The incidents of Guweiran prison in Hasakah

After the failure of ISIS cells’ attempt to storm Guweiran prison in December, 2021 with the aim of controlling it and smuggling prisoners from it, and after the SDF arrested the group planning the attack, and with reference to the confessions of the direct responsible for the prison break-in operation, Muhammad al-Awwad, it turns out to us that the current attack on al-Sina’a prison in the Guweiran neighborhood in Hasakah, was repeated in the same scenario.
Where the prison, which is considered one of the most dangerous prisons in the world and houses thousands of ISIS members, witnessed serious developments, as the storming process by ISIS cells resulted in the outbreak of strong clashes between ISIS members inside and outside the prison and between the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and the Internal Security Forces (Asayish), where clashes led to dozens of deaths.
Meanwhile, the media center of the SDF confirmed the escape of a number of the organization’s members to the security square of the Syrian regime in Hasakah, in addition to others fleeing towards the al-Zohour neighborhood, where they hid among the residents, which led to a mass exodus to the central and northern neighborhoods after the fall of victims, as well as the information indicating the arrival of ISIS members from Sere Kaniye (Ras al-Ain) occupied by Turkey and the mercenaries of the so-called “National Army” and that they were in contact with the captured ISIS terrorists inside the prison.
It is noteworthy that Guweiran prison’s incidents coincided with a support of Turkish mercenaries by bombing areas in the vicinity of Ain Issa and Tel Tamr, where a Turkish march bombed a convoy of the Tel Tamr Military Council heading towards Hasakah. In parallel, groups of the so-called “popular resistance” in the regions of Deir ez-Zor and Raqqa began launching an armed attack on an SDF military point, but what is remarkable about this process is that both ISIS and the Syrian regime adopted it on their official social media at the same time.
In light of this, the social media of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) published a document that claimed to be affiliated with the Iraqi Military Intelligence, revealing that “the purpose of the attack on Hasakah prison is to smuggle 5,000 ISIS fighters from prison and send them to Iraq to strengthen themselves.”
In the context of these developments and events, we infer that this scenario was woven by a Syrian-Turkish-Iranian-Russian scheme to pressure the SDF forces to make concessions in favor of the ruling Syrian regime after the regime failed to conclude reconciliation settlements in Deir ez-Zor, Raqqa and Hasakah, and this is one of the continuous attempts by the regime to justify through its agents and by moving ISIS to start its return to the region. These matters show us the true intentions of the terrorist plot that took place in Guweiran prison.