Syrian leader Sharaa’s path from global jihad to Trump meeting
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Mr Ahmed al-Sharaa (pictured) took power after his Islamist fighters launched an offensive in 2024 and toppled Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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DAMASCUS - Syria’s Ahmed al-Sharaa has transformed himself from Al-Qaeda militant to Syrian president in a dramatic political rise capped on May 14 by a meeting with US President Donald Trump
The encounter in Saudi Arabia is a milestone for a man who joined Al-Qaeda in Iraq around the time of the 2003 US-led invasion and spent years in a US prison there before returning to Syria to join the insurgency against Mr Bashar al-Assad.
The meeting – following Mr Trump’s announcement of an end to US sanctions on Syria
Mr Sharaa took power after his Islamist fighters launched an offensive from their enclave in the north-west in 2024 and toppled Mr Assad, whose allies Russia and Iran were distracted by other wars.
For a long time, he was better known as Abu Mohammad al-Golani, his nom de guerre as commander of the Nusra Front, an insurgent group fighting Mr Assad, and for years, Al-Qaeda’s official wing in the conflict.
Mr Sharaa cut ties with Al-Qaeda in 2016, gradually recasting his group as part of the Syrian revolution rather than global jihad.
He swopped combat fatigues for suits and ties after entering Damascus as Syria’s de facto ruler in December 2024, promising to replace Mr Assad’s brutal police state with an inclusive and just order.
He cited priorities including reuniting Syria, reviving an economy choked by sanctions, and bringing arms under state authority. His administration won significant backing from Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
But he has struggled to meet his aims as armed groups kept their weapons, sanctions remained, and sectarian killings left minority groups afraid of his rule.
Israel, alleging that Mr Sharaa remains a jihadist, has declared south Syria off-limits to his forces.
It said a strike near the presidential palace in Damascus on May 2 was a warning that it would not let Syrian forces deploy south of the capital or allow any threat to Syria’s Druze minority.
The challenges were laid bare in March when Assad loyalists attacked government forces in the coastal region, prompting a wave of revenge killing in which Islamist gunmen killed hundreds of civilians from the Alawite minority, from which Mr Assad hailed.
It amplified fears about the jihadist roots of Syria’s new ruling group, despite Mr Sharaa’s promises of tolerance and accountability for the killings.
Fears of a slide back towards authoritarian rule were hardened by a temporary Constitution focusing power in his hands.
Syariah law
Mr Sharaa characterised Mr Assad’s defeat as a God-given victory.
He sidestepped interviewers’ questions on whether he thought Syria should apply Islamic syariah law, saying it was for experts to decide. The temporary Constitution strengthened its role.
He cited revolutionary legitimacy for his designation as interim president. He has said elections will take place, but that Syria needs up to five years to organise them properly.
In a Reuters interview at the presidential palace, Mr Sharaa underlined his intention to turn the page on Mr Assad's rule.
“My chest tightens in this palace. I’m astonished by how much evil against society emanated from every corner,” he said.
Mr Sharaa was born in Saudi Arabia, where he spent the first years of his life, before moving to Syria.
His father was an Arab nationalist, an ideology at odds with Mr Sharaa’s political Islam.
In a 2021 interview with the US Public Broadcasting Service’s Frontline programme, Mr Sharaa said he was influenced by the second Palestinian Intifada, or uprising against Israeli occupation, which began in 2000.
He returned to Syria from Iraq once the uprising began, sent by the leader of the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Islamic State group in Iraq at the time, Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, to build up Al-Qaeda’s presence.
The US designated Mr Sharaa a terrorist in 2013, saying Al-Qaeda in Iraq had tasked him with overthrowing Mr Assad’s rule and establishing Islamic syariah law in Syria.
It said the Nusra Front had carried out suicide attacks that killed civilians and espoused a violent sectarian vision.
Mr Sharaa gave his first media interview in 2013, his face wrapped in a scarf and showing his back to the camera. He told Al Jazeera that Syria should be run according to syariah law.
In his 2021 Frontline interview, he faced the camera in a shirt and jacket. He said the terrorist designation was unfair and that he opposed the killing of innocent people.
Asked about his views on the Sept 11 attacks at the time they happened, Mr Sharaa said anybody in the Arab or Islamic world who said “he wasn’t happy would be lying to you, because people felt the injustice of the Americans in their support of the Zionists, their policies towards Muslims in general, and their clear and strong support of the tyrants in the region”.
“But people regret the killing of innocent people, for sure,” he said.
The Nusra Front had never presented a threat to the West, he said.
Despite its Al-Qaeda ties, Nusra was regarded as relatively less heavy-handed in dealings with civilians and other rebel groups than Islamic State. REUTERS

