw Syria’s president become a pariah in the West, some officials cite the maxim that the “enemy of my enemy can still be my enemy.”

Jolani has attempted to improve his reputation in the eyes of the West. In 2021, he gave an interview to PBS, the US state-funded broadcaster, calling the designation of HTS as a terrorist group “unfair” and “political.” He said that under the Salvation Government, the administrative arm of HTS, rule should be Islamic “but not according to the standards of IS or even Saudi Arabia.” In Idlib region, Jolani has allowed women not to wear the veil and smokers to keep up the habit, a looser regime than, for example, the Taliban in Afghanistan.

As his fighters advanced into Aleppo, Jolani put out a series of statements intended to allay fears among the population, segments of which are aligned with the Assad regime. Fighters should not “scare children,” he said, while HTS channels eagerly broadcast clips of Christians in the city going about their business as normal. Afram Ma’lui, the Archbishop of Aleppo, promised that services would be unaffected by the takeover. On Tuesday, with regime forces fully ejected from the city, Jolani put out a second statement declaring “diversity is a strength,” a phrase more redolent of Western HR departments than jihadist warlords.

Even as the HTS leader armed and prepared his fighters in Idlib, he stressed the importance of state-building. In March this year, Jolani addressed a cohort of top students at Idlib University, saying that rebels would have to build governments in the middle of war—rather than after the conflict ends. “Every brick built in the liberated areas advances us hundreds of kilometres towards our fundamental goal, which is the liberation of Damascus—God willing,” he said.

He is now putting the principle into practice, with a host of blandly titled bureaucratic bodies springing to life in Aleppo. Garbage collection has already begun and electricity and water services have been reconnected. HTS has distributed phone numbers for local residents to enquire about administrative services. The General Zakat Commission, an Islamic tax collection agency that also deals with the poor, has started to distribute emergency baskets of bread, while HTS’s General Organization for Grain Trade and Processing has provided fuel to bakeries to make sure they can continue production. In total, the Ministry of Development and Humanitarian Affairs claims it has delivered 65,000 loaves of bread to locals in a campaign they are dubbing “Together We Return.” In a sign that their proto-state has its eye on international legitimacy as well as local favour, HTS’s Political Affairs Department has provided phone numbers for foreigners and diplomats seeking to leave the city.

There is also the matter of how to handle the remnants of the Assad regime. On Tuesday, the Salvation Government said any soldiers, police or security forces who surrendered would be granted amnesty. There have been no confirmed reports of reprisal killings so far. Meanwhile, residents have been told to contact Salvation Government officials if they come across weapons depots, warning that anyone caught buying or selling ammunition will be punished.

Since 2020, large numbers of refugees from Assad-held areas of Syria have lived under HTS rule. As Jolani’s forces seize back more of the country, they have been keen to present themselves as facilitating the return of the displaced to their homes. The Idlib City Municipality has opened roads that were previously blocked off as they lead to Assad military positions. E-Clean, an HTS-aligned company that clears up public spaces, oversaw an operation to clear a road between the towns of Sarmin and Saraqib, which had been blocked for several years. Social media has been filled with video clips of emotional family reunions in a boost to the group’s efforts to win hearts and minds.

The treatment of minorities will be under particularly close watch, however. Jolani has issued a number of recommendations, statements, and notices to make sure that no one harasses or harms the Christian or Kurdish community.

They also make sure to highlight the diversity of Syrian culture and heritage, stating “Aleppo is a meeting place of civilisation with cultural and religious diversity for all Syrians.” In the initial days after the takeover of Aleppo, they have largely abided by their word.

But questions remain on how integrated minorities can be in an HTS administration. In the past, Jolani has engaged with Christians and Druze in Idlib, and there is a Directorate of Minority Affairs within the Salvation Government. But they do not have representation within the government’s General Consultative Council. Neither do women, though they are far more active and public in society in general.

It is not just minorities who might be fearful of coming under HTS rule. A majority of Sunnis disagree with the HTS government and its hardline Islamic principles. Several activists have been imprisoned and tortured. In early 2024, a protest movement against Jolani’s rule in Idlib erupted, with the leader accused of amassing too much power and acting tyrannically. In response, HTS created a Complaints Committee for all the area it controls, issued a general amnesty for non-criminal prisoners, and cancelled residential building fees. It also formed a committee it claimed would help broaden the pool of people admitted to leadership positions.

Under Jolani, HTS has transformed itself dramatically, splitting away from its explicitly jihadist roots. This new stage might provide another platform for evolution. Certainly the group’s institution-building over the past four years has positioned it well to consolidate battlefield victories into a much larger state-building project.

But while it may be far more liberal than IS or the Taliban, Jolani and his forces remain, at heart, an authoritarian armed group. If they are to win support among distrustful locals—and grudging acceptance from the watching West—they will have to make sure that the plethora of bureaucratic initiatives launched in recent days are more than just a PR operation.

Aaron Zelin is the Levy Senior Fellow at The Washington Institute and author of The Age of Political Jihadism: A Study of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham. This article was originally published on the Telegraph website.

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The author of this piece, Aaron Y. Zelin, is a real subversive fellow. For years he has ran a website called Jihadology.net, which is an archive of pretty much everything that groups like ISIS and al-Qaeda have published, and actually a pretty useful resource back in the day. And, sure, you need to archive these things for study.

BUT it was completely open to the public, which I might not have an issue with if it wasn't blatantly obvious that he wanted to drive support for these groups. He claimed it wasn't intended to be a recruiting tool and resisted calls for him to close it to non-academics for years, claiming that the reason was to keep everything open so the public can study, until eventually governments forced him to shut it down (years after the height of Jihadist recruiting in the mid-2010s)

I would be much more sympathetic to this position had he not been a cheerleader for these sorts of groups. He goes on about how he's just an academic and totally not trying to help recruit people to join al-Qaeda, but at the same time cheerleads their takeover of Syria, publishes articles talking about how they're totally different and love everyone now, and tweets about how happy he is that Syria is now "free" and that he is "Looking forward to the HTS bike lane plan for Damascus" (a). So many of these "terror researchers" act like this, academics claiming that they totally don't support these groups, but cheering on every single thing they do: Charles Lister, Paweł Wójcik, and of course Zelin. Among others.
 
Every time 'Moderate Muslims' get into power we end up with the same backwards bullshit attempt to establish a caliphate and all the fun that goes with that. At least the Egyptians put an end to that bullshit after the moderate muslim brotherhood turned out to be goat fucking cunts.
Syria will end up with the Jhadi groups fighting between eachother for the next decade at least, maybe spread out to some buses of pieces and either end up with US military intervention, or spread to other countries.
 
Its various different factions made up of various different groups backed by multiple actors. They aren't going to build shit. Assads plane fell out of the sky, and he is most likely dead. When the smoke clears all these people are going to start killing each other and anyone who gets in their way.
 
The only functional forms of government for Muslim countries seem to be secular dictators or military juntas.
It is how Islamist's and all their off shoots have functioned for the last 1000 years. It is just one big bad man after another who rules. Goes nuts with power, gets overthrown by a another guy. Only to end up like the guy before him, gets couped by the next and so on and so on till the present day.
Think about how the US topped the mad dog Saddam and how it gave rise to ISIS. They rule by fear, so the next ruler has to out mad dog the last ruler to keep others in line. So you have them doing HD music execution vids and generally being 2x as brutal as Saddam.
They know of no other way to rule themselves other than through fear.
 
Surely this group of moderate rebels will actually be moderate.
we did it reddit, another evilbadman fell, now in short time Syria will celebrate diversity, democracy and have LGBT parades, surely
My only hope is that they have a sense of humour, like the Aghanistinanis. There was nothing funnier than watching Peoples of Talibanist descent trolling the Global American Empire with ice cream cone selfies and bumper cars, while shitlib j*urnos oy vey'ed.

No clue how this latest "rebel" group is aligned, but seeing updates about the #Inclusivity of having all 15 goat tribes represented in their cabinet, or "In this Jihad, we believe..." signs, would be hilarious.

(It would also be nice, when it all goes horribly wrong again, to finally see people turn on the globalist neolibs/neocons like Liz Cheney, Victoria Nuland, and Hillary Clinton who keep burning down everything they get involved in.)

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What are their views on the lgbt?

Also it looks like these new guys are starting to fight the sdf, that right there is a big plus in my book. The sdf are us stooges and Kurdish trash and if there is one group that deserves a genocide it's the kurds.
 
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On the bright side all those Syrian refugees who fled Assad can go home now right? …right?
Don't be silly. All of yesterday's rapefugees of course get to stay in the West forever, plus import their entire extended families, but also we need a new category for the other side of the eternal desert tribe conflict, so they can all show up and resume the bloodshed in your neighborhood. You will, of course, be blamed for it.
 
Don't be silly. All of yesterday's rapefugees of course get to stay in the West forever, plus import their entire extended families, but also we need a new category for the other side of the eternal desert tribe conflict, so they can all show up and resume the bloodshed in your neighborhood. You will, of course, be blamed for it.
Actually calling them syrians is racist, we refer to them now as new Europeans.
 
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