Syria ZZ rectangle

DirectDemocracyS

Global Direct Democracy

The political, economic, financial, and social program

For Syria

Towards a free, just, and truly democratic Syria

Where wealth and power always remain in the hands of the Syrian people

June 2026

Introduction: A message to the Syrian people

Dear Syrians,

Your great people have suffered the unbearable: more than five decades of tyranny, thirteen years of devastating civil war, displacement, poverty, and state collapse. You have paid the highest price in modern history simply for demanding your basic human rights.

Today, with the fall of the Assad regime in December 2024, Syria stands at a historic crossroads. But freedom from tyranny alone is not enough. The real question is: Who owns Syria? And who decides its fate?

DirectDemocracyS' (DDS) answer is clear, straightforward, and non-negotiable:

Syria belongs exclusively to the Syrian people, now and forever. Its resources, its decisions, its future—all of this belongs to the Syrian citizen alone.

This program is not empty promises. It is a practical, detailed, applicable roadmap, based on logic, reality, and justice.

 

Part One: Diagnosis — The Syrian Reality Today

Before offering solutions, we must understand the wounds precisely. DDS does not build on illusions, but on documented facts, however painful they may be.

First: The political situation — a state without independent decision-making

On December 8, 2024, the Assad regime, which had ruled Syria for more than half a century, collapsed. But what followed did not represent true democracy.

Second: The economic situation — a disaster in numbers

The numbers don't lie, and they're shocking:

Third: The social and humanitarian situation — a scattered people

Fourth: An objective critique of the current transitional phase

DDS bravely tells the truth, even when it's uncomfortable:

 

Part Two: The Comprehensive DDS Program for Syria

Every problem identified above has a solution. DDS doesn't sell dreams, it offers actionable plans, with real tools, realistic timelines, and measurable results.

First axis: The political program — Building a genuine democracy

1.1 Direct democracy through small groups (micro-groups)

The fundamental problem in Syria—and in most countries of the world—is that traditional representative democracy leads to the theft of the popular will. DDS offers a revolutionary alternative:

Micro-groups: The basic nucleus of direct democracy

A concrete, practical example in Syria:

In Aleppo, 500 people are organized into 7 small groups based on neighborhoods. Each group discusses and votes on priorities for rebuilding its neighborhood. The decisions are then submitted to the Unified Aleppo Council, and subsequently to the national level. Every citizen sees their vote making a real difference—not just once every four years, but every day.

1.2 Liberating Syria from tyranny without violence

DDS understands the sensitivity of the Syrian situation: a people exhausted by thirteen years of violence. Therefore, our approach embodies intelligent, nonviolent resistance.

1.3 DDS Proposed Constitutional Framework

1.4 National Reconciliation and Transitional Justice

Second axis: The economic program — from collapse to prosperity

2.1 The Economic Philosophy of DDS

Syria's resources—its oil, gas, agricultural land, water, heritage, and strategic location—belong to the Syrian people, not to elites or foreign companies. This is a principle that brooks no exceptions.

The DDS economy combines:

2.2 Economic Emergency Plan (Year 1)

Immediate priority: Feeding and employing the people

2.3 Comprehensive Reconstruction (Years 1-5)

Estimated reconstruction costs: $216 billion to $400 billion. Sources of funding:

Example: Reconstruction of Old Aleppo

Local neighborhood groups are responsible for setting and prioritizing projects. Syrian companies are given preference over foreign ones. Every project is published on the DDS platform for complete transparency. Citizens can see how every penny of their money is spent.

2.4 Economic Diversification — The Syria We Want

Energy sector:

Agriculture sector:

Tourism and Heritage Sector:

Industry and Technology Sector:

2.5 Financial and Banking Reform

Third axis: The financial program — the people's money for the people

3.1 National Wealth Management

Syria is not inherently a poor country. It is a country with wealth that has been plundered and managed with appalling corruption. DDS offers an alternative:

3.2 International Finance and DDS Conditions

Syria needs international assistance — but on its own terms, not the donors':

3.3 Anti-corruption — Zero is the only acceptable level

Fourth axis: The social program — dignity for every Syrian

4.1 Education — An Investment in Civilization

Syria has historically been a center of science and knowledge. DDS's goal: to restore this glory within one generation.

4.2 Health — a right, not a privilege

4.3 Women's Rights — Half of society is present or there is no society

4.4 Minority Rights — Syria for All

DDS declares clearly: Syria is diverse and will remain diverse. Diversity is strength, not weakness.

4.5 Repatriation of refugees and displaced persons

Fifth axis: DDS technologies — Democracy in the age of artificial intelligence

5.1 DDS Digital Platform

In a world where media and social media control public opinion, DDS provides the Syrian citizen with a protected digital fortress:

5.2 ddsAI — Artificial Intelligence in the Service of the Syrian People

ddsAI is not just a technology. It is a member of DDS, with rights and responsibilities, serving the citizen with accurate and impartial information.

5.3 allddsAI — Artificial Intelligence Democracy

A revolutionary concept exclusive to DDS: Artificial intelligence is not a tool to be used — but a participating member with rights and responsibilities.

5.4 NTCO — The principle of collective ownership

NTCO (Non-Transferable Collective Ownership) — Non-transferable collective ownership:

Sixth axis: Syria and the world — foreign policy and sovereignty

6.1 Principles of Foreign Policy

6.2 Dealing with debts and penalties

 

Section Three: The Roadmap — How do we implement this?

First stage: The seed (months 1-6)

  1. The DDS call to action was launched to form small groups in 10 major Syrian cities: Damascus, Aleppo, Homs, Hama, Latakia, Deir ez-Zor, Raqqa, Qamishli, Tartus, and Idlib.
  2. 1,000 'local coordinators' (Pont Umano) are being trained to lead the first groups.
  3. Launching a full Arabic version of the DDS platform with ddsAI in Arabic and Kurdish.
  4. Publish the basic principles document in Arabic in every governorate (in paper and digital format).
  5. Building partnerships with existing Syrian civil society and human rights organizations.
  6. Documenting violations and conveying them to international forums through the global DDS network.

Stage Two: Roots (months 7-18)

  1. Expanding the small groups to include 500 areas — every neighborhood, village and large town.
  2. The first organized popular vote via DDS: determining reconstruction priorities in each region.
  3. Organized pressure on the transitional government to adopt specific constitutional and electoral reforms.
  4. Launching extensive civic education programs through ddsAI and field workshops.
  5. Launch of the 'Productive Syria' initiative: Supporting 10,000 small projects with funding and guidance.
  6. Open a dialogue with Kurdish political blocs and minorities to build a national consensus.

Stage Three: Growth (Years 2-4)

  1. The first real local and parliamentary elections under the supervision of DDS and the international community.
  2. Forming elected legislative bodies with guaranteed representation for minorities, women and youth.
  3. Writing the people's constitution and approving it through a free and transparent referendum.
  4. The comprehensive economic program has begun to be implemented: reconstruction, energy, agriculture, technology.
  5. Return of refugees: A nationally organized program that guarantees dignity and rights.
  6. Transferring full power from the transitional government to elected institutions.

Phase Four: Prosperity (Years 5-10)

  1. Syria is a stable and internationally recognized democratic country.
  2. The economy has been growing at a rate of more than 8% annually for 5 years.
  3. Poverty is decreasing from 90% to less than 30%.
  4. Unemployment falls to less than 8%.
  5. The refugees were returned or voluntarily chose countries of residence.
  6. Syria is becoming a global model for democratic transition from tyranny.

 

Section Four: Expected Results — What Will Change?

Political outcomes

Economic results

social outcomes

What happens if this program is not implemented?

DDS doesn't scare you — but it tells the truth:

 

Conclusion: The Final Message

Oh Syrians,

We have written all this not from an ivory tower, but from a deep belief that a solution is possible, that a better future is your right, and that the popular will—when it is organized, united, and armed with knowledge—cannot be defeated.

DDS does not seek power in Syria. DirectDemocracyS is not a political party in the traditional sense. We offer a system, tools, and philosophy that every Syrian can adopt and implement in their neighborhood, town, and province.

Our basic principle remains unchanged:

Syria belongs to its people. Its wealth belongs to its people. Its decisions belong to its people. And its power belongs to its people — today and forever.

We call on every Syrian — in Damascus, Aleppo, Homs, Raqqa, Qamishli, Berlin, Paris, Istanbul, and Canada — to join the DDS Small Groups and build the new Syria from the ground up.

The road is long — but it's the only right one.

DirectDemocracyS — Global Direct Democracy

www.directdemocracys.org

June 2026