From Trump and Turkey, to Russia and Iran — Syria’s regime change has huge global consequences


TOPSHOT – This aerial picture shows a bullet-riddled portrait of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad adorning Hama’s municipality building after it was defaced following the capture of the city by anti government fighters, on December 6, 2024. 

Omar Haj Kadour | Afp | Getty Images

The dramatic toppling of Bashar al-Assad’s Syrian regime at the hands of rebel forces this weekend could have far-reaching consequences for the Middle Eastern country, global alliances and markets, according to analysts.

Over the past fortnight, rebel forces led by the Islamist militant group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham carried out a lightning-fast offensive across the country, seizing key cities along the way. The faction finally claimed the capital Damascus at the weekend, prompting President Bashar al-Assad to flee the country and seek refuge in Russia, according to Russian state media reports.

The overthrow of Assad was greeted cautiously by Western nations who are wary of the potential for further bloodshed and of a power vacuum in Syria, if a chaotic and contested transition of leadership takes place.

A country riven with 13 years of brutal civil war Syria has seen competing factions — including the terrorist group that styles itself the Islamic State — fight each other as well as Assad’s force in recent years, raising the potential for rival power grabs.

For now, however, the fall of the Assad dynasty after over 50 years in power has more immediate global ramifications, with Russia and Iran seen as “losers” from the ousting of the Syrian dictator, while the U.S., Turkey and Israel are viewed among the main beneficiaries from regime change.

An anti-government fighter holds a weapon as he keeps position near a defaced portrait of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, in the city of Hama after forces captured the central Syrian city, on December 6, 2024. 

Omar Haj Kadour | Afp | Getty Images

“The rapid collapse of the Assad regime in Damascus will have repercussions well beyond Syria. The great losers are Iran and Russia, without whose support Assad would have lost the almost 14-year civil war long ago,” Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg Bank, said in analysis Monday.

“Iran has likely lost its major route to send weapons to the Hezbollah terror militia in Lebanon. Despite a potential power vacuum in parts of Syria for a while, the Middle East could eventually be a little less unstable as a result,” Schmieding said in emailed comments.

U.S., Europe emboldened

Israel and Turkey boosted

Russia weakened

A man sits in front of a poster depicting the since-ousted Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (L) and Russian President Vladimir Putin and reading in Arabic “Syria stands with the Russian Federation”, in Syria’s port city of Tartus on July 24, 2022.

Louai Beshara | Afp | Getty Images

Timothy Ash, emerging markets strategist at BlueBay Asset Management, described Assad’s ousting as a “huge humiliation for Putin who has made a lot of the fact that he never abandons his allies.”

“The limits of Russian military power have now been revealed — unable to fight multiple wars, and still bogged down in Ukraine. Putin is struggling to hang on to the prized asset of the Tartus warm water port — and if he keeps it, he might have had to give Turkey concessions elsewhere,” Ash said.

He further noted that Putin “now goes into Ukraine peace talks from a position of weakness,” adding that developments in Syria make “a better Ukrainian peace” more likely.

As for Iran, strategist Ash said Tehran’s misfortunes had just grown, after Israel already severely weakened its proxies, Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

“Iran — it just goes from bad to worse as another proxy domino drops, Hezbollah, now Assad. Could Tehran be next? Could we see internal forces arise again?” Ash said in emailed comments, questioning what Tehran can now do “to stop the rot” of its influence.



Source link

Leave a Comment