Assad regime in Syria may fall in days, US increasingly believes

Vocabulary: 349, Words: 729

1Biden administration officials, watching the remarkable speed of the Syrian rebel advance, increasingly see the possibility of the regime of Bashar al-Assad falling within days, five US officials told CNN.

2If the American analysis proves true, it would represent a spectacularly fast fall from power for the Syrian dictator after a 14-year war, one that had been relatively stagnant until just last week.

3Officials cautioned that a formal assessment on Assad’s fate hasn’t emerged and that views vary, saying his demise isn’t a forgone conclusion.

A rebel fighter stands on a military vehicle in Homs, Syria, on December 7.

4live updates Syria’s rebels say they are encircling Damascus but army denies retreat

7The emerging consensus is that is an increasingly plausible scenario,” one senior US official said.

8Probably by next weekend the Assad regime will have lost any semblance of power,” another official said.

9Only thing that would delay a rebel conquest would be a well-organized coup and reorganization, but Assad’s folks have done a good job of stifling any potential competitors,” the official added.

10Rebels are racing toward the Syrian capital after routing government forces in two of the country’s biggest cities in an advance that started just over a week ago. 11Homs, Syria’s third largest city, lies next in their path as they sweep south.

12Beyond there, the capital Damascus.

13The Biden administration appeared caught off guard by the speed of the rebel advance launched last week. 14Regime troops have collapsed and melted away, leaving a fragile shell of an army to defend the president and Damascus.

15The US has misjudged the staying power of regimes before, most recently in Afghanistanwhere the US intelligence community judged that the Afghan government would be more resilient than it ultimately wasand in Ukraine, which the US wrongly believed would fall to Russia within days of Moscow’s invasion. 16As a result, in 2022 the US intelligence launched a review of how it assesses thewill to fightof foreign militaries, CNN previously reported.

17Leading the rebel advance in Syria is a group designated by the US as terrorist organization: 18Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, which was previously linked to al Qaeda.

19We have real concerns about the designs and objectives of that organization,” national security adviser Jake Sullivan told CNN last weekend. 20At the same time, of course, we don’t cry over the fact that the Assad government, backed by Russia, Iran and Hezbollah, are facing certain kinds of pressure.”

Fighters enter the Rashidin district on the outskirts of Aleppo on their motorbikes with smoke billowing in the background during fighting on November 29, 2024, as Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) jihadists and allied factions continue their offensive in the Aleppo province against government forces. The jihadists along with Turkey-backed factions launched this week a shock offensive against Syrian regime troops and sparked the deadliest battle the country has seen in years, with the violence killing so far 242 people, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. The war monitor said most of the victims were combatants on both sides but also including civilians. (Photo by Bakr ALKASEM / AFP) (Photo by BAKR ALKASEM/AFP via Getty Images)

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26There is little sign that Iran and Russiawhose support have kept Assad in powerare going to swoop in to save him, at least in a way that would make a difference. 27Russia is bogged down with its war in Ukraine, and Iran has been significantly weakened after Israel’s recent strikes on its air defenses and decimation of its regional proxies Hamas and Hezbollah. 28HTS appears to have taken advantage of the fact that Assad’s allies were all distractedand that the world was not paying much attention to Syriawhen it launched its operation, one of the US officials said.

29One of the US officials said the Pentagon, which has around 900 troops in Syria, is not making plans to change its force posture in the country and is waiting to see what happens while taking additional force protection measures.

30The US has long partnered with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces for anti-ISIS operations in Syria. 31The SDF has maintained contact with the rebel group known as HTS, the US official said, but the US does not communicate with HTS because it is considered a terrorist organization.

32HTS does not appear to have the overt support of Assad adversary Turkey, but US officials believe Turkey gave the group a green light to launch its operation.

33One significant concern the administration has is the safety of Assad’s stockpile of chemical weapons, thought to include both chlorine and sarin, which Assad has infamously used in rebel areas to the horror of the international community.

34It is unclear where Assad would flee to, US officials said. 35His patrons could offer refuge in Moscow or Tehran, and it remains to be seen whether the rebels will set their sights on Latakia, an enclave of the Alawite sect to which Assad belongs.

from CNN