The lightning advance of a militia alliance
spearheaded by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, a former al-Qaeda affiliate, marked one of
the biggest turning points for the Middle East in generations.
Assad's fall removed a bastion from which Iran and Russia exercised influence
across the Arab world.
Hours after Assad's fall, Iran said it expected relations
with Damascus to continue based on the two countries' "far-sighted and
wise approach" and called for the establishment of an inclusive government
representing all segments of Syrian society.
There is little doubt about Tehran's concern about how the
change of power in Damascus will affect Iran's influence in Syria, the lynchpin
of its regional clout.
But there is no panic as Tehran seeks diplomatic avenues to
establish contact with people whom one of the officials called "those
within Syria's new ruling groups whose views are closer to Iran's".
The main concern for Iran is whether Assad's successor will
push Syria away from Tehran's orbit, a scenario Iran is keen to avoid.
A hostile post-Assad Syria would deprive Lebanese armed
group Hezbollah of its only land supply route and deny Iran its main access to
the Mediterranean and the front line with Israel.
After losing of an important ally in Damascus and the return
of Donald Trump to the white House in January 2024, this engagement is key to
stabilize ties and avoiding further regional tensions.
According to Reuters, Tehran has established contacts with
two groups inside the new leadership and the level of interaction will be
assessed in the coming days.
Tehran was wary of Trump using Assad's removal as leverage
to intensify economic and political pressure on Iran, either to force
concessions or to destabilize the Islamic Republic.
After pulling the United States out of Iran's 2015 nuclear
deal with six major powers in 2018, then-President Trump pursued a
"maximum pressure" policy that led to extreme economic hardship and
exacerbated public discontent in Iran. Trump is staffing his planned
administration with hawks on Iran.
In 2020, Trump, as president, ordered a drone strike that
killed Qassem Soleimani, Iran's most powerful military commander and mastermind
of overseas attacks on US interests and those of its allies.
Iran is now only left with two options: fall back and draw a
defensive line in Iraq or seek a deal with Trump.
The fall of Assad exposed Tehran's dwindling strategic
leverage in the region, exacerbated by Israel's military offensives against
Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza.
Iran's clerical rulers spent billions of dollars propping up
Assad during the civil war that erupted in Syria in 2011 and deployed its
Revolutionary Guards to Syria to keep its ally in power and maintain Tehran's
"Axis of Resistance" to Israel and US influence in the Middle East.
Assad's fall removes a critical link in Iran's regional
resistance chain that served as a crucial transit route for Tehran to supply
arms and fund its proxies and particularly Hezbollah.
No comments:
Post a Comment