What is Syria’s Al-Qamishli base dispute?
Syria’s interim government plans to demand that Russian forces leave the Al-Qamishli airbase, their outpost in northeastern Hasakah province since 2019. The base serves as Russia’s primary foothold in the region previously controlled by US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). Talks may start once Hasakah fully integrates under Damascus control following a recent SDF agreement.
How did Russia end up at Al-Qamishli?
Russia established presence at Al-Qamishli amid the Syrian civil war to support Bashar al-Assad’s regime against rebels and ISIS. After Assad’s fall in December 2024, Moscow scaled back but consolidated at three sites, including reinforcements at Al-Qamishli from Hmeimim base in 2025. On January 20, 2026, Damascus issued a four-day truce to SDF for Hasakah integration plan, paving way for central authority.
What changes for Syrian-Russian military ties?
The demand signals Damascus reasserting sovereignty over foreign bases, targeting Al-Qamishli as unnecessary post-SDF integration. It affects Russia’s logistics in northeast Syria, near Turkish border, while Khmeimim and Tartus remain key for Mediterranean operations. Negotiations could revise Assad-era leases for Syrian financial or political gains like debt relief.
Who faces impact from Al-Qamishli talks?
Syria’s transitional government under President Ahmad al-Sharaa drives the policy to unify territory. Russian forces at the base, numbering a small contingent with helicopters and radar, must relocate supplies from Hmeimim if asked to leave. SDF fighters integrate into Syrian defense and interior ministries, handing over oil fields and border crossings.
What this demand does not signal?
This does not mean immediate Russian expulsion from all Syrian bases, as Khmeimim and Tartus stay operational. Reports of Russian evacuation from Al-Qamishli are inaccurate; recent A-50 flights brought reinforcements instead. No full Syria-Russia rift exists, with talks open for revised terms rather than outright conflict.
What developments follow Al-Qamishli status?
Monitor Hasakah integration progress after the January 20 truce, triggering formal Damascus-Moscow discussions. Track Russian redeployments or negotiations on base leases amid US envoy pushes for SDF merger. Watch if Turkey influences outcomes given PKK links to SDF near its border.
How we know this
Information draws from reports by Kommersant via Caliber.Az, The New Arab, Al Jazeera, and security analyses from think tanks like INSS, cross-checked against timelines from Syrian government announcements and Russian media.



