With the Captagon trade becoming an increasingly vital tool for Assad, the Risk team’s latest article considers the geostrategic impact of the trade on the region and beyond.
The Syrian Civil War, now in a ceasefire since 2020, is ongoing in a minor capacity with scattered and intermittent clashes still taking place. The financial source of the Syrian government’s success is in part due to the production of the amphetamine Captagon. Captagon was first produced in the 1960s in Germany as a product to treat ADHD, but it has since been banned globally. 80% of Captagon production is now in Syria, from where it is exported predominantly to Lebanon to be smuggled elsewhere. Sanctions spearheaded by the US have forced the Syrian government to turn to multiple streams of illegal income including Captagon, arms dealing, and other illegal goods smuggling. Although the Captagon trade is incredibly lucrative, the Assad government may be moving away from it in some capacity due to Syria’s recent reacceptance into the Arab League. Saudi Arabia – a major Captagon consumer – has expressed its concerns about the Syrian government’s links to the drug. Nonetheless, the trade still retains financial, political and security influence across the region. Monitoring the Captagon trade allows Western observers to consider security within Syria as well as Damascus’ relationships with other powers both globally and regionally.
The Captagon trade has been one of the main financial drivers of Assad’s success to regain control. Revenue from Captagon has gone to either Assad and his inner circle or to fund the 4th Armored Division – a separate fighting force of the Syrian state that remains loyal to Assad directly. This revenue stream has allowed government forces to largely defeat Islamic State (IS) and other anti-regime forces, bringing the ceasefire into effect. The tightness of the regime’s grip means that the chances of outright fighting have dropped, making much of Syria comparatively safer than at the height of the civil war. (However, stability in the region is relative as most of the country is still under the control of an authoritarian leader responsible for the death of half a million of his citizens and the displacement of millions of others).
The importance of the Captagon trade to security in Syria has had two distinct but opposing outcomes. It has allowed for greater government success in the civil war, but at the price of rampant drug related violence on the borders with Lebanon and Jordan in particular. The Captagon trade’s financial tendrils have put money into the pockets of a litany of different groups in the region, meaning it can be linked to many different security scenarios. However, the majority of this metaphorical gold mine ends with the Assad family. This is why the trade is so instrumental in Syrian politics and security issues in the current climate.
The importance of Captagon to the Syrian regime impacts Damascus’s relationships on the geopolitical stage in four important ways. Firstly, Syria’s relationship with the regional powers in the Arab League. Secondly, Syria’s allies Russia and Iran who view the normalisation of Assad as a geopolitical victory. Thirdly Israel, who while officially neutral on the matter, is a major regional power and as a consequence affects Syria greatly; and finally, the US and the West who have spearheaded sanctions on the country.
Both Russia and Iran’s backing of Damascus throughout the civil war provided a large cash flow to the Assad regime: the financial stream of Captagon has provided support in addition to this funding. From the perspective of Tehran and Moscow, the survival of the Assad regime is a geopolitical win made even more significant with the backdrop of the Ukraine war. With Russia bogged down in the Donbas, Putin’s strongman persona has been almost destroyed: the survival of the Assad regime is a foreign policy win for Putin that helps repair this image, by demonstrating that he can have an impact where the West cannot. Russia has little to no input on the Captagon trade but still gains from its success in terms of its foreign policy. Russia also achieves another foreign policy aim of access to warm water ports and military bases in the eastern Mediterranean. Tartus is the main Russian access port on the Syrian coast, helping project Russian power at a time when it seems to be at its weakest.
For Iran, Syria’s reacceptance into the Arab League puts a counterweight against Saudi Arabia back into regional politics to help achieve Tehran’s foreign policy aims of countering Riyadh in regional politics. Captagon’s role in this for Iran is financial, similar to Russia. Captagon is an alternative financial stream for Hezbollah and other militia groups seeking to achieve Iran’s foreign policy aims of curbing Saudi and Israeli regional power and keeping the US out of regional politics. This significance of Captagon further highlights its importance at the centre of geopolitics in the Middle East. The Captagon trade, therefore, is of little direct concern to Russia and Iran but is a useful financial tool that they can use to keep an ally in power and sway regional politics to their needs once more.
Captagon’s lucrative capacity has caused it to be linked to every part of Syrian society and therefore politics. This is the most important point about the Captagon trade. The Captagon trade is an important revenue stream for the Assad regime that has allowed the government to remain in power towards what looks like the end of the civil war. The security situation has therefore changed due to Captagon. While it has aided in bringing stability to the civil war, Captagon has brought its own new security issues, such as smaller, more sporadic fights in smuggling-related clashes. The trade’s links to radical Islamist groups and Iranian-backed militias have hindered Syria’s already poor global image and have on-the-ground effects on security. The wider geopolitical issues associated with trade are equally important. The geopolitical quandary of Middle Eastern politics is deeply tied to the Captagon trade. With so many different states involved, each with their own agenda, a solution to Captagon and stability in Syria is incredibly difficult to find. The fact that stability in Syria is so difficult to achieve and Captagon is so integral to the problem highlights the prevalence of the Captagon trade in geopolitics. The Captagon trade has shown its potential problems for the EU and other markets. This shows that Captagon is not a problem that is going away anytime soon despite Arab League members’ efforts to end the practice.
The relevance to travellers is how Captagon will prolong instability in the region by changing the reason for the instability. Where instability was previously due to civil war, Captagon has changed this to drug related violence. The other possible way Captagon will affect travellers in the future is the changing of smuggling routes and markets. The markets’ shift towards Europe is a possible long-term problem with the short-term being alternate smuggling routes into the Gulf states. Captagon is worth too much to too many different groups to see it fade out of existence. Therefore, it will remain a persistent problem for regional politics for a while to come.
Author: Oliver Stewart, Associate Analyst, Northcott Global Solutions
Contact: risk@northcottglobalsolutions.com
Northcott Global Solutions provides risk assessments, tracking, security escorts, personal protective equipment, remote medical assistance and emergency evacuation.
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