Tahrir al-Sham reintroducing itself as a civilian entity
Turkey's relations with the factions fighting in Syria have experienced unending ups and downs all through the years of the Syrian war.
Relations between Turkey and the al-Qaeda-affiliated Tahrir
al-Sham are no exception.
Tahrir al-Sham controls most of the northern Syrian
province of Idlib on the border between Turkey and Syria.
In recent years, Ankara has been encouraging this group to
reintroduce itself to the world, but this time as a civilian group that has
nothing to do with militancy or jihad (holy fighting).
Tahrir al-Sham has been trying to introduce itself as a
civilian group since 2018. It held a conference on the economy and another on
agriculture in Idlib. The group also formed a government and appointed a
spokesman who appears wearing a suit and a necktie and conducts interviews with
different media. The spokesman is called Youssef al-Hajiri.
Tahrir al-Sham is apparently following in the footsteps of
the Taliban which is part of negotiations with the United States now. Tahrir
al-Sham views the Taliban as a victorious group that has forced its enemy to
sit on the negotiating table with it.
However, this view angered some of the commanders of Tahrir
al-Sham who defected from the group. The group also got rid of other commanders
who opposed its overtures to the Taliban.
Tahrir al-Sham is also trying to contain its younger
members who travelled from other countries to join it at the peak of its
strength. It does this by reorienting these members to its new policy course.
Observers have always viewed Tahrir al-Sham as Syria's
Taliban that is ready to do anything to fulfill its political dreams on the
Syrian stage.




