Description
-- Author's Note --
I'm sorry if you're expect the design to be something akin to the last two, it was the original design I was going with but it ends up looking god awful. So, I revised it and I believe that this one is better since it's simple in design but the topography gives it a sense of depth that I always love. It's unfortunate since the sketch concept I drew days ago was amazing but it doesn't translate well with Illustrator, however.
Enough rambling, here's the description!
-- Description --
On the northern fringes of Syria, a small but resilient collection of Kurdish enclaves banded together to fend off the horrors of the civil war. But as each year passes by, it gradually evolved; from a simple means of defense to an actual quasi-polity committed to the libertarian ethos it espouses. That society will later be known as the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria, also known as Rojava.
Despite the misconception from the Westerners - depicted as a monolithic polity - Rojava is, in actuality, a diverse quasi-state comprised many ethnicities; from the Syrian Turks, Arabs, Turkmen, and even smaller enclaves such as the Armenians and Chechens.
The region is composed of three major cantons: Afrin, the Euphrates, and Jazira. Cantons represent the voice of their local electorates within their respective regions. They can propose and enact their own laws; as long as it doesn’t conflate with the respective articles from the Charter.
Their band of militias has proved to be very popular amongst the world, especially with libertarian socialist. They fought with great resolve and ferocity, with international militia brigades such as the IFB and the Women’s Protection Units making up a decent yet reputable chunk of their armed forces.
But they have yet to prove their mettle as the war is coming to an end and Assad’s goal to reunify his country seemed inevitable. Will, they survive? Well, that's not for us to decide.
Comments: 17
syppy1 [2023-01-24 19:12:54 +0000 UTC]
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Kalimutxo [2019-11-26 00:10:12 +0000 UTC]
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matritum [2018-07-14 19:57:35 +0000 UTC]
Nice work! It's very shocking Raqqa being part of this Democratic Federation of Nothern Syria, it was the capital city of Islamic State in past.
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DrakiTheDude In reply to matritum [2018-07-16 10:44:18 +0000 UTC]
The DFNS basically just incorporates provinces without their consent to actually join the federation. There have been many attempted protests against their rule but they've all been put down.
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DrakiTheDude In reply to Aleksandr-2 [2018-12-13 08:10:00 +0000 UTC]
Check syria.liveuamap.com, the situation has calmed now but before the armstice between the FSA and SAA every other day there was a story about "democratic protest being crushed" or "fire opened on civilians" in DNSF provinces.
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Aleksandr-2 In reply to DrakiTheDude [2018-12-13 21:22:23 +0000 UTC]
It appears to be just reposting any random news source I recommend doing some more independent research. Though the amount of such news reports seems a bit fishy.
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DrakiTheDude In reply to Aleksandr-2 [2018-12-14 06:44:11 +0000 UTC]
Just be happy we know this much about the Syrian civil war at all. Most wars are incredibly hard to report on, Yemen is a perfect example.
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whatkop [2018-07-14 12:01:37 +0000 UTC]
"Will, they survive?"
Not without the benevolent helping hand of the arsenal of democracy they won't. Doubt any of the great hegemons will give much of a care to a bunch of pacifists, though.
Ah, no good thing lasts forever.
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Charles-Porter [2018-07-13 21:21:20 +0000 UTC]
I hope Rojava can achieve some victory over Assad and either reunify Syria or gain independence but they are very likely to be conquered. Syria makes me really depressed because it's tragic how the Revolution died.
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ShahAbbas1571 In reply to Charles-Porter [2018-07-14 04:00:13 +0000 UTC]
Rojava, from what I've learned, never intended to be separated from Assad. Despite doing their own thing, they really seek the country to be federalized than anything, not cut it into chunks. So far, their relationship the Syrian government is ambiguous at best, which is a good thing since they're not seeking to destabilize the Northern region.
Also, I don't think being independent is a good thing for them, it just give Sultan Erdogan a good reason to kick their asses and the United States can't really afford to alienate an ally just for the sake of one autonomous region, especially when they don't really offer much strategic advantages.
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eddsworldbatboy1 In reply to ShahAbbas1571 [2018-07-14 22:12:39 +0000 UTC]
Independence would also be bad because of the destruction from the war. They would start with a mostly destroyed infrastructure
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Charles-Porter In reply to ShahAbbas1571 [2018-07-14 04:03:04 +0000 UTC]
I predict that to avoid further conflict Assad will federalize Syria to incorporate Rojava but after maybe 5 years he will begin to erode the autonomy of Rojava and eventually Syria will only be a federation in name.
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JonasGraf [2018-07-13 19:18:54 +0000 UTC]
Cool and interesting! Why is this territory on the border to Iraq not under them control? Its occupied by Isis ?
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ShahAbbas1571 In reply to JonasGraf [2018-07-13 19:53:27 +0000 UTC]
It's the remaining enclaves of ISIS, dude.
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