Essayer OR - Gratuit
A year after Assad, Syria and the world wait to see if Sharaa is democrat or despot
The Observer
|December 07, 2025
As a grocer's son turned jihadist warlord marks the anniversary of his toppling of the regime, a shattered country still fears his intentions, report Ruth Michaelson and Saad Alnassife in Damascus
Fighters from militant group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, once led by Syria's new ruler, gather in Damascus after the fall of Bashar al-Assad.
(Chris McGrath/Getty)
Sitting high on a plateau over Damascus, the imposing modernist white marble of Syria's presidential palace is easily visible from the middle-class neighbourhood of beige high-rises where Ahmed al-Sharaa grew up. That the quiet, studious boy from Mezzeh, more often seen in the local mosque or his father's grocery, is now living in the palace is remarkable to his childhood neighbours.
Mohammed Samy, the local barber who gave Sharaa the occasional haircut, recalls how people used to jokingly call the man who now rules Syria "Abu Ahmed" - Ahmed's father. He seemed older than his adolescent years. Unlike his brothers, he wasn't one to hang around with teenagers.
Sharaa spent his 20s in Iraq as a footsoldier for al-Qaida and his 30s in the rocky hills of Idlib leading a jihadist militia. Now he wears tailored suits and expensive watches and is described by his new ally, the US president Donald Trump, as a "young, attractive guy. Tough guy. Strong past."
The question for Sharaa a year after the fall of Bashar al-Assad is what sort of leader will he be? Is he a careful operator who might be persuaded to heed growing demands from Syrian minorities and more secular revolutionaries to build an inclusive democracy? Will he rule like a warlord, as he did in Idlib? Or is he a new kind of autocrat, willing to rebuild and employ Assad's security state, and to rule with an iron fist?
Becoming president
When The Observer met Sharaa in Idlib in 2023, he was dressed in a black fleece and scuffed trainers and was uncomfortable being photographed. He did not look or act like someone who aspired to lead a nation - he was more focused on feeding the millions taking shelter in the city.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition December 07, 2025 de The Observer.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Observer
The Observer
Faulty and inaccessible defibrillators linked to dozens of deaths
On a Saturday afternoon in early November last year, the members of Beauchief Tennis Club in Sheffield were taking part in their annual winter league.
2 mins
November 23, 2025
The Observer
Behind the wheel I’m free. That irks some people
Motability for disabled people is no freebie, says Melanie Reid - it's sweet independence
2 mins
December 07, 2025
The Observer
Reform's record £9m crypto donation is just the latest offering from abroad
Two thirds of funds given to Nigel Farage's party this parliament have come donors with overseas interests
2 mins
December 07, 2025
The Observer
Trump’s favourite for Fed chair gets a cool reception from Wall Street
Donald Trump’s search for a new chairman of the Federal Reserve seemed to reach a conclusion last week — at least until Wall Street lobbying against his presumed choice put the announcement on ice.
3 mins
December 07, 2025
The Observer
Will the leftish parties unite to stop Nigel Farage from becoming PM?
It's time to start thinking about electoral pacts - though now it's near impossible to see how a bargain would be struck
4 mins
December 07, 2025
The Observer
‘The Greens are anti-Nato and think it’s all right to sell drugs. That’s nuts’
Keir Starmer says the thing he misses most as prime minister is taking long, solitary hikes in the countryside.
8 mins
December 07, 2025
The Observer
Riddled with bullet holes and grief, Sangin has no choice but to remember the British
'Kill or capture' raids and 'call-out procedures' that ended in unexplained deaths in Afghanistan are at the heart of the hearing into war crimes. Oliver Marsden tours a still traumatised land
9 mins
December 07, 2025
The Observer
Aid in a post-aid world
In a world where much foreign policy is in Trumpian disarray, it is hard to spare a thought for multilateralism - just another victim in a global road crash.
4 mins
December 07, 2025
The Observer
A year after Assad, Syria and the world wait to see if Sharaa is democrat or despot
As a grocer's son turned jihadist warlord marks the anniversary of his toppling of the regime, a shattered country still fears his intentions, report Ruth Michaelson and Saad Alnassife in Damascus
9 mins
December 07, 2025
The Observer
Nicolai Tangen: 'Even if AI is a bad bubble, it's directing capital toward change'
The CEO of Norges says markets are 'very hot' and this time it is different from the dotcom crisis, AI will be transformative, he says, but will create inequalities between developed and poorer nations
7 mins
December 07, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
