
Syria Reaches Historic Peace Deal With Kurdish Forces
After weeks of conflict, Syria's government and Kurdish-led forces signed a sweeping agreement to integrate military units and end fighting. The deal brings stability to a region torn by 13 years of civil war.
Syria's government and Kurdish-led forces just signed a comprehensive peace agreement that could finally bring stability to a war-torn region. The deal ends weeks of clashes and marks a major step toward reunifying a country fractured by over a decade of conflict.
The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and Syria's central government reached the agreement on Friday, putting an end to fighting that had forced Kurdish forces to retreat from large territories. Kurdish fighters, who once controlled much of northeastern Syria, will now gradually integrate into the national military and government structure.
Under the terms, Syrian government forces will peacefully enter the Kurdish-controlled cities of Hasakeh and Qamishli in the northeast. Three new army brigades will be created from existing SDF forces, with a separate brigade formed for the Kurdish-majority town of Kobane in the north.

The agreement follows a 15-day ceasefire extension that gave both sides time to negotiate. Syria's new authorities, who took power after longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad's ouster in December 2024, are working to reunite the country under a single government structure.
The Bright Side: This deal represents a peaceful resolution to conflict in a region that has known little but war for 13 years. Rather than continued bloodshed, both sides chose negotiation and integration. The Kurdish forces played a crucial role fighting extremism during Syria's civil war, and now they'll continue serving their country within a unified national framework.
While the Kurdish minority loses some autonomy they held during the civil war, the agreement brings something equally valuable: an end to fighting and a chance at lasting peace. Thousands of families in northeastern Syria can now look forward to stability after years of uncertainty.
The integration process will happen gradually, giving communities time to adjust. Government security forces will deploy to Kurdish-held cities not as conquerors but as part of a negotiated peaceful transition that both sides agreed to.
Syria still faces enormous challenges ahead, but this agreement shows that former adversaries can find common ground. In a region where conflicts often drag on for decades, choosing peace over prolonged fighting is itself a victory worth celebrating.
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Based on reporting by France 24 English
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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