Syria has been liberated from Russia and Iran – but outsiders still threaten its new freedom

Syria has been liberated from Russia and Iran – but outsiders still threaten its new freedom

Robin Yassin-Kassab writes:

The liberation of Syria was long hoped for, but unexpected. Over the past weeks, Syrians have experienced the full range of human emotions, with the exception of boredom. On the first two Assad-free Fridays, millions of celebrants swelled the streets to chant and sing and speak formerly forbidden truths. There was a huge presence of women, who had been less visible during the years of war. Relatives are meeting again and assuaging their pain as hundreds of thousands return from the camps of exile.

At the same time, millions are having to accept at last that their loved ones have been tortured to death. It now appears that most of the 130,000 lost in Bashar al-Assad’s prisons (a bare minimum figure) are dead. Dozens of mass graves have already been discovered.

Working hard to crawl out from under the corpse of one of the worst torture states in history, Syrians are now looking to the future.

A key factor in the final fall of the regime was the remarkable discipline and social intelligence shown by the rebel coalition led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS). When it became clear that neither Christians nor unveiled women were being harassed in liberated Aleppo, that there was no looting, and that Shia towns which had hosted foreign militias were not being subjected to revenge attacks, then tens of thousands of Assad soldiers felt safe enough to defect or desert.

But some still harbour deep suspicions of the HTS leader, Ahmed al-Sharaa, previously known as Abu Mohammed al-Jolani. He has enormous charisma, which may ease the path to a new dictatorship, but, so far, the signs are more hopeful than that. Sharaa is popular precisely for his non-dictatorial qualities. [Continue reading…]

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