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Forbes
Forbes
8 Dec 2024


Syrian President Bashar al-Assad arrived in Russia on Sunday after rebels seized control of Damascus, Russian state media said—a pivotal moment in the years-long civil war against the regime that has controlled Syria since the 1970s.

TOPSHOT-SYRIA-CONFLICT-MOSQUE

This aerial photo shows Damascus's historic Umayyad Mosque on December 8, 2024, with smoke billowing ... [+] in the background after Islamist-led rebels declared that they have taken the Syrian capital in a lightning offensive, sending President Bashar al-Assad fleeing and ending five decades of Baath rule in Syria. (Photo by AREF TAMMAWI/AFP via Getty Images)

AFP via Getty Images

Assad and his family arrived in Moscow and will be granted asylum there as Russia is an ally of his regime, according to Russian state media.

The foreign ministry of Russia said early he “decided to step down as the Syrian President and leave the country, instructing the government to transfer power peacefully”—but did not specify where Assad, who had not spoken publicly in a week, fled to.

Assad’s apparent departure follows a week-long blitz by the Islamist rebel group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham and other anti-government forces, starting with the seizure of Aleppo and culminating Sunday in a takeover of Damascus.

The group said it would work with Syrian Prime Minister Mohammad Ghazi al-Jalali, who would maintain control over public institutions for the immediate future, The New York Times reported.

Jalali said he had not spoken to al-Assad since Saturday and vowed to work with the country’s new leader, calling for free elections, Reuters reported.

"The great Syrian revolution has moved from the stage of struggle to overthrow the Assad regime to the struggle to build a Syria together that befits the sacrifices of its people," the Syrian rebel coalition said in a statement, according to Reuters.

The Assad family kept an authoritarian grip on Syria for 54 years—the first 30 under Hafez al-Assad, and the last 24 under his son Bashar al-Assad. The country has faced a bloody civil war since 2011, but a brutal counteroffensive by Assad’s forces—aided by Russia—had reclaimed much of the country after 2016, leaving rebels in control of a tiny sliver of the country’s northwest while U.S.-backed Kurdish forces controlled eastern Syria. The surprise rebel takeover in recent weeks was apparently facilitated by waning support from Iran and Russia as their militaries—and Iranian-backed Hezbollah—are engaged in their own conflicts with Ukraine and Israel, respectively. Syrians gathered in the streets for the first time in years, celebrating the reprieve in violence after bombings were a reality of daily life for years and devastated much of the country’s infrastructure, killing more than 100,000 Syrians, The New York Times reported, citing watchdog group the Syrian Network for Human Rights.

Assad’s apparent fall introduces a period of uncertainty and vulnerability in Syria and the possibility that Islamic State militants could take advantage of the leadership gap. Lead rebel group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham could also face headwinds. The Islamist group has its roots in an al Qaeda offshoot and is still designated by the United States as a terrorist organization, and while its leader has tried to cast himself as a moderate and promised to respect Syria’s religious minorities, many observers are wary.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday the Syrian rebels’ success was attributed to Israel’s military campaign against the Hezbollah militia group in Lebanon, calling it a “historic day in the Middle East.” Netanyahu ordered the Israeli military to take control of the buffer zone between Israeli-occupied Golan heights and the rest of Syria to stave off “any hostile force,” CNN reported. Meanwhile, Syrian rebels stormed Iran’s embassy, Reuters reported, citing Iranian English-language Press TV, and Hezbollah retreated from Syria, two Lebanese security sources told Reuters.

Syria Live Updates: Assad Has Resigned and Left Syria, Russia Says (The New York Times)

Jubilation and gunfire as Syrians celebrate the end of the Assad family’s half-century rule (Associated Press)

Syrian rebels topple President Assad, difficult times lie ahead (Reuters)