ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - An agreement to integrate Kurdish-led forces into the Syrian military is “moving forward” but disputes remain over the deputy defense minister’s role, Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) Commander Mazloum Abdi said on Tuesday.
Abdi said the integration of autonomously-run Kurdish government, military and security forces is underway as mandated in a January 30 agreement with the Syrian government.
“We are moving forward with the implementation of the agreement,” Abdi told Arab and Kurdish tribes and commanders in Hasaka with reporters present.
The agreement aimed to end weeks of fighting between Kurdish forces and the Syrian Arab Army, which seized Kurdish-held areas backed by armed groups during January. The agreement includes a military division comprising three SDF brigades, as well as a brigade for the Kurdish stronghold of Kobane.
While the focus has been on Kurdish-run autonomous regions in northeastern Syria (Rojava), Abdi said the agreement applies to all of Syria. Damascus and the international community have pressed for Syria to unify and nationalize institutions following a 14-year civil war that saw the country splinter with hundreds of armed groups.
Abdi, who led negotiations to bring the Kurdish-led SDF under the Syrian Ministry of Defense, said a dispute over deputy defense minister’s post remains unresolved, without providing further details. The agreement stipulates that the senior post will be held by an SDF member.
Syrian Ministry of Interior personnel have deployed in Hasaka, Abdi said, amid withdrawals by other forces.
