Lawrence Freedman
There is a clear line from the 1979 Iranian Revolution to the 2024 Syrian Revolution, which leaves open the question of whether there is a potential line to yet another Iranian revolution, this one overthrowing the victors of 45 years ago.
The sudden collapse of the Assad regime is one of those ‘in retrospect it was inevitable but no one saw it coming’ moments. Exactly where it leaves Syria is still unclear, so it is also one of those ‘the future is uncertain, but one thing is for sure, things will never be the same again’ moments.
As Russia and Iran were Bashar al-Assad’s most vital backers, we can be reasonably confident that for now both are the big losers. After a decade of substantial investment in Syria, Russia has nothing to show for it other than Assad himself, now taking up residence in Moscow. It is abandoning its air base in Syria, probably its naval base, and in practice its aspirations to be a major player in Middle Eastern affairs, with only its position in Libya to cling on to.
Iran’s investment goes back even further, and its setback is even greater. This comes at the end of a disastrous year for the defining feature of its foreign policy – its ‘axis of resistance’ drawing on radical Shi’ite groups throughout the region, including in Iraq and Yemen, but with Hamas in Palestine, Hezbollah in Lebanon and Assad in Syria as the key components.
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