Following the ousting of Bashar al-Assad, Syria's new government is inviting investment in its oil and gas sector. The U.S.
Zour, which remains divided between Syria's new government and a Kurdish-backed militia, is a hostage to competing ambitions.
Before Syria’s civil war erupted in 2011, it was pumping almost 400,000 barrels a day of crude. Production has since slumped and many fields are in the hands of Kurdish forces rather than the ...
Though it has pinned its hopes on resurrecting both oil and agriculture, most of Syria’s oil fields and a large portion of its arable land are in the northeast, which is controlled by U.S ...
An agreement would potentially also end restrictions on financing exploring or refining oil ... Before Syria’s civil war erupted in 2011, it was pumping almost 400,000 barrels a day of crude.
For many years, the Syrian desert was an incredibly dangerous place. Experts believe the last remnants of Islamic State are still there. But are they really?
But as a new government takes shape in Damascus, Syrians and foreign observers alike worry about how inclusive, representative, and Islamist it may be. The country’s de facto leader, Ahmed al-Shara, ...
Syria's electricity sector, long plagued by a cascade of crises – from war-torn infrastructure and fuel shortages, to ...
They also reviewed “relations and opportunities for cooperation across various fields ... Syrian people,” Sharaa said. Sharaa arrived in Riyadh early Sunday on the landmark visit to the oil ...
The Defense Department is developing plans to withdraw all U.S. troops from Syria, two U.S. defense officials told NBC News ...