lol…the rebels are not educated technocrats. Have you heard them speak, these are future warlords which will result in chaos. The Kurds have a chance if they can break off into a separate country and Turkey doesn’t interfere (which of course they will). This is the Middle East, prepare for more chaos and finger pointing. |
The Kurds are playing both sides, and American/Israeli airstrikes are limiting how quickly Iranian and Iraqi forces can arrive. The real issue is that apparently the Syrian army has 0 fight in it. Armored units are running from pickup trucks, and apparently no one thought to even dig a trench anywhere. Its really pretty pathetic. |
This is very bad for the Israelis. I am surprised they have not invaded and crushed the rebels forces. At least make some air strikes on the rebels? Like you say it is a golden opportunity for the Israelis take some territory though the IDF suffered a lot of casualties in Lebanon. |
Thousands of people have fled the city of Homs as anti government forces push south toward Damascus. |
It reminds me of Afghanistan. In some countries, the line between stability and mayhem is papyrus thin. What's different now is that the Assad regime has for all intents and purposes lost their main allies. Hezbollah was a major military force for Assad. Obviously, since then Israel has destroyed Hezbollah. And Russia, which was responsible for scorched earth aerial bombing that killed many more civilians than ISIS ever did, can no longer afford to use more military resources to preserve Assad. Ukraine has wrecked the Russian military. Russia will defend its naval port in Syria while they can, but are otherwise out. They don't have the resources anymore since their dumbass invasion of Ukraine. So Assad is effectively alone now. And fear does not beget loyalty. The moment the tide turned, the Syrian Army fled - and they are still fleeing. I don't know how this ends. There are too many armies and militias with various interests. And there are too many external countries involved, from Turkey to Iran to the US to Israel to Russia. And Syria is way too messy with ethnicities and factions - Kurds, Druze, Alawites, Sunni, Shi'a, etc. Plus there are a significant number of Islamic fanatics involved. It's a mess. Hopefully, it stays within the borders. Iran may choose to become more involved since Assad is an ally, but after watching allies like Hamas and Hezbollah get wrecked, perhaps they'll think twice. Regardless, it will be chaotic in Syria for the next few days and weeks. Assad will likely flee to Moscow or Tehran soon. |
Why? Given Iran is on Assad's side right now, Israel is probably funding the rebels. |
+1. and 9/11. these rebels were originally an offshoot of al qaeda. these are islamists. they are the world’s problem. |
Israel wants its neighbors to be failed states and lawless. It is much easier to do another Gaza, Lebanon or just bomb civilians every few months in a “failed” states full of “terrorists”. Israel can not let a state emerge from Syria. Syria has 3 times the population of Israel and is in a strategic cross roads in the Middle East. They can not let something like that emerge from that area. Let’s not forget everyone who shares a border with Israel hates Israel. |
The Israelis supported ISIS with aid, weapons and safe areas. They saw ISIS as a challenge to Hezbollah supremacy in the region. They hoped ISIS would fight is out and weaken or destroy Hezbollah. |
The junkyard was he visiting President elect Dumpy? |
Everyone seems to put their hands in Syria . Russia and Iran helping the government. Turkey supporting the rebels. I think Israel and USA soft support of rebels. |
That's changing very quickly. The Russians are presently abandoning their air base and they've sent their ships out to sea. Lebanon has closed all but one border crossing with Syria and Israel is bombing all the supply routes that Iran uses to smuggle weapons to Hezbollah. Without Russian air power and Hezbollah and Iranian fighters, the Assad regime cannot survive. The Syrian Army is demoralized, poorly trained, and underpaid. It's just conscripts who would like to see tomorrow. Once Homs falls, they will have a few days at most to decide whether to try to defend Damascus or retreat to their natural power base on the coast. Turkey will be the power broker in most of Syria. Assad is done. But it's not at all clear what follows. Syria has only known dictatorships. Civil society doesn't exist. There are no mechanisms for a change in power in Syria besides brute force. And the "rebels" have so many different interests and benefactors that no one knows how it's all going to shake out. Add in what remains of ISIS and other jihadist groups and the likelihood for chaos is very high. The velocity of this offensive has taken everyone by surprise. |
Iran is out. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/06/world/middleeast/iran-syria-evacuation.html?smtyp=cur&smid=tw-nytimes Russia is out. https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2024/12/06/russians-in-syria-urged-to-leave-country-a87254 Assad is done. |
Seems so. Erdogan didn’t mince his words today either. I’m not quite sure what Turkey’s beef is with him, but they sure want him gone. I thought the Kurds were anti-Assad too. |