Turkey Airstrike in Syria Claims Nine Lives, Sparks Outcry

Ahmad Al-Sharaa, the leader of the rebel faction that toppled Syrian President Bashar Assad last month, has been appointed as the country's interim president, according to a statement from Col. Hassan Abdul Ghani, spokesperson for the new de facto government, reported by state news agency SANA. The announcement follows a meeting of former insurgent factions in Damascus, where they also revealed plans to draft a new constitution, cancelling the previous one adopted under Assad's regime in 2012.
Al-Sharaa, previously affiliated with al-Qaida, now leads Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which has emerged as the ruling party since Assad's fall. He has pledged to create a unified national army and proposed including diverse Syrian communities in a national dialogue to form a new government. Despite previous US sanctions and a $10 million bounty, he was regarded as pragmatic by American diplomats following recent meetings in Damascus.
No immediate reactions have been reported from the broader Arab world regarding Al-Sharaa’s leadership, and significant challenges persist, especially concerning the autonomy of Kurdish groups in northern Syria.