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Analysis

Syria’s new rulers need to show Israel and the rest of the region that it will not be a threat

Nature abhors a vacuum and Syria is now a power vacuum. Let us hope it is filled with something positive

December 11, 2024 09:02
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Abu Mohammed al-Jolani, leader of Syria's Islamist Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) group (Getty Images)
4 min read

V On December 8 the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad fell from power. I was on Israel’s Golan border with Syria as the momentous events unfolded. The border was quiet, except for distant bursts of gunfire – apparently people shooting in the air in celebration at Assad’s fall.

The Assad regime was a mainstay of the Middle East for 50 years. It wasn’t as brash and outspoken at the Gaddafi regime in Libya, and it wasn’t as powerful as Saddam Hussein’s Iraq once was. Saddam fought a ten year war with Iran and then invaded Kuwait, setting in motion events that transformed the region for decades.

The Assad regime, by contrast, was more pragmatic on the surface. It had occupied Lebanon for decades and enabled Iran to support Hezbollah, but it was internally frayed and atrophied over time. It had fought Israel in the 1973 Yom Kippur War. From where I was standing on the border watching Syria on December 8, Syrian tanks had once mauled Israeli forces in days of pitched battles. Israel won but the cost was high. Now Syria’s army no longer exists.

The fall of Assad provides a unique opportunity for Syria – and for the region. The Syrian regime facilitated weapons smuggling and transfers to Hezbollah and it gave Iran a role in Syria. With the change in rulers in Damascus, Iran may lose out on some of its ability to use Syria as a base to threaten the region. Similarly, the Syrian regime once facilitated the movement of Jihadists down the Euphrates river valley and into Iraq to fight the US after its invasion of Iraq in 2003. This insurgency fuelled extremists and gave birth to ISIS a decade later. The Syrian regime is in many ways is responsible for the rise of ISIS, which fed off the Syrian civil war. So its fall could mean Syria stops being a threat to its neighbours.

Topics:

Syria