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Haid Haid

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Dr. Haid Haid is a Syrian columnist and a consulting fellow with the Middle East and North Africa program at Chatham House.

Previously, Dr. Haid was a research fellow at the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation (ICSR), King’s College London. He also worked as a program manager on Syria and Iraq at the Heinrich Böll Stiftung Middle East Office in Beirut.

Prior to that, Dr. Haid worked as a senior community services protection assistant at UNHCR’s Damascus office. He has a bachelor’s degree in sociology, a postgraduate diploma in counselling, master’s degrees in social development and in conflict resolution and a PhD in war studies.

Dr. Haid’s main research interests include security policies, governance, conflict resolution, and non-state actors.

The Latest from Haid Haid

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Assad’s economic fragility exposed by Israel’s war on Lebanon
Photo by Louai Beshara/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Assad’s economic fragility exposed by Israel’s war on Lebanon

    Israel’s escalation of its military campaign against Hezbollah in Lebanon has severely disrupted the cross-border flow of goods into Syria that have long served as a critical lifeline for Damascus. These interruptions have worsened existing shortages, triggering sharp increases in the prices of essential commodities for Syrian who were already struggling economically.

    October 30, 2024

    Smoke and mirrors: The Syrian regime's dubious anti-drug campaigns
    Photo by JOSEPH EID/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Smoke and mirrors: The Syrian regime's dubious anti-drug campaigns

    The Syrian regime recently announced that it had arrested over 2,000 people in Damascus on drug-related charges during the first half of 2024. However, the relatively small amount of drugs confiscated suggests the regime is focusing on arresting users and street-level pushers rather than going after the major producers and traffickers. This highlights how the Syrian regime manipulates drug crackdowns to serve multiple agendas while ensuring the flow of illicit drugs continues uninterrupted.

    July 11, 2024

    Syrians turn to street justice to free relatives from Assad's prisons
    Photo by SUWAYDA 24/AFP
  • Analysis
  • Syrians turn to street justice to free relatives from Assad's prisons

    In recent weeks, the southern Syrian province of Sweida has seen a series of kidnappings targeting regime military officers. Unlike the financially motivated incidents common in the region, these abductions, which occurred on April 2 and 25, stand out because they targeted individuals based on their affiliation with the regime of Bashar al-Assad rather than their personal identities. Reports suggest that Sweida residents orchestrated the abductions as a way of negotiating the release of relatives detained by the regime.

    May 8, 2024

    Locals fight their own war on drugs in Syria’s Daraa Province
    Photo by FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Locals fight their own war on drugs in Syria’s Daraa Province

    Since early last year there has been a surge in drug-related assassinations in Syria’s southwestern Daraa Province, adding a new layer to the region’s persistent violence. The regime’s complicity, driven by financial and political motives, has fostered a climate where drug networks operate with impunity, spurring locals to take matters into their own hands.

    January 9, 2024

    The soaring threat of drug drones from Syria
  • Analysis
  • The soaring threat of drug drones from Syria

    On Sept. 26, Jordan dealt a double blow to drug traffickers by intercepting two drones packed with crystal meth from Syria. But this is just the tip of a rapidly growing iceberg. In the past two months alone, Amman has thwarted four more drones, each laden with a deadly cocktail of drugs, arms, and explosives. This surge illuminates a disturbing evolution in the tactics of smuggling networks operating in southern Syria.

    October 11, 2023