Syrian Civil War and The future of Syria after liberation

Yes but after the Syrian Revolution, you can feel USA influence weakening now.

Because the US has very weak manufacturing capability, and its technological progress also sucks compared to China.

And the only thing they can do is to boast their fake paper GDP.

See how the US is getting annihilated by China in the most recent EV/renewable energy competition, and soon it gonna be the high end chips and AI, then the space race for moon landing.

Russia is becoming irrelevant, and the US will soon become the second Russia.
 
Yes but after the Syrian Revolution, you can feel USA influence weakening now.

How? FSA and SDF are Usa assets, they control alot of Syria. For usa they would want autonomous Kurdish state as an ally and then FSA/HTS/SNA national government. This way they can scare Turkey aswell as protect Israel from attack. Although Israel is already busy invading Syria whilst everyone celebrates.
 
Yes but after the Syrian Revolution, you can feel USA influence weakening now.

On what planet? Assads collapse, Hamas and Hezbollah defeated, Russias strategic defeat in Syria. All strategic victories for the US.

Assads collapse all leads back to US support for Israel and Ukraine.
 
HTS is also in Damascus now. So the situation is not like in Libya where only Misrata rebel captured Tripoli.

There is greater chance for Syrian opposition force to make compromise between them.


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Does anyone know the latest updates where Assad is?

I can’t see Russia keeping his location in secret after Assad made them look weak. His exile to Moscow would be all over the news.

It's mainstream news. Russia has officially stated that they have given Assad asylum
 
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heavy Israeli airstrikes in south Syria

what will HTS and Turkey do about this?
 

Few tears shed for Assad after lightning regime collapse​


James Landale
Diplomatic correspondent

Bashar al-Assad sitting down in black suit, white shirt and patterned tie with a table mic in front of him. The Syrian flag (red top, white centre with two green stars and black bottom) is to his left


There’ve been few tears shed for the Assad regime. President Macron of France said a barbaric state had fallen.

Chancellor Scholz of Germany said the Syrian people had suffered appallingly and the end of Assad was good news. But that satisfaction was outweighed by concern about what might come next.

The United Nations’ special envoy to Syria, Geir Pedersen, said it was a moment of only “cautious hope” and emphasised the need for a stable transition.

Arab countries in the Gulf - which had repaired relations with Assad in recent years – looked on nervously at the prospect of an Islamist-led Syria.

Qatar’s foreign ministry voiced “great concern” and called for Syria’s unity to be protected.

A senior Emirati diplomat, Anwar Gargash, told the Manama Dialogue Syria was “not out of the woods” and hoped different groups there could work together.

Countries with a direct stake emphasised continuity.

The US has military forces in eastern Syria and a senior Pentagon official said they would remain there to combat the Islamic State group which, he admitted, could exploit the chaos to step up its operations.

Turkey hosts more than three million Syrian refugees and the country’s foreign minister, Hakan Fidan, said they could now return home.

He also said Turkey would continue to fight Kurdish groups in Syria that his country brands terrorists.

As for Assad’s allies, Russia and Iran, the EU foreign affairs chief, Kaja Kallas, said both were weakened. Russia’s foreign ministry said its two military facilities in Syria were on high alert but there was no serious threat.

President-elect Donald Trump said the fall of Assad meant President Putin should agree an immediate ceasefire in Ukraine.

Iran - which has lost its territorial link to Hezbollah in Lebanon - said, without irony, the Syrian people should determine their future “without any destructive interference or external imposition”.
 

Syrians return home from Jordan and Lebanon​


Pictures from earlier on Sunday showed Syrians in Lebanon and Jordan entering Syria, just hours after the fall of President Bashar al-Assad.

On the Lebanon-Syria border, an correspondent with the AFP news agency saw dozens of cars lining the main Masnaa crossing, with crowds cheering and chanting anti-Assad slogans.

On the Jaber crossing from Jordan, one man told Reuters: "I have been in Jordan for 12 years. When we heard the news that Bashar al-Assad fell, we felt better emotionally. We can return to our country with safety and security."

Four adults and one child, all wearing winter coats, carrying backpacks and suitcases walk along a street with parked car in background
Image source,Reuters
Image caption,
At the Masnaa crossing on the Lebanese-Syrian border, families carried suitcases and bags
People carrying suitcases gather outside an office at the Masnaa border crossing, with signs in Arabic and one sign with the word Depart and a rock painted with the Lebanese flag
Image source,Getty Images
Image caption,
A regular flow of people turned up to the Masnaa crossing with luggage
Line of cars at a border crossing. Car closest to camera has the boot overflowing with large plastic carrier bags with the boot unable to close. Mountains in the background
Image source,Reuters
Two women, wearing white headscarves, stand here suitcases and bags with a wall and large gate behind them
Image source,Getty Images
Image caption,
Meanwhile in Jordan, similar scenes played out at the Jaber border crossing in Mafraq
Man putting luggage into the back of a ute and others carrying bags. A uniformed officer is on the right
Image source,Getty Images
 

We weren't asked for help, says Iran's foreign minister

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in suit and shirt speaking into a microphone



Earlier on Sunday, Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told local media that Iran - an ally of former President Assad - was not asked to intervene as rebels swept towards Damascus.

"We were never asked for help, the duty was the duty of the [Syrian] army basically, we did not consider it a duty for ourselves," he said.

"What was surprising was the inability of the Syrian army to counter this move and the speed of the developments," he added.
 
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heavy Israeli airstrikes in south Syria

what will HTS and Turkey do about this?


Duh, they are just capturing Damascus. Now goes to coast city to capture Alawite strong hold

Israel wants to weaken Syria and hoping HTS will fight Israel righ away that can weaken HTS

They are not stupid
 

Key dates that led to collapse of Assad's regime​


In our last post (see below), Jeremy Bowen said that Assad's regime collapsed in less than a fortnight - here are the key defining moments that led to the rebels' victory.

27 November: Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) and allies announce they have launched an offensive - accusing the government of escalating attacks on civilians in the north-west.

30 November: Syria's military confirmed that rebels had entered "large parts" of Aleppo.

5 December: Hama falls to the rebels following days of fighting.

6 December: rebel forces in southern Syria capture most of the Deraa region - the birthplace of the 2011 uprising against Assad.

7 December: rebels say they have taken Homs - Syria's third largest city.

8 December: in the early hours of the morning the rebels announce they have entered Damascus. Less than two hours later, they declare: "The tyrant Bashar al-Assad has fled."
 
I condone all human cruelty and such conditions.

But I won’t condone Israel’s response to Hamas and the den of terror it cultivated in Gaza.
In other words you give 76 years of israel's brutal occupation, ethnic cleansing, and now genocide a free pass. How American of you!!!
 

Assad regime has itself to blame for collapse - Blinken​


Antony Blinken


Reuters


The Assad regime's refusal to engage in a "credible political process" and its reliance on Russian and Iranian support "inevitably led to its own collapse", US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has said.

The US will "closely monitor" developments in the country and will assess the rebel leaders by their actions, not words, Blinken said, calling on them to "take all precautions" to protect civilians.

"During this transitional period, the Syrian people have every right to demand the preservation of state institutions, the resumption of key services, and the protection of vulnerable communities," he said, adding that the US will support efforts to hold the Assad regime accountable for abuses committed against the Syrian people.

"After 14 years of conflict, the Syrian people finally have reason for hope."
 

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