How will control of territories in northern Syria change by May 31, 2025?
SDF gains control • 25%
Turkish-backed forces gain control • 25%
Stalemate with no change • 25%
Other outcome • 25%
Reports from credible news organizations and territorial control maps
Turkey Denies Ceasefire with SDF, Calls US Statement a 'Slip of the Tongue'
Dec 19, 2024, 09:19 AM
Turkey has denied any ceasefire agreement with the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in northern Syria, contradicting a US announcement. A Turkish Defense Ministry official stated that Turkey does not negotiate with terrorist organizations and considered the US statement a 'slip of the tongue.' The official added that preparations and measures to fight terrorism will continue until the PKK/YPG lay down their arms and foreign fighters leave Syria. Turkey believes that Syria's new administration and the Syrian National Army, alongside the Syrian people, will liberate regions occupied by the PKK/YPG. The Turkish Defense Ministry emphasized that it will continue to take preventive and destructive measures against terrorist groups in Syria and cooperate with Syria's new administration in combating terrorism. Meanwhile, the SDF accused Turkey and Turkish-backed groups of not abiding by a decision to declare a ceasefire in Manbij and northern regions. The SDF announced that they will fight Turkey and its allied forces in Kobani, called on the people of Kobani to carry weapons, and emphasized the importance of stopping escalation, halting all military operations, and resolving all pending issues.
View original story
PKK/YPG regain control • 25%
Stalemate with no change • 25%
Other groups gain control • 25%
Turkey gains more control • 25%
Other outcome • 25%
Türkiye gains control • 25%
SDF retains control • 25%
Joint control established • 25%
Turkey gains control • 25%
Other groups gain control • 25%
Status quo maintained • 25%
PKK/YPG gains control • 25%
Turkey gains control • 25%
Control remains contested • 25%
Syrian government regains control • 25%
YPG retains control • 25%
Controlled by Turkey • 25%
Controlled by other factions • 25%
Controlled by Syrian government • 25%
Controlled by YPG • 25%
Control remains unchanged • 25%
Other changes • 25%
Increased control by Turkey • 25%
Increased control by YPG • 25%
Syrian government • 25%
YPG • 25%
Other Kurdish groups • 25%
Other factions • 25%
Controlled by rebel groups • 25%
Controlled by new Syrian government • 25%
Controlled by foreign powers • 25%
Mixed control • 25%
Syrian government • 25%
Other • 25%
Joint control • 25%
Rebel forces • 25%
Government regains control • 25%
Rebels gain significant control • 25%
International intervention • 25%
Stalemate continues • 25%
Controlled by Syrian government • 25%
Other/Unclear control • 25%
Controlled by rebel groups • 25%
Controlled by Kurdish forces • 25%
Other • 25%
Status quo maintained • 25%
Increased opposition control • 25%
Increased government control • 25%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
No international involvement • 25%
UN mediation • 25%
Other international action • 25%
NATO intervention • 25%