Letters from an American - December 8, 2024
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December 8, 2024. Late last night, the White House said in a statement that,
President Biden and his team are closely monitoring the extraordinary events in Syria
and are staying in constant touch with regional partners. Early this morning,
the Syrian government of Bashar
al-Assad fell to armed opposition. According to Jill Lawless of the
Associated Press, the forces that toppled Assad are led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham or
HTS, a coalition of Islamic groups formerly associated with al-Qaeda's
branch in Syria and currently designated a terrorist group by the US and the United Nations
Although its leaders have tried to distance themselves from al-Qaeda
President Bashar al-Assad succeeded his father to the Syrian presidency in July 2000
establishing a totalitarian dictatorship in
2011 Assad cracked down on protesters who were part of the Arab Spring,
sparking a civil war of a number of factions fighting Assad's troops, which by 2015 relied
on support from Russia and Iran. That war has turned half of Syria's pre-war population
of 23 million, a little more than the population of Florida, into refugees and killed more
than half a million people.
With Russian and Iranian support, Assad managed to regain control of most of the country,
with rebels pushed back to the north and northwest.
A stalemate that had lasted for years ended abruptly on November 27.
Iran and Hezbollah have been badly weakened by the ongoing fight of Israel against Iran-backed
Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis.
On November 27, Israel and Lebanon signed a ceasefire agreement that made it clear that
Hezbollah had been tied down in Lebanon and that its ability to fight had been severely
compromised.
At the same time, Russia has been badly weakened by almost three years of war against Ukraine,
and the Russian ruble fell sharply again in late November after additional U.S. sanctions
targeted Russia's third-largest bank, creating more economic hardship in Russia and undercutting
Putin's insistence that he is winning against the West.
When opposition forces began an offensive on November 27, they took more than 15 villages
in Aleppo province that day.
Journalist Lawless recounted a quick history of the next 11 days, recording how the insurgents
swept through the country with little resistance, taking Syria's largest city, Aleppo, on the 29th. The Syrian military launched a
counterattack on December 1st, but the insurgents continued to gain ground, and
by December 7th they had captured Syria's third largest city, Homs. They
announced they were in the final stage of their offensive. Today, December 8th,
Assad fled with his family to Moscow where Russian President Vladimir Putin has offered
him asylum. As Nick Payton Walsh of CNN put it, without the physical crutches of Russia's Air
Force and Iran's proxy muscle Hezbollah, Assad toppled when finally pushed.
In Damascus, crowds are praying and celebrating, and opposition forces have liberated the prisoners
held in the notorious Sadnaya military prison. More than 100,000 detainees are unaccounted for,
and their families are hoping to find them, or at least to find answers.
and their families are hoping to find them, or at least to find answers.
Meanwhile, after Assad's regime fell, the U.S. Air Force struck more than 75 ISIS-related targets in Syria. ISIS has been trying to reconstitute in this broad area known as the Badia Desert,
a White House senior official told reporters, we have worked to make sure they cannot do that. So when they try
to camp there, when they try to train, we take them out. National security advisor Jake Sullivan
explained at the Reagan National Defense Forum in Simi Valley, California, that the U.S. will
work to prevent the resurgence of ISIS. It will also make sure that our friends in the region, Israel, Jordan, Iraq, others who
border Syria or who would potentially face spillover effects from Syria, are strong and
secure.
Finally, he said, the U.S. wants to make sure that this does not lead to a humanitarian
catastrophe.
Speaking to the nation this afternoon, President Joe Biden announced, at long last, the Assad
regime has fallen.
This regime brutalized and tortured and killed literally hundreds of thousands of innocent
Syrians.
He called the fall of Assad's regime a fundamental act of justice and a moment of historic opportunity for the long-suffering
people of Syria to build a better future for their proud country.
But it is also a moment of risk and uncertainty," the president said.
He noted that the U.S. is mindful of the security of Americans in Syria, including freelance
journalist Austin Tice, who was kidnapped in 2012 and
imprisoned by Assad's regime. We believe he is alive, Biden told reporters. We
think we can get him back, but we have no direct evidence of that yet. Biden noted
that Syria's main backers, Iran, Hezbollah, and Russia, could not defend
this abhorrent regime in Syria because they are far weaker
today than when I took office," he continued.
This is a direct result of the blows that Ukraine and Israel have landed on them with
the unflagging support of the United States.
In contrast to Biden's comments, President-elect Donald Trump's social media accounts took
Russia's side in the Syrian events.
Noting that the insurgents looked as if they would throw a sod out, Trump's account said
that Russia, because they are so tied up in Ukraine and with the loss there of over 600,000
soldiers, seems incapable of stopping this literal march through Syria, a country they
have protected
for years.
The account blamed former President Barack Obama for the crisis of 2011 and said that
Russia had stepped in then to stop the chaos.
The Trump account suggested that Assad's defeat might be the best thing that can happen to
Russia because there was never much of a benefit in Syria for Russia
other than to make Obama look really stupid.
In any event, the account continued, Syria is a mess but is not our friend and the United
States should have nothing to do with it.
This is not our fight.
Let it play out.
Do not get involved.
In contrast to Trump's focus on Russia, journalist Anne Applebaum, a scholar of autocracy, took
a much broader view of the meaning of Assad's fall.
In dictatorships, she wrote in the Atlantic, cold, deliberate, well-planned cruelty like
Assad's is meant to inspire hopelessness.
Ludicrous lies and cynical propaganda campaigns are meant to create apathy and nihilism.
Random arrests create destabilizing waves of refugees that leave those who remain in despair.
Authoritarian regimes seek to rob people of any ability to plan for a different future,
to convince people that their dictatorships are eternal.
Our leader forever, she points out, was the slogan of the Assad dynasty.
But soldiers and police officers have relatives who suffer under the regime, and their loyalty
is not assured, as Assad has now learned.
The future of Syria is entirely unclear Applebaum writes but there is no doubt
that the end of the Assad regime creates something new and not only in Syria
there is nothing worse than hopelessness nothing more soul-destroying than
pessimism grief and despair the fall of a Russian and Iranian backed regime
offers suddenly the possibility of change.
The future might be different. And that possibility will inspire hope all around the world.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.