The group's commander, Mahmoud Khallo, was previously a commander in the
Yusuf al-'Azma Brigade, based around
Qabasin and the countryside of
al-Bab. At one time, Khallo was also imprisoned by the YPG for 19 months. Masoud Ibo, spokesman of the group, also called the PYD "an integral part of
Bashar al-Assad’s
Ba'athist regime". Since February 2016, the group suffered a series of internal splits. On 27 February, a number of its fighters defected from the group, accusing it of
corruption, "betraying the blood of martyrs", "serving personal interests", "unmatched selfishness", and "forgetting the goals of the real revolution". They also accused leaders of the group of being affiliated with Kurdish parties "unpatriotic toward the Syrian Revolution", marginalizing "free Kurdish fighters" and replacing them with "paid
mercenaries", and "political coordination" with the SDF's
Army of Revolutionaries. In March, Mohammed Hawash, the group's military commander, defected after he accused the group of collaborating with the
Kurdish National Council. Hawash called the 99th Division, which the Descendants of Saladin Brigade joined, a "dirty formation". However, the group's commander, Mahmoud Khallo, denied the incident ever occurred and claimed Ahrar ash-Sham to be its ally. At the time, the Descendants of Saladin Brigade was part of the United States-led
Syrian Train and Equip Program, though the group said that the support it received from the United States fell short of what was actually needed. On 3 April 2017, Ahrar al-Sham reportedly attacked the group in Qabasin and captured more than 8 of their fighters, including a commander. Hours later, the prisoners were released after negotiations, although tensions between the two groups remain. Following the announcement, the group was attacked by multiple Turkish-backed groups, which captured the group's positions and warehouses with vehicles, weapons, and equipment. On 5 July, a
Facebook page which claimed to represent the group disavowed Khallo and vowed to continue to fight against the SDF alongside other Turkish-backed rebel groups. On 14 July, Khallo himself was captured by the
Levant Front, which accused him of affiliation with both
al-Qaeda and the
Democratic Union Party (PYD), and was
tortured. The Levant Front then handed him over to Turkish security forces, who
interrogated him. After being released soon after, Khallo protested against his unit's treatment and criticized that Turkey was apparently only interested in using the Syrian militias to further its own strategic goals. He also said that his unit, now without weapons, would set up a political party. A remnant of the militia continued to be active and cooperate with
Turkey, however, though now known simply as "Saladin Brigade" and led by Mohammed Hawash. This faction participated in the
Turkish-led offensive against the
SDF in the
Afrin Region, stating that "the operation in Afrin paves the way for the liberation of the remaining Syrian lands from any form of terrorism". ==See also==