On 8 December, Bashar al-Assad fled Syria, bringing an end to nearly 54 years of his family’s rule and sending millions of Syrians at home and abroad into a state of euphoria and relief. Over a dramatic 12 days, an armed opposition offensive that had begun west of Aleppo on 27 November triggered the precipitous crumbling of regime front lines, one after the other. As rebels began to advance south, Syrians across the country began to rise up. By the night of 7 December, al-Assad’s defeat had been sealed.
The rapid disintegration of al-Assad’s regime came as a surprise to everyone. For years, the international community had written off any chance that Syrians’ demand for change would ever be realised, embracing instead the concept of a “frozen conflict” and gradually withdrawing attention and resources away from Syria policy. In 2023, most of the Arab world reembraced al-Assad, rewarding him with his seat back in the Arab League and granting him and his regime high-profile public visits across the region.
In truth, the international community has misjudged the situation in Syria in recent years. While lines drawn on maps and the stagnation of diplomacy led to assumptions that al-Assad was here to stay and was consolidating his rule, the regime had, in fact, been decaying and fragmenting from within. In many ways, the fact that al-Assad’s regime had not faced a serious military challenge since early 2020 was what created the conditions that allowed the decay to take root.
Rapid reassessment underway
Events over the past two weeks have turned the entire international approach to Syria on its head. A rapid process of adaptation and reassessment is now underway. In a series of hurriedly organised high-level meetings in Doha, Qatar, this weekend, Arab governments have struggled to adjust to the new reality.