For his success against Ilyas Pasha, he was promoted to the rank of
vizier and appointed back to Damascus in 1632 to eliminate
Fakhr al-Din II, a
Druze chief and
sanjak-bey (district governor). The latter had gained practical control over an area extending from
Safed to
Latakia, controlled thirty fortresses, and maintained a large army of outlawed
sekban mercenaries, all in defiance of the Ottomans. There were additional governmental fears that he was poised to take over
Damascus city. Ahmed Pasha defeated Fakhr al-Din's forces and besieged him in a cave in southern
Mount Lebanon in 1633. He forced him to surrender by lighting fires around the cave, causing Fakhr al-Din and his men to choke from the smoke. He escorted the Druze leader through Damascus, where the city's residents congratulated Ahmed Pasha and local poets sang his praises. He then sent Fakhr al-Din to Constantinople, where he was executed two years later. Following his capture of Fakhr al-Din, Ahmed Pasha confiscated the properties of the Druze chief and his family, the
Ma'n dynasty. He had his properties in
Tyre and al-Jazira near
Baalbek endowed for his own
tekkiye (
Sufi lodge) in the town of
al-Qadam, called
al-Asali, and the
Umayyad Mosque in Damascus. His
tekkiye was founded in 1635 as a lodge for the well-known local Sufi shaykh of the
Khalwati order, al-Asali, after whom the
tekkiye is commonly known. It was one of the few monuments to be built in greater Damascus in the early 17th century. It was often used to distribute food to the Muslim pilgrims on their way to the
Hajj to
Mecca. The entirety of Fakhr al-Din's assets, including dozens of properties in
Sidon, meanwhile, became part of Ahmed Pasha's
waqf (religious endowment) in 1634 or 1636 as a reward by Sultan
Murad IV for his success and again posthumously in 1637; the pasha endowed the properties for the benefit of the Muslim holy cities of Mecca and
Medina. ==Commander on the Iranian front==