With Cash and Aid, Saudi Arabia Pursues Soft Power Push in Syria
This handout picture released by the official Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) shows Saudi Arabia's Investment Minister Khalid bin Abdulaziz al-Falih (C-L) and his delegation being received at Damascus International Airport on July 23, 2025. ©SANA / AFP

After losing his arms in an ordnance explosion, Syrian teenager Mohammed Hasram was fitted with prosthetic limbs funded by Saudi Arabia, which is leveraging major investments and aid to gain influence over Damascus.

Since the overthrow of President Bashar al-Assad in December, Saudi Arabia has showered the new leadership with millions of dollars in assistance and investment pledges in the hope of steering it further into the kingdom's sphere of influence, analysts told AFP.

Syria was a battleground for outside powers throughout the conflict, with Iran and Russia backing Assad and Turkey and the United States supporting various armed groups.

As the Assad allies withdraw and Syria seeks to rebuild, Saudi Arabia is leveraging its oil wealth to expand its influence.

Its main goals are "keeping Syria within the Saudi camp" and "keeping the new Syria aligned on issues related to Lebanon, Hezbollah and Iran," said Umar Karim, a Saudi policy expert at the University of Birmingham.

Saudi Arabia has spent months courting Syria's new leaders, aiming to draw closer a country long dominated by Iran and Russia.

In May, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman convinced visiting US President Donald Trump to promise to lift Syria sanctions.

He also arranged a landmark meeting with Trump for Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa, a former jihadist who spent five years in US custody in Iraq.

The kingdom has deployed its vast oil wealth in pursuit of its goals. In July, Saudi Arabia signed investment and partnership deals with Syria valued at $6.4 billion to help with post-war reconstruction.

In April, Saudi Arabia vowed, alongside Qatar, to settle $15 million in Syrian debt to the World Bank.

'Fill the Vacuum'

It pledged to rebuild schools, hospitals, and bakeries and remove rubble from Syrian cities, as well as provide 1.65 million barrels of crude oil for electricity generation.

Saudi Arabia's soft power push comes as Qatar and Turkey, key supporters of Syria's new government, also vie for influence.

Riyadh wants to ensure that the "influence of other Gulf states never overrides that of Saudi, and lastly to balance out against Turkish influence," Karim said.

Since Assad's ouster, Saudi medical teams have fanned out across Syria, performing open-heart surgeries and cochlear implant operations.

Hasram, 13, beamed with joy as he spoke about his new limbs. "Now I can use the pen again, draw and play with my classmates," he told AFP.

Saudi aid efforts have been praised by Emergencies and Disaster Management Minister Raed al-Saleh, who told AFP the projects "strengthen Saudi Arabia's standing among Syrians."

During a visit to Damascus by Saudi aid agency KSrelief earlier this month, he described Riyadh as "a supporter on political, economic and humanitarian levels."

"Saudi support is clearly helping rebuild Syria," teacher Ahmad Hood told AFP at an aid handover ceremony.

But in the new rulers' wartime base in Idlib province in the northwest, shopkeeper Hamadi al-Rifai, 40, cautioned that Saudi "investments are good as long as there is no political impact or interference in domestic affairs."

For Rabha Seif Allam, a Syria expert at the Al-Ahram Center for Political Studies in Cairo, the kingdom is "trying to fill the huge vacuum" left by the ending of more than half a century of Assad family rule.

Alternative to Captagon

Saudi economic and humanitarian support aims to create "a forward defensive line for the Gulf to prevent Syria from sliding back into chaos or aligning with destabilizing regional axes," Allam said.

It is also hoping to curtail a rampant trade in the amphetamine-like narcotic captagon, which became Syria's largest export during the civil war and a key source of government revenue.

The kingdom has become a major market for captagon and normalized ties with the Assad government in 2023 after more than a decade of estrangement in the hope that Damascus would rein in the traffic.

Since Assad's overthrow, the new authorities have announced seizures of millions of pills, but the smuggling has not stopped.

"One of the goals remains the complete eradication of the captagon industry by providing a legitimate economic alternative," Allam said.

AFP

 

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