Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa has downplayed his past links to the terrorist group Al-Qaeda and distanced himself from the 9/11 attacks.
Al-Sharaa, who was removed from the US State Department’s ‘global terrorist’ list last week, met with US President Donald Trump in the White House on Monday.
When asked about the 9/11 attacks and whether he has any regrets that al-Qaeda carried them out, Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa said to Fox News:
I was only 19 years old, so I was a very young person. And it didn’t have any decision-making power at that time. And al-Qaeda was… pic.twitter.com/1Mht8MrqFU
— Levant24 (@Levant_24_) November 11, 2025
He once led the Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), a regional offshoot of Al-Qaeda, which spearheaded a coalition of anti-government forces that seized Damascus in December 2024, toppling Syria’s longtime president, Bashar Assad.
Read more: What is the COP30 climate summit, and why does it matter?
Speaking to Fox News shortly after meeting with Trump, al-Sharaa described his former affiliation with jihadists as “a matter of the past.” Asked if he has any regrets over Al-Qaeda’s 9/11 attacks, he denied any involvement.
“I was only 19 years old. I was a very young person. I didn’t have any decision-making power at the time. I don’t have anything to do with it. Al-Qaeda was not present right then in my area,” al-Sharaa said.
Read more: Trump to meet Sharaa at White House, capping major turnaround for Syria
He added that he is “the wrong person” to be linked to the plane hijackings that killed nearly 3,000 Americans on September 11, 2001, which also paved the way for US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq.
“We mourn for every civilian that got killed,” he said.
Although al-Sharaa has pledged to rebuild civil war-torn Syria as an inclusive state, his rule has been marred by sporadic sectarian violence against Druze, Alawite, and Christian communities.
In his Fox News interview, al-Sharaa said Syria and the US need to coordinate efforts against the terrorist group Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS). He also expressed hope that Trump can help negotiate a deal with Israel, which expanded its occupation of southwestern Syria in 2024.
With additional input by GVS US and Intl desk
