According to a report published by the International Crisis Group on September 8,
the regime of Syrian president Bashar al Assad and the jihadist group ISIS are squeezing the rebels out of Aleppo, the strategic and symbolic center of the country's three-year-old revolution.
The report warns that if the rebels' hold on the city is broken, Syria's conflict could slip into an even more dangerous and anarchic phase — and the U.S. and its allies would lose their most valuable partners on the battlefield, a fighting force with local credibility and years of experience fighting both ISIS and Assad.
"Rebel-held areas in and around Aleppo remain the most valuable of the mainstream opposition's dwindling assets," the report states. The Assad regime is "on the verge of severing the last rebel supply line linking it to Turkey." And although the Syrian rebels handed ISIS one of its most significant defeats in January of 2014, when it drove the jihadist group from the city, that achievement is now in danger: ISIS is attacking the rebels from the north, as the city's defenders remain bogged down against regime forces moving in from west of town.
The national-level appeal, and indeed the very survival of the Syrian revolution, depends largely on its ability to hold Aleppo.
Mike Nudelman/Business Insider
The rebels have endured a series of setbacks since mid-2012, when some observers believed the Assad regime was on the brink of collapse.
The American-brokered Syrian chemical weapons deal effectively destroyed any chance of game-changing U.S. support against Assad, a development that the Crisis Group says fractured the rebel coalition and forced certain factions into a pragmatic alliance with al Qaeda affiliate Jabhat al Nusra.
Subsequently, the Assad regime's brutal barrel-bombing campaign against rebel-held areas, its systematic murder of over 10,000 anti-government activists, internal fracture within the rebel coalition, and the rapid advance of ISIS, have diminished the Syrian opposition to the point where it no longer appears a realistic, viable alternative to Assad, as it did throughout 2012 and much of 2013.
But it isn't totally beaten, partly because of its ability to hold Aleppo.
"What's at stake in Aleppo is not regime victory, but opposition defeat," the report states — with ISIS sweeping through former rebel territory in Syria's east, and Assad laying siege to rebel areas "to the point of starvation in some cases," Aleppo is the revolution's last remaining beachhead.
The International Crisis Group predicts that if the rebels lose Aleppo, the war would continue between ISIS and Assad. The regime isn't strong enough to reconquer territory taken by ISIS, who would probably begin hunting down the remnants of the secular revolution while consolidating control over its vast domain in eastern and northern Syria.
In such a situation, there would be even less of a credible path to a negotiated solution to Syria's civil war — and, most importantly, no fighting force committed to Syria's survival as a country.
The Assad regime has an Alawite-sectarian bent, and has retreated to the Syrian coast, where most of the minority religious sect lives. Assad has conceded territory in the east to ISIS, a group that's unilaterally nullified the Iraqi-Syrian border and whose declaration of a Caliphate highlights its trans-national ambitions. ISIS's Caliphate runs counter to Syria's very existence.
If Aleppo falls, the idea of a united Syria could fall with it. The only combatants left would be a serial human rights abuser that's beat a tactical retreat to a sectarian enclave in the west — and ISIS, perhaps the richest and best-armed jiihadist group in history.
The Syrian civil war has already displaced over 9 million people, and killed over 200,000. A conflict that's already on of the wore humanitarian and political cataclycms of the 21st century could be on the edge of even getting worse
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