by Kevork Almassian, published on Kevork’s Newsletter, December 14, 2025
As Washington blesses monarchies and Jolani echoes Baghdadi’s words from the Umayyad Mosque, Syria is being steered from broken republic to Islamic throne.
SSM Editor: External forces are building a new Syria on the Saudi Model, only without the fortune in oil. This is not surprising, but this article is a real insight into a very backward and distorted form of governance, creating a dystopia most of us cannot imagine.
Standing on a Doha stage as Washington’s special envoy to Syria, Tom Barrack, representing not only the US administration but also the moods of Ankara, Doha, and Riyadh, calmly said out loud what twenty years of bloodshed were always really about.
In his words, what has “worked best” in the Middle East is a benevolent monarchy. Democracy, he argued, should not be imposed on the region. Israel “can claim” to be a democracy, he said, but in this part of the world, the truly functional system is a king, an emir, a family rule
Let’s translate this out of diplomatese:
- The US spent decades destroying Iraq, Syria, Libya, and Lebanon, killing hundreds of thousands, claiming it wanted to “export democracy.”
- Now, after the corpses are in the ground and Syria’s economy is in ruins, its envoy shrugs and says, “Actually, democracy doesn’t work there. Monarchies are better.”
And all of this, conveniently, just as Washington’s new man in Damascus – Abu Mohammed al-Jolani – walks into the Umayyad Mosque and starts speaking like a caliph.
From Doha to Damascus in 48 Hours
The timeline matters.
- Sunday: Tom Barrack in Doha, praising the “epic and heroic achievements” of Jolani’s regime after the fall of Assad, and insisting that a “benevolent monarchy” is the model that works best in the region.
- He warns against forcing democracy, mocks the idea of “we want a democracy in 12 months,” and explicitly says monarchies have a better track record than any supposed republics around.
- Two days later: Jolani appears in military fatigues at the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus – one of the most symbolically loaded pulpits in the Islamic world – and delivers a short but very clear message to Syrians:
“Oh Syrians, obey me as long as I obey Allah in you.”
He is not asking them to vote for him. He is not asking them to assemble, form parties, or debate a constitution.
He is demanding obedience. And not just political obedience, but obedience framed as a religious duty; conditional only on his own claim to be obeying God.
You do not need a PhD in Islamic political thought to hear what that implies. This is the language of bayʿa or the oath of allegiance to a ruler who claims to rule by divine law. This is the literature of caliphate, of Amir al-Mu’minin.
Tom Barrack says: “What works here is monarchy.”
Jolani answers: “Obey me as I obey Allah in you.”
Coincidence? I think not.
“Obey Me as I Obey Allah in You”: What It Really Means
“Obey me as I obey Allah in you,” is a political program:
- It repeats the same ideology Jolani enforced in Idlib when he put up banners declaring that democracy is polytheism and disbelief and that popular sovereignty is a violation of God’s rule.
- It closes the door on individual freedoms, social freedoms, and political freedoms. There is no longer a space where the citizen stands as a free agent; there is only the obedient believer and the commander who interprets God’s will.
- It shuts down the very concept of elections, human rights, women’s rights, and pluralism. The only “right” that matters is the right of the ruler to be obeyed as long as he claims to obey God.
This formula opens the door to:
- Islamic legislation replacing secular and human-rights-based law
- Ideas of jihad and the “ummah” overriding national citizenship
- Ending the public role of women
- Crushing every opponent of an extremist Islamist doctrine under the accusation of “disobeying God.”
“Obeying God” here is not about spirituality. It is about discipline – disciplining society into submission before a man who claims to be God’s executor on earth.
God has nothing to do with power, governance, and modern law. Dragging His name into every law, every prison, every bullet is an exploitation of God’s beautiful name, a way to sanctify tyranny.
That’s exactly what Jolani was doing from the minbar of the Umayyad Mosque.
Baghdadi Said It First
If all of this sounds familiar, it’s because we’ve heard it before from another man who thought he had been chosen to rule Muslims in God’s name.
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the so-called caliph of ISIS, stood in a mosque in Mosul and used the same sentence:
“Obey me as I obey Allah in you.”
The difference between Baghdadi and Jolani today is the production value.
Baghdadi had a black turban and a collapsing “caliphate”, hunted by every air force in the region. Jolani has:
- A presidential palace
- A Western PR team
- Friendly segments on CNN praising him as a “slick communicator.”
- And envoys like Tom Barrack calling his regime “epic” and “heroic” while floating the idea of monarchy as the best solution for Syria and the region.
An Islamic Monarchy on a Shattered Republic
Some people tell me that “an Islamic monarchy will never work in Syria. Too many sects, too many ethnicities. Jolani is on borrowed time.”
I wish I could agree. But history is less comforting.
Syria has already lived under Islamic caliphates: Umayyads, Abbasids, Ottomans, for centuries. Those structures were not “liberal monarchies.” They were religiously legitimized hierarchies, often intolerant, often suppressing local communities while relying on their labor and taxes. And they “worked” in the sense that they endured.
Today’s Syria is even more fragile:
- Christians, Alawites, Druze, Shi’a, Yazidis, many Kurds, secular Sunnis – all these groups exist, but their demographic weight is collapsing after years of war and emigration.
- The state has been shattered. Institutions hollowed out. Society traumatized.
In such an environment, a carefully managed Islamic monarchy or a caliphate-lite, marketed as “stability” and “order,” can absolutely be imposed, even if it is hated by large parts of the population.
Tom Barrack and the powers he represents – US, Turkey, Qatar, Saudi Arabia – know this very well. For them, the model is familiar:
- Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait – all are family monarchies in one form or another, blending religious or tribal legitimacy with absolute or near-absolute executive power.
- Such systems are easy to manage for foreign patrons: there is one man to bribe, one circle to arm, one palace to pressure.
Why should Syria, from their perspective, remain a messy republic?
A Sunni Islamist monarch in Damascus – Jolani crowned by bayʿa from mosque pulpits, backed by Turkish intel, Gulf money, and US security guarantees – would be the perfect local partner:
- Islamist enough to dominate society and crush secular or leftist opposition.
- “Reformed” enough to pass on CNN and to sign normalization deals with Israel when the time is ripe.
- Dependent enough on foreign backing to never seriously threaten the regional order.
What It Would Mean for Syrians
We don’t need to speculate. “Obey me as I obey Allah in you” means:
- No space for dissent. Any opposition to the ruler becomes opposition to God.
- No secular law. Sharia, as interpreted by the ruling clique, replaces civil codes and international human rights norms.
- No equal citizenship. Non-Muslims and “wrong” Muslims (Alawites, many Shi’a, some Sufi orders, secular Sunnis) become tolerated subjects at best, traitors at worst.
- No public role for women beyond what the ruling clerics consider acceptable.
- Permanent mobilization. Ideas of jihad and “the ummah” replace national development as the regime’s main narrative.
For minorities like Syria’s Christians, who have already lost a big portion of their community to emigration, this is a slow-motion extinction. Even those who stay will live as relics, museum pieces: “These were the Christians of Syria back in the day.”
For Kurds, Druze, Alawites, and secular Sunnis, it means life under a sectarian state that demands not just obedience but ideological conversion.
And for Lebanon, especially Tripoli and the north, it means being slowly pulled into Jolani’s orbit: Sunni populations mobilized to demand “reunification” with an Islamic Syria, creating pressure to redraw borders under the slogan of Muslim unity.
All of this is consistent with what we are already seeing:
- Jolani supporters are marching openly in Tripoli.
- Islamist demonstrations in European cities are celebrating him as a “liberator” while threatening dissidents and minorities.
- A slow normalization of his rule in Western media.
War on Terror, Now With a King
Twenty years ago, Washington told us it was fighting a “War on Terror” to stop exactly this kind of project: men claiming divine authority, ruling entire populations through fear packaged as faith.
Now, the same Washington sends an envoy to say:
“Democracies don’t work there. Monarchies do.”
And two days later, its preferred strongman in Damascus climbs the Umayyad minbar to proclaim:
“Oh Syrians, obey me as long as I obey Allah in you.”
The line between counter-terrorism and caliphate management has never been thinner.
Baghdadi said it in Mosul and became the world’s most wanted terrorist.
Jolani says it in Damascus and becomes a “partner,” a “president,” a future king in the eyes of those who destroyed Syria in the first place.
The project now is not to prevent an Islamic monarchy in Syria.
It is to build one, carefully, slowly, with good lighting, better sound, and the full blessing of the same powers that once claimed to bomb for democracy.
Syrians need to understand that when a man like Jolani asks for obedience “for God’s sake,” he is not offering salvation. He is offering serfdom, underwritten by the very foreign capitals that turned our republic into rubble.
—Kevork Almassian is a Syrian geopolitical analyst and the founder of Syriana Analysis.
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