
Syrian president is due to hold the first elections since the fall of the Assad regime?
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Tristan Redman
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Orla Guerin
Hey there, I'm Asma Khalid.
Tristan Redman
And I'm Tristan Redman, and we're here with a bonus episode for you from the Global Story podcast. On Monday, the Syrian President Ahmed Al Shara is in Washington and he'll be visiting the White House. Now if you remember, Al Sharar became president of Syria after Bashar Al Assad's regime was overthrown about a year ago. But what's notable about Al Sharar is that he was previously a member of Al Qaeda. He left the organization in 2016. But last week the UN Security Council voted in favor of a US resolution to lift sanctions against him. About a month ago on the Global Story, we did an episode about Al Sharah and and about Syria's first elections since Assad's fall and since Al Sharra came to power. Now, these elections were a landmark moment in Syria. On the one hand, they were the first serious elections that Syria's had in many decades. But they've also faced criticism for favoring well connected people in the country rather than paving the way for actual democratic change.
Orla Guerin
So we hope you enjoy this episode and to find more of our show, just search for the Global Story. Wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
Tristan Redman
Please.
Ahmed Al Shara
Join again in welcoming President Ahmed Al Shara to the stage.
Tristan Redman
Last week in New York we saw the new Syrian president, Ahmed Al Shara appear on stage alongside David Petraeus. These two men have every reason to.
Ahmed Al Shara
Hate each other because the fact is that we were on different sides. When I was commanding the surge in Iraq, you were, of course, detained by US forces for some five years, including again when I was the four star there. And here you are now as the president of Syria.
Tristan Redman
Petraeus was the commander of US forces in Iraq in the 2000s, and Al Shirah was an Al Qaeda soldier who fought against the American soldiers under Petraeus command. Yet the old general couldn't speak more highly of him.
Ahmed Al Shara
Are you getting time to do some thinking? Are you getting enough sleep at night again? I've been there and it is so very, very hard. And your many fans, and I am one of them, we do have worries.
Tristan Redman
These days. U.S. leaders want to like Al Sharra. They believe he's stopping Syria from disintegrating. The country is about to hold its first serious election in decades. But there are doubts about whether these elections might just be a sham. And there are big questions about who Ahmed Al Shara actually is and where he might lead Syria. I'm Tristan Redman and today on the Global. Are Syrians living their own miracle transition to peace and democracy? Or is America repeating a mistake it's made in the Middle east many times by backing tomorrow's dictator? Hello, Orla, this is Tristan.
Orla Guerin
Hi, Tristan. How are you?
Tristan Redman
Very well, thank you. Thank you so much for taking the time to speak with us, Ola. I really appreciate it.
Orla Guerin
I'm on a quite noisy route.
Tristan Redman
Orla Guerin is the BBC's senior international correspondent. She spent decades covering the Middle east and she's talking to me from the top of her hotel in Damascus in Syria.
Orla Guerin
Swirly carpet from the 1970s.
Tristan Redman
Oh, okay.
Orla Guerin
Terrible coffee and dreadful food. Yeah, okay.
Tristan Redman
I'm sorry to hear it.
Orla Guerin
Don't worry, there's plenty of good food to be had in this town.
Tristan Redman
A lot has happened, Orla, in the last year in Syria. After decades of dictatorship, Bashar Al Assad was ousted from power. He got on a plane and flew to Russia. There is a new president in Syria who's come to most of us out of nowhere. And then here we are nine months later and he's being feted by all and sundry. In New York, at the United nations, he was being shepherded around for high level meetings by Tom Barak, who's Trump's envoy to Syria. How surprised were you at the level of treatment that he received when he was in New York?
Orla Guerin
Well, you couldn't really imagine more of a red carpet being rolled out for anyone. It was quite safe. Staggering to watch when you consider that until last December, Ahmed Al Sharah was an individual with a $10 million US bounty on his head who led a prescribed organization that was considered to be a terrorist group by the un, by the eu, by the US and then we have him in New York where he's being taken to fancy restaurants, where he's standing, addressing the United Nations General Assembly.
Tristan Redman
Syria today is rebuilding itself through establishing a new state, building institutions and laws that guarantee the rights of all without exception. A land of ancient civilization and culture deserves to be a state of law.
Orla Guerin
Where he's being interviewed on a podium by the former director of the CIA, David Petraeus. I watched those exchanges at the time and I found them absolutely extraordinary. I mean, one thing for David Petraeus to be respectful towards the man who is now the head of state in Syria, but it was far beyond that. You know, sounding worried about him on a personal level, I think that was a degree of warmth that I wasn't expecting. These two men were firmly, firmly on opposite sides of a very bloody conflict. And to see them both face to face, sitting together, Al Sharah not wearing his camouflage military fatigues, but looking very comfortable in a smart business suit. And it was interesting when he was speaking that night, we were on the roof here in Damascus doing some lives. His speech was being broadcast in the main square behind me on a big screen. There were fireworks going off. The traffic came to a standstill. Syrians were staying to watch. And we had spoken to people a few hours beforehand saying, what does this mean? And one young woman said, listen, my father can't remember a time in his lifetime when Syria has been represented like this.
Tristan Redman
That's extraordinary.
Orla Guerin
It is, it is. And it's happened at a speed that I think few could have imagined. But we have seen from the very start last December, when Ahmed Al Shiraz swept into Damascus, there has been huge buy in from the United States. And there is a huge desire internationally that Syria should be stable at a time when the Middle east is more unstable than ever.
Tristan Redman
Well, today we really want to get a sense of where he comes from, who the man is, and what we might be able to glean about his future plans and the future prospects for Syria if he remains president. Where does Al Shiraz story start for you?
Orla Guerin
Well, he came from an educated family. His father worked overseas in Saudi Arabia. He spent his first few years there. Then the family returned to Damascus. People who knew him, during his childhood say that he and his siblings were disciplined, he was religious, he was well educated. But I think his path, quite possibly to jihad was because of the huge events that happened in the region at the time. The 911 attacks carried out by Al Qaeda, the second Palestinian intifada. It was a time very much of turmoil in the region. My fellow citizens, at this hour, American and coalition forces are in the early stages of military operations to disarm Iraq, to free its people and to defend the world from grave danger. And he got on a bus in Damascus, as many other young Syrians did at the time. America faces an enemy, has no regard for conventions of war or rules of morality. And he went and he took up arms in Iraq and he was there for seven years. These are opening stages of what will be a broad and concerted campaign. And there are reports that during that time his family didn't really know whether he was dead or alive. He has not said that much about that period of his life and has not been anxious to answer questions about it. But it's certainly something he cannot deny. It exists and it's on the public record. He was a member of Al Qaeda in Iraq and he left Iraq and came back to Syria and set up Jabar Al Nusra, which was actually the Al Qaeda affiliate here in Syria.
Tristan Redman
He obviously doesn't like talking about it, but do we know anything about what he did in those years as a fighter or as a militant in Iraq?
Orla Guerin
Little enough. I mean, the key point that he has claimed is that he does not have blood on his hands in relation to civilians in Iraq. That is something we cannot confirm or deny. I have no doubt that in the last 10 months people have been digging furiously into his background and trying to make contact with people who may have known him in Iraq during that time, but there is very little information or detail about it.
Tristan Redman
You mentioned that Al Sharra was in Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. Now, that was the notorious prison where there was a famous scandal which revealed mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners by American jailers and caused a huge scandal in the region. How formative was this experience for him?
Orla Guerin
Well, I think we have to assume that, as with many others, that he learnt in prison from other jihadis, that he made connections. We certainly know that he got to know Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi, who went on to become the leader of is the Islamic State. And little enough is known or written about that time, but it has been reported that he was in prison. As he was out of prison, a very Conservative, religious, very serious figure, a very disciplined figure. And that seems to have been his reputation right through the years.
Tristan Redman
So you said that he was sent back to Syria to form this organization called the Nusra Front. Who were the Nusra Front?
Orla Guerin
Well, they were all the fighters he could gather together. He came back here to set up this organization. This was after the Arab Spring. This was after the revolution had begun in Syria. He was an opponent of the Assad regime, but he then went to the northwest to Idlib province, which is a very conservative area. And over time he attracted more supporters and fighters, including foreign fighters, to Jabhat Al Nusra. And he built this fighting force which came to be seen as effective and serious and disciplined and perhaps more professional, if I can use that word, than some of the other groups that were part of the rebel alliance that was trying to unseat Bashar al Assad.
Tristan Redman
Ola, we can hear the call to prayer behind you there, which is quite evocative given that I'm sitting in a small studio in a building. So Al Sharra's group, the Nusra Front, eventually end up capturing the city of Idlib in, in Syria. How significant is that in his story?
Orla Guerin
Well, it became a very important power base and I suppose in a way a testing ground for him. He and the group took over and his emphasis at that time seems to have been to show himself to be an efficient administrator. And there are some who feel that his approach was, and I use this word carefully, moderately Islamic rather than more strictly so. He proved himself as a leader who could do things in the civilian arena as well as on the battlefield.
Tristan Redman
From his base in Idlib, he then advances on Damascus which results in the fall of Assad. How does he pull this off militarily?
Orla Guerin
It would be wrong, I think, to paint Al Sharah as the man who managed to single handedly topple Bashar Al Assad. Without other regional developments, that simply would not have happened. First and foremost, the Russians, who had been very strong supporters of Bashar al Assad, militarily going as far as dropping barrel bombs on Syrian civilians at the behest of the regime. The Russians obviously got very busy elsewhere. President Putin was prosecuting and still is a war in Ukraine. So his focus was not on syndrome, saving Bashar al Assad. The other thing that was extremely significant at that time was the weakening of the Iranian backed militia Hezbollah, which again had been an important ally of President Assad. Hezbollah was greatly weakened because Israel had gone to war again in Lebanon and really targeted the organization. So Assad's key allies, one by one had basically fallen away or got preoccupied elsewhere. And we also had a very strong push from Turkey, which has backed the anti Assad rebels from the very beginning and which wanted to see them get as far as Damascus. And there's another interesting point that a lot of people speculate about here. Was there a deal done? Was there some kind of agreement made with the regime or elements of the regime? Because it is worth noting that in that 11 day sweep that Al Sharah had to Damascus, you know, there wasn't much fighting. He arrived here without too much opposition and an awful lot of the regime simply melted away.
Tristan Redman
Well, it's been about 10 months since Assad has fallen and 10 months since Al Sharah has taken power in Damascus. What has he shown us since then about how he intends to govern Syria?
Orla Guerin
His focus has been very much in the first few months on wooing the international community, not just the us, but of course particularly the us, but also Gulf Arab states and the eu. He wants to get investors into Syria. He wants to do that as quickly as possible. I mean, this is a country where many people are living below the poverty line. They have been unable to find work. There are areas of massive epic destruction. So there are many Syrians displaced, there are many unemployed. And one of the key things, of course, is that he needs to reconnect Syria to the international banking system at the moment. If, if you want to pay a bill in Damascus, you're carrying around bricks of Syrian pounds in a plastic bag. He needs to try and address those issues. And I think he has to have something to show the goodwill that he enjoys at the moment will last a certain amount of time. But you already hear people saying he's made a lot of promises, he's made a lot of announcements. We've heard that money is coming, but we're not seeing it yet. One of his key messages since last December has been that he would be a president for all Syrians and that he would unify the country. And that was very much part of his interview when he spoke to the BBC's international editor, Jeremy Bowen here in Damascus last December.
Tristan Redman
You've made a lot of promises. You said that you'll respect the mosaic of different sectarian groups, minorities as well. Are you going to keep those promises? The Syrian population has lived together for thousands of years. We're going to discuss all of it. We're going to have dialogue and make sure everyone is represented. The old regime always played on sectarian divisions, but we won't Is there a sense in Damascus that people feel concerned about his supposed conservativism? Is Damascus a relatively liberal place?
Orla Guerin
I think it's quite mixed. I mean, when you go to the Old city, it's full of surprises. There's a tattoo parlor and a karaoke bar. I don't remember them being there on my last visit in 2005. Maybe they were and I missed them. But you do find people who are concerned about things like, for example, is there going to be a prohibition on alcohol? Are women going to be told to dress more conservatively? In the past, when Ahmad al Sharahi has been asked about this kind of issue, he has said, look, when I was in charge in Idlib, 60% of the university graduates were women. So that has been his answer. So I think he is trying at the moment to kind of walk a fine line and find the middle ground. But there are certainly deep seated concerns that people here have that this may be the honeymoon period and that a more hardline approach could emerge.
Tristan Redman
Coming up There are early signs that all is not as it seems in the Middle East's newest democracy.
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Tristan Redman
Who's actually in charge in Syria right now? Because it's obviously a country that's come out of debt, decades of dictatorship. Who is running the show right now?
Orla Guerin
So there is an interim administration, which he heads. He is the transitional president. He has said it will take four years, about four years to write a new constitution, slightly more than that to hold full elections in the normal sense. We have an electoral process that will take place here in the coming days, but not a real election as we would know it. Members of a transitional assembly will but two thirds of them will be chosen by committees in various districts and one third will be appointed by the president. And certainly you hear rumblings here, complaints that, you know, powerful family members of the president, including one of his brothers, are being given an outsize role. And you hear people saying when you contact the various ministries, okay, there are the officials there, but somehow there's a sheikh, a religious figure in the background, and he really is the one who has the say. And somebody made an interesting point this week. They said that Al Sharra is benefiting from the legacy of fear that remains, that people are afraid that they don't want to challenge the new authorities, that they're still very much sort of feeling out this new phase for Syria.
Tristan Redman
Well, the way you describe the elections to me there, Ola, it sounds like this is not direct suffrage. This is not direct democracy. How confident do people feel there in the state of a future democracy?
Orla Guerin
I think the jury is out. Many Syrians hope That the future for them will hold a proper democracy, that their country will stay together, that they will finally have some stability and some peace. This exercise, this representative assembly that's being chosen, some are welcoming it as, as a first step. Others will say this is a charade and it really doesn't mean much.
Tristan Redman
Ola, you mentioned that Al Shiraz brother is playing a role in the government. It strikes me that Syria has just emerged from a dictatorship where family ties were kind of a key part of the government. You had Assad the father, Assad the uncle, Assad the president, Assad the brother. How do Syrians feel about the possibility of this family element starting to creep into government?
Orla Guerin
People are very concerned about this, very anxious. They certainly do not want to see a repeat of the Assad era dynasty. Now at this stage, we cannot say if he is going down the path of Bashar Al Assad in plundering Syrian resources or accumulating national wealth for himself. We simply don't know. But people are concerned about the appearance of cronyism and about the appearance of undue influence by some of his family members.
Tristan Redman
So we've talked about the lack of direct democracy, potentially the appearance of cronyism. Which brings us back to Al Shiraz appearance in New York last week at the United Nations. What is it that he wants from the international community and what do the international community want from him?
Orla Guerin
I think he wants legitimacy. He's certainly appealing for more support for Syria, for more investment. One of his big pleas when he spoke to the General assembly was for the lifting of all U.S. sanctions. You may remember that President Trump announced that sanctions would be lifted, but in fact the legislation which governs them is still on the statute books and Congress hasn't yet taken action about that. And Ahmed Al Sharra and many Syrians feel that until that happens, there is kind of a block in the path of the international community coming in here to invest, to trade, to accept that Syria is back in the international community. But I think with that one speech and that one appearance at the General assembly, he did a massive amount to bring Syria in from the cold.
Tristan Redman
Well, I just wonder, Ola, if you think that there is a helping of maybe hoping for the best from some leaders in the international community. I mean, isn't it a well worn path, especially for the United States in the Middle east, to back a new leader who claims to be a transitional figure in the hopes that that leader will hold together a difficult situation, prevent a descent into chaos and you know, possibly later on things don't turn out so well you might find your find a dictator in charge. Have we been here before?
Orla Guerin
We have been here before in the Middle east, certainly, and more than once. There is no doubt that the international community wants to see Al Shira succeed and may, if the time comes, be willing to turn a blind eye to things that appear troubling to people in Syria. They want to see him hold the country together. I think one of the major concerns is that we do not have yet more instability in the Middle East. But certainly Donald Trump was characteristically quick to pass judgment on Al Shirab. How did you find the Syrian president?
Tristan Redman
Great, great.
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I think very good.
Orla Guerin
And after their first meeting, pronounced him to be a tough, attractive guy, young attractive guy, tough guy with a strong past, strong pass, very strong past fighter, which I think was a phrase that many found slightly curious, given that that strong past was bound up very closely with Al Qaeda. But it showed.
Tristan Redman
Strong pass is doing a lot of work in that. In that situation.
Orla Guerin
It is. And of course, that says a lot about Trump himself and about the approach, the very transactional approach he is prepared to take to international politics and the allies he decides to make. But I think to some extent, and perhaps with more caution and more nuance, the international community has adopted a similar approach.
Tristan Redman
Donald Trump has made it very clear that he wants a peaceful resolution to the situation in Syria. What does the United States have to gain from having such a close relationship with Ahmed Al Shara?
Orla Guerin
Well, I think, as ever, when it comes to Donald Trump and the Middle east, you have to consider Israel and Israel's position. There is a lot of friction and a lot of tension between Syria and Israel because there is the unresolved issue of the Golan Heights. Now, this is Syrian land that was occupied by Israel in 1967 and was annexed by Israel after that. And since last December, when Al Sharah came to power, Israel has been pushing forward, carrying out incursions, carrying out raids, attacking Syria over a thousand times, in the words of Al Shira. And in fact, where I'm sitting, I can see the Defense Ministry, which was bombed by Israel. So Israel is pushing for a greater degree of control here. President Trump is pushing for a security pact between Syria and Israel. Syria seems willing in principle to come to some sort of agreement. It wants to have a de escalation. It certainly does not want to be bombed by Israel on a regular basis. And Ahmed Al Sharrah has said, we are not interested in war, we are interested in rebuilding. But that is an issue that remains to be resolved.
Tristan Redman
Ola you've reported from all around the Middle east for a very long time. Is this what a transition to democracy looks like? I mean, I'm sure you've seen things go badly and you've seen things go better. What's your gut feeling about what's happening in Syria right now?
Orla Guerin
I would like to say I'm optimistic. In all honesty, I'm not sure. I think we will know a lot more in the next six months when the initial euphoria that people felt has worn off. One Syrian said to me this week, we're cursed by hope. Which I thought was a very poetic way of putting it. And I think a lot of people here have the curse of hope. They really want to believe, after suffering for so long, for more than 50 years, that Syria will now have a chance to fully emerge from this nightmare.
Tristan Redman
Ola, we've watched the sun go down behind you whilst we've been talking. I have to assume that this is the moment of the day when you go off to the karaoke bar, Is that right?
Orla Guerin
I wouldn't subject the people of Damascus to karaoke by myself. No, no, this is. This is the moment when I go off to do some more work.
Tristan Redman
Okay. Thank you so much, Ola. We really appreciate it.
Orla Guerin
Cheers, guys.
Tristan Redman
That's it for today's show. And if you like what we do, please rate us wherever you're listening. Today's episode was made by Cat Farnsworth and Valerio Esposito. It was edited by James Shield and mixed by Travis Evans. The senior news editor is China Collins. We'll be back tomorrow. Cheerio.
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Podcast: Global News Podcast
Episode: The Global Story: The Rehabilitation of Syria’s ex-jihadist president
Host: BBC World Service, Tristan Redman
Date: November 9, 2025
Featured Guest: Orla Guerin, Senior International Correspondent, BBC
This special episode examines the remarkable transformation of Ahmed Al Shara from a former Al Qaeda member to the President of Syria and international statesman. The discussion explores Al Shara’s background, the response of Syrians and the international community to his rise, skepticism about Syria’s shift to democracy, and the delicate balance of hopes and anxieties shaping the country’s future.
"It was quite staggering to watch when you consider that until last December, Ahmed Al Shara was an individual with a $10 million US bounty on his head... And then we have him in New York...addressing the United Nations General Assembly."
— Orla Guerin [05:32]
"He has not said that much about that period of his life and has not been anxious to answer questions about it. But it's certainly something he cannot deny. It exists and it's on the public record."
— Orla Guerin [09:54]
"In that 11-day sweep that Al Shara had to Damascus... there wasn’t much fighting... an awful lot of the regime simply melted away."
— Orla Guerin [15:17]
"He wants to get investors into Syria...he has to have something to show. The goodwill...will last a certain amount of time, but you already hear people saying he’s made a lot of promises...but we’re not seeing it yet."
— Orla Guerin [16:01]
"This exercise...some are welcoming it as a first step. Others will say this is a charade and it really doesn't mean much."
— Orla Guerin [23:21]
"Donald Trump...after their first meeting, pronounced him to be a tough, attractive guy, young attractive guy, tough guy with a strong past—which I think was a phrase that many found slightly curious, given that that strong past was bound up very closely with Al Qaeda."
— Orla Guerin [26:58]
"One Syrian said to me this week, 'we're cursed by hope.' Which I thought was a very poetic way of putting it."
— Orla Guerin [29:33]
On Al Shara’s Rehabilitation:
"You couldn't really imagine more of a red carpet being rolled out... absolutely extraordinary."
— Orla Guerin [05:32]
On Al Shara’s Personal Leadership Style:
“His emphasis at that time seems to have been to show himself to be an efficient administrator... moderately Islamic rather than more strictly so.”
— Orla Guerin [13:13]
On US Support and the Risk of Repeating Mistakes:
"Is America repeating a mistake it's made in the Middle East many times by backing tomorrow's dictator?"
— Tristan Redman [03:39]
On the Precariousness of Change:
"People here have the curse of hope. They really want to believe, after suffering for so long... that Syria will now have a chance to fully emerge from this nightmare."
— Orla Guerin [29:52]
The tone is a blend of informed skepticism and cautious optimism. Both host and guest interweave factual reporting with personal observations from years of reporting in Syria and the region. They balance diplomatic assessments with the voices and anxieties of ordinary Syrians, offering listeners a nuanced portrait of a nation at a historic crossroads.
This summary provides a comprehensive overview of the discussion for listeners seeking to understand Syria's new chapter and the profound uncertainties that accompany it.