I’ve said for a couple years now that we’re living through something bigger than a single war in a single place. Call it a world war, call it a multi-front conflict, call it the beginning stages of a new global order collapsing and reforming—whatever label you prefer, the point is this:
What happens in one theater affects the others, and the people pretending these conflicts are isolated are either naïve or lying.
Northeast Syria: the quiet tension under the surface
Yesterday we pushed as far northeast as you can go inside Syria—close enough to see the tri-border area where Iraq, Iran, and Turkey squeeze together. We drove right along the Turkish border wall. We passed an American base that is still functional, and we watched a U.S. convoy roll by—MRAPs, American flags, escorting tankers and cargo trucks that looked like a resupply run.
So yes: there are still U.S. troops here, and they’re positioned where the oil infrastructure is. This matters, because it tells you what Washington is willing to hold onto even when it publicly pretends it’s “done” with Syria.
This whole region is still considered Kurdish-held territory. And even as Kurdish authorities try to manage the political reality of new forces pushing in—playing “friendly,” flashing peace signs, trying to keep the temperature down—the underlying truth hasn’t changed:
The Kurds haven’t abandoned the dream of a state.
There are still voices calling for Rojava—everything east of the Euphrates—to be declared sovereign. That probably isn’t going anywhere diplomatically, but it tells you the story here isn’t “resolved.” It’s paused. And pauses in this part of the world are usually just the breath you take before the next sprint.
Derek, displaced families, and the kind of “aid” that lasts longer than food
We also went to the town of Derek, in the far northeast corner—right on the Turkish border. Our Free Burma Rangers team was there to run a Good Life Club and do food distribution for internally displaced families living in a school.



