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Tobias Schneider

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Tobias Schneider is an independent International Security Analyst specializing in the political economy of violence in the Levant. He has worked as a consultant for think tanks, governments, multilateral institutions, as well as private clients. His research on the Syrian Civil War in particular has been published and cited across international media.

He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Middle East Studies from Sciences Po Paris and a Master’s in Strategic Studies and International Economics from Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.

The Latest from Tobias Schneider

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3 Results
The Fatemiyoun Division: Afghan fighters in the Syrian civil war
  • التحليل
  • The Fatemiyoun Division: Afghan fighters in the Syrian civil war

    Summary

    Originally styled as a small detachment of volunteers and refugees mobilized to defend the shrine of Sayyeda Zeinab outside Damascus, the Fatemiyoun formation’s size and presence across Syria has slowly expanded throughout the war. At home, the IRGC began cultivating a narrative of Afghan “resistance” to transnational Sunni jihadism. Joining the Syrian jihad was increasingly promoted as a path to legal and social recognition within the Islamic Republic at a time when thousands of desperate young Hazaras were setting out to emigrate to Europe.

    October 15, 2018

    Debt-Ridden and Broke: The Syrian Regime’s Colossal Reconstruction Challenge
  • التحليل
  • Debt-Ridden and Broke: The Syrian Regime’s Colossal Reconstruction Challenge

    As the Syrian civil war—at least from Damascus’s point of view—enters its final stages, the Assad regime will likely begin looking beyond narrow military goals, and focus more on the socio-economic stability and viability of its captured statelet. After six years of war, the Syrian regime finds itself in a disastrous fiscal situation, unable to shift funds to meet humanitarian and stabilization needs.

    July 18, 2017

    Aleppo's Warlords and Post-War Reconstruction
  • التحليل
  • Aleppo's Warlords and Post-War Reconstruction

    Six months after the heavily publicized defeat of Syrian rebel forces in Aleppo to the Assad government, the once magnificent metropolis and largest city of northern Syria is still reeling from the consequences of years of violent conflict. The elaborate communal, economic and material threads that for centuries had made up the social fabric underpinning the city’s wealth, as well as its physical and societal integrity, may have been irreparably damaged. Today, much of the city lies in rubble and many of its once proud inhabitants have been reduced to abject poverty.

    June 13, 2017