The sudden assault by well-armed rebels against the key Syrian city of Aleppo and their further gains since have raised serious questions about the ability of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and his Damascus regime to survive this crisis.
Assad only survived Syria’s decade-long civil war (which began in 2011) because of the military support he received from key allies in Tehran and Moscow, the former having drafted in Lebanon-based fighters from Hezbollah to help.
A seminal moment came in 2015 when Qasem Soleimani, the head of the elite Quds Force of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), flew to Moscow to persuade Russian President Vladimir Putin to intervene on Assad’s behalf.
From Russia with bombs
Moscow’s ties with Damascus date back to the Soviet era, when the Kremlin supported Assad’s father Hafez and his Ba’athist dictatorship. The help was appreciated and resulted in the Russians getting key military bases in Syria.
Soleimani’s blunt warning to Putin in 2015 was blunt: if he did not intervene on Assad’s behalf, Moscow risked losing its military assets in Syria, including its strategically important ‘warm water’ naval base in Tartus on the eastern Mediterranean coast.