Qué Sharaa, Sharaa
With concrete steps, Washington can keep Syria’s future on track.
Sharaa sits in an ornately decorated armchair with his hands folded in his lap. He is in his young 40s, wearing a suit and a beard. Barrack, an older bald man who also wears a suit, sits in another armchair at a diagonal. They face small low tables with water glasses on them; a Syrian flag hangs in the corner. September 5, 2025, 11:11 AM Comment icon View Comments ( )
Later this month, Syria’s Ahmed al-Sharaa will appear before the U.N. General Assembly—the first Syrian leader to do so since 1967. The world will be watching to see how he plans to navigate the religious and ethnic kaleidoscope of a country still traumatized by five decades of brutal authoritarian rule under the Assad family.