Home Asia Turkiye To Supply Weapons, Train Syrian Army: Reports

Turkiye To Supply Weapons, Train Syrian Army: Reports

Turkiye, a NATO member, has been one of Syria's main foreign allies since the ousting of President Bashar al-Assad last year.
Turkiye Syria
Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad Hassan al-Shibani, accompanied by General Intelligence Service Director Hussein Al-Salama and Defence Minister Murhaf Abu Qasra, meets with his Turkiye counterpart Hakan Fidan in Ankara, Turkey, August 13, 2025. Turkish Foreign Ministry/Handout via REUTERS

Turkiye has agreed to supply weapons systems and logistical support to Syria under a new military cooperation deal signed on Wednesday, with Ankara also prepared to train Syrian forces in using the equipment if required, according to a source in the Turkish Defence Ministry.

Turkiye, a NATO member, has been one of Syria’s main foreign allies since the ousting of President Bashar al-Assad last year. It has vowed to help train and restructure Syria’s armed forces, rebuild the country and its state institutions, and support efforts to protect Syrian territorial integrity.

Top Brass Meetings

In a first step towards a comprehensive military cooperation accord that they have been negotiating for months, Turkiye and Syria inked a memorandum of understanding on Wednesday after extensive meetings between their foreign and defence ministers, and intelligence chiefs.

“The memorandum aims to coordinate, plan military training and cooperation, provide consultancy, information and experience sharing, ensure the procurement of military equipment, weapon systems, logistical materials and related services,” the Turkiye Defence Ministry source told reporters on Thursday.

Losing Patience

Turkiye has been growing impatient with what it calls the lack of implementation of a March deal between Damascus and the Kurdish-led, US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces for integrating the SDF into the Syrian state apparatus.

Ankara has warned of military action against the SDF, which it considers a terrorist organisation and against which it has carried out cross-border operations in the past.

It has said that clashes between the SDF and Syrian government forces earlier this month and a conference held by the SDF calling for a review of Syria’s constitutional declaration threatened the country’s territorial integrity.

The Turkiye source said the SDF had not met any of the conditions of the March deal and reiterated Ankara’s accusation that its actions were undermining Syria’s political unity.

“Our expectation is full compliance with the agreement that was signed and its urgent implementation in the field,” the source added.

(With inputs from Reuters)