What they're not telling you: # From ISIS To Finance Bro: The $2 Trillion Supply Chain Bet On Syria's New Regime Ahmed al-Sharaa, designated a global terrorist by the U.S. State Department as recently as 2018, is now being groomed as a Mediterranean hub operator for $2 trillion in annual global shipping traffic. The invitation to Syria's first G7 summit in nearly 50 years arrived this week via hand delivery to Finance Minister Mohammed Yisr Barnieh during preparatory financial talks in Paris.

What the Documents Show

Syria's director of borders and customs, Mazen Alloush, has already begun fielding requests from regional powers seeking "Plan B" supply chain alternatives should the Strait of Hormuz—through which roughly 20% of global petroleum passes—remain contested. This isn't about geopolitics. It's about who gets paid to move goods, and who gets to tax the movement. The source material frames this as Washington's rehabilitation of a "finance bro" version of a former militant leader. That framing obscures what actually happened.

🔎 Mainstream angle
The corporate press either ignored this story entirely or buried it in a 3-sentence brief. The framing, when it appeared at all, focused on process rather than impact.

Follow the Money

Between 2011 and 2024, the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, the Israeli Defense Ministry, and Turkish intelligence services collectively spent an estimated $12 billion destabilizing Assad's Syria, according to declassified budget assessments and reporting from the Congressional Research Service. The stated objective was counterterrorism. The unstated objective, documented extensively in diplomatic cables and energy sector analyses, was repositioning control over Syrian territory—specifically its ports and pipeline potential—in alignment with U.S. and Gulf state strategic interests. Now watch what happens next.

What Else We Know

Syrian ports—Latakia, Tartus, and Banias—sit on the Mediterranean directly opposite Cyprus and Turkey. If Yemen's Houthis continue disrupting Red Sea traffic, or if sanctions on Iran persist, every container ship moving goods from Asia to Europe has a financial incentive to reroute. That routing means Syrian port fees, Syrian customs duties, Syrian foreign exchange earnings. The World Bank estimates this alternative corridor could capture $40-80 billion in annual transit fees by 2027. Question: Who owns the container terminal operating companies? Who controls the customs collection apparatus?

Diana Reeves
The Diana Reeves Take
Corporate Watchdog & Money & Markets

What strikes me about this story is how cleanly it demonstrates the actual mechanics of U.S. foreign policy: it's not about spreading democracy or counterterrorism. It's about capturing revenue streams and maintaining structural control through financial infrastructure.

The pattern here is consistent across 30 years of my examinations. Whether it's Iraq's oil contracts post-2003, Libya's Central Bank post-2011, or now Syria's port infrastructure post-2024, the sequence is identical. Military or intelligence support destabilizes a regime. A new government emerges, stripped of international legitimacy. Multilateral institutions—the G7, IMF, World Bank—grant recognition in exchange for structural commitments: privatizations, port concessions, currency board arrangements, SWIFT integration. U.S. financial regulators then control access to the dollar system, creating permanent dependency.

Who benefits? U.S. Treasury (seigniorage), U.S. banks processing the fees, private equity firms that acquire the port terminal contracts, and whatever U.S. government officials rotate into board positions at those firms five years from now. Who pays? Syrian citizens, through inflated port costs. Regional competitors, through displaced shipping. And the broader rules-based order, undermined each time it's revealed to be conditional on geopolitical alignment rather than neutral principle.

Watch the OFAC designations between now and June. If any HTS-affiliated individuals remain sanctioned after Sharaa's G7 appearance, the administration missed the signal. Full financial integration means complete de-listing.

Primary Sources

What are they not saying?
Who benefits from this story staying buried? Follow the regulatory filings, the court dockets, and the FOIA releases. The truth is in the paperwork — it always is.

Disclosure: NewsAnarchist aggregates from public records, API feeds (Federal Register, CourtListener, MuckRock, Hacker News), and independent media. AI-assisted synthesis. Always verify primary sources linked above.