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Why Syria's Captagon Trade Didn't Die with Assad

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Mohammed Shabani

The fall of the Assad regime revealed what everyone already suspected: the Assad family itself ran the Captagon trade in Syria. But if we assume the Assad family was indeed at the heart of the trade, how can we explain the continued seizure of millions of Captagon pills within Syria and along its borders with neighboring countries, despite more than five months having passed since the regime's collapse?

This article explores the primary factors that enabled the Captagon trade to not only persist but adapt and evolve after the downfall of the Assad regime.

An International Machine Worth Billions

Despite the prominent role the Assad family played in the Captagon trade, the fall of their regime and the flight of top officials abroad merely severed one link in a vast international network. It did not dismantle the system itself. The Assad family's share in the Captagon economy was estimated at $2.4 billion. In contrast, t he global Captagon trade is valued at around $10 billion, meaning the family controlled, at most, 30% of the market.

The remainder is spread across various regional actors, including networks in Lebanon (notably Hezbollah), Jordan, and the Gulf. In Jordan, an estimated 20% of the Captagon pills smuggled from Syria are sold domestically, while the rest are funneled into the lucrative Gulf markets, particularly Saudi Arabia, the world's largest Captagon consumer. Here, complex trafficking operations ensure the pills are smuggled, stored, and sold at exponentially higher prices. A pill worth under $1 in Syria can fetch up to $20 in Saudi Arabia.

Such profit margins are too attractive for regional syndicates to abandon. The collapse of the Assad regime, rather than disrupting the trade, merely encouraged it to diversify and decentralize. In fact, production and smuggling activities resumed in Syria almost immediately. On May 18, the Jordanian Air Force launched a strike on a suspected trafficker in Syria's southern As-Suwayda province. Just two days earlier, Syrian forces reported the seizure of nine million pills in Aleppo. The system remains very much alive.

Why the Captagon Network Didn't Die with Assad

Despite significant setbacks, including the defeat of the armed opposition in many areas and the destruction of several production facilities, Syria remains the global hub of Captagon production, responsible for an estimated 80% of total global output. This persistence is due in large part to the scale and structure of the domestic network.

According to researcher Hassan Jaber in his 2024 book "The Northern War", more than 12,000 armed individuals are involved in smuggling Captagon in southern Syria alone, spread across roughly 150 factions. Thousands more handle production, packaging, transport, and distribution. The network operates like a shadow state, with well-developed communication lines and logistics.

Inside Syria's Smuggling Empire

What sets this network apart is not just its size but its professionalism. Traffickers employ ingenious smuggling tactics, hiding pills inside furniture, transformers, and even fruit pits. They've used drones, plastic mortars, and even homing pigeons to outsmart border authorities. Their confrontations with Jordanian forces are often intense and prolonged.

Furthermore, a portion of the network once under regime protection, including factions linked to the Fourth Division led by Maher al-Assad, has now splintered. Opposition-controlled areas also host production hubs. With the Assad family out, new players are eager to fill the vacuum, further complicating any effort to dismantle the network.

Criminal Innovation: Smuggling Tactics that Defy Logic

These networks aren't just persistent; they're inventive. From embedding pills in electrical appliances to using pigeons as carriers, their methods adapt faster than border controls can catch up. Such operations reflect an evolution in criminal enterprise that goes beyond mere desperation; it's industrial-scale ingenuity.

From Cartels to Warlords: Who Fills the Vacuum?

Beyond the organized networks, there are smaller producers who once operated in secrecy under regime eyes, often persecuted by state forces to eliminate competition. With the fall of the Assad family, these players are seizing the opportunity to expand. The competition is no longer limited to traditional actors but includes former regime loyalists, local warlords, and ambitious criminal entrepreneurs.

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Mohammad Shabani is a Syrian writer and researcher based in Germany. He focuses on political economy, social transformations, and Middle Eastern affairs. His work has appeared in Arabic and international platforms.
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Why Syria's Captagon Trade Didn't Die with Assad

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3 people are discussing this page, with 7 comments  Post Comment


Mary Elizabeth

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Had not heard of Captagon, before reading your article. Thank you

Al Jazeers link explaning Captagon

What is Captagon?

Submitted on Friday, May 30, 2025 at 10:43:05 AM

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Mohammed Shabani

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Reply to Mary Elizabeth:   New Content

Hi Mary, Thank you for reading and for your kind comment. I'm glad the article helped shed light on this underreported topic. It's important that more people become aware of how deeply rooted and complex the Captagon trade is. Best regards, Mohammed

Submitted on Friday, May 30, 2025 at 5:58:09 PM

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Guglielmo Tell

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Captagon was detected once and again in Venezuela during the episodes of wild violence unleashed by right-wing pro-Western fascists, and it had arrived from Colombia where the real-life czar is the ex-Psdt Alvaro Uribe, Pablo Escobar's man, the one who inherited it all from him, and possibly the biggest drug dealer in the world today. World's biggest drug cartel is the Pentagon. It came to have more military intervention in Colombia than in Afghanistan, and both countries came to be the biggest producers of drugs in the world: Colombia number 1 and Afghanistan number 2. So, no, captagon was not sent by Bashar al-Assad to Maduro, as portrayed by all the "freedom and democracy" propaganda, but by the Jihadists from the Middle East to Uribe. al-Qaeda and DAESH are the creations of the Western-Zionist-and-acolytes 4th Reich, al-Baghdadi posed for pictures with John McCain.

Submitted on Sunday, Jun 1, 2025 at 8:04:46 PM

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Mohammed Shabani

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Thank you for your comment. The facts are clear: Captagon factories were discovered inside facilities operated by the 4th Division led by Maher al-Assad (the deposed presidentï

Submitted on Monday, Jun 2, 2025 at 12:39:46 PM

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Mohammed Shabani

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Thank you for your comment. The facts are clear: Captagon factories were discovered inside facilities operated by the 4th Division led by Maher al-Assad (the deposed presidentï

Submitted on Monday, Jun 2, 2025 at 1:09:15 PM

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But did Bashar know, was part of it? Traitors sometimes exist within families, nothing is impossible in this world. Bilal Erdogan, for example, ran a network of exchange of archaeological artifacts for weapons between the NATO and DAESH in Syria. The whole thing went public though, but was silenced immediately and nothing happened. So, Recep Tayip KNEW.

Submitted on Tuesday, Jun 3, 2025 at 5:44:12 PM

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Thank you for your comment. The facts are clear: Captagon factories were discovered inside facilities operated by the 4th Division led by Maher al-Assad (the deposed president

Submitted on Monday, Jun 2, 2025 at 12:51:49 PM

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