Jaysh al-Ahrar

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Leaders
  • Hasim al-Sheikh ("Abu Jaber", founder and commander until Sept. 2017)[1]
  • Abu Saleh Tahan[2]
  • Khalil Ismail Arslan ("Abu Ismail Gubas", deputy commander) [3]
  • Walid al-Mushayil ("Abu Hashim", artillery commander)[4]
Dates of operation1 December 2016–22 January 2017[5]
14 September 2017[6]-29 January 2025
Split from Ahrar al-Sham[7]
Groups
  • Liwa al-Tamkeen[5]
  • Liwa Ahrar al-Jabal al-Wastani[5]
  • Martyr Ali Mutlaq Battalion[8]
  • al-Naasan Bloc[9]
Jaysh al-Ahrar
Army of the Free
Arabic: جيش الأحرار
Leaders
  • Hasim al-Sheikh ("Abu Jaber", founder and commander until Sept. 2017)[1]
  • Abu Saleh Tahan[2]
  • Khalil Ismail Arslan ("Abu Ismail Gubas", deputy commander) [3]
  • Walid al-Mushayil ("Abu Hashim", artillery commander)[4]
Dates of operation1 December 2016–22 January 2017[5]
14 September 2017[6]-29 January 2025
Split from Ahrar al-Sham[7]
Groups
  • Liwa al-Tamkeen[5]
  • Liwa Ahrar al-Jabal al-Wastani[5]
  • Martyr Ali Mutlaq Battalion[8]
  • al-Naasan Bloc[9]
Active regionsNorthwestern Syria
IdeologySunni Islamism
Salafism
Salafi Jihadism[7]
StatusDissolved[10]
Size1,500–2,000 (Jan. 2017)[11]
Part of Tahrir al-Sham (Jan.–Sep. 2017)[12]
National Front for Liberation (since Aug. 2018)[4]
Defeat the Invaders Operations Room (Feb.–May 2018)[13]
Allies Tahrir al-Sham Turkistan Islamic Party in Syria
Ahrar al-Sham
Sham Legion
Free Syrian Army[13]
Opponents Ba'athist Syria
Iran
Russia
Hezbollah
Warsthe Syrian Civil War

Jaysh al-Ahrar (Arabic: جيش الأحرار, lit.'Army of the Free'), was an armed Salafi Islamist rebel group in northwestern Syria that originated as a clique composed of 16 units in Ahrar al-Sham that opposed involvement in Operation Euphrates Shield, after a fatwa was released by religious clerics in Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, which led to the group's separation from Ahrar al-Sham.[7]

Most members of the group joined Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) in January 2017. The founding leader of Jaysh al-Ahrar, Hashim al-Sheikh ("Abu Jaber") was appointed as the head of HTS. Jaysh al-Ahrar left HTS in September 2017, and have since then closely cooperated with both HTS and Ahrar al-Sham, as well as other rebel groups in the area.[14]

At the Syrian Revolution Victory Conference, which was held on 29 January 2025, most factions of the armed opposition, including Jaysh al-Ahrar, announced their dissolution and were incorporated into the newly formed Ministry of Defense.[10]

Formation and HTS

References

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