Southern Syria’s Darkest Hour: A War of Extermination Against the Druze

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Sectarian violence erupted in southern Syria after a security incident involving robbery and kidnapping on the Damascus–Suwayda highway. The transitional authority in Damascus seized upon it as a political opportunity to forcibly bring the province under government control. This rapidly escalated into fierce combat and massacres against unarmed civilians of different faiths in Suwayda.

Over a week of clashes between government forces (backed by tribal militias) and local resistance, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights recorded 657 deaths: 196 were executed on the spot (including 8 children and 30 women), plus 464 members of the interior and defense ministries, 40 tribal fighters, and one Lebanese fighter. Three Bedouin tribespeople (including a woman and a child) were also killed. The true death toll is likely far higher, according to videos, photos, and eyewitness accounts.

The trigger on July 12 was a recurring attack—the abduction and robbery of a vegetable truck driver. Such attacks, often facilitated or tolerated by security forces, are viewed as punitive measures against Suwayda’s refusal to align with Damascus’s transitional government. Many locals described the spiraling events as A War of Extermination Against the Druze, underscoring the devastating scope of violence.

Despite claims the Ministry of Defense had integrated rogue factions—including some with ISIS affiliations—into its ranks, tribal and independent fighters bearing ISIS insignia have been documented in involvement with massacres earlier in the year and since July 14 in Suwayda.

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