On the way to Latakia. Photo: Delil Souleiman/Getty.

It felt like a fairytale. How else to explain the dramatic fall of the Assads, in the space of days and all without any civilian casualties? Back in December, Syrians had feared that the regime would make a last stand in Lattakia, the heartland of their support and of the Alawite sect from which its top officers emerged. Many also feared there would be a sectarian bloodbath, as traumatised members of the Sunni majority took random revenge on the communities that had birthed their torturers.
None of that happened then â but some has now. On 6 March, an Assadist insurgency killed hundreds in Latakia and other coastal cities. Beyond crushing the insurrection, government forces also committed sectarian atrocities, summarily executing their armed opponents and killing many Alawite civilians. This is the first sectarian massacre of the new Syria, and it casts a fearsome shadow over the future. The revolution was supposed to overcome the targeting of sects for political reasons. Now, many fear the cycle will continue.
The previous regime was a sectarianising regime par excellence, both under Hafez al-Assad, who ruled from 1970, and under his son Bashar, who inherited the throne in 2000. This doesnât mean that the Assads attempted to impose a particular set of religious beliefs: but they did divide and rule, exacerbating and weaponising resentments between sects (as well as between ethnicities, regions, families, tribes). They carefully instrumentalised social differences for the purposes of power, making them politically salient.
The Assads made the Alawite community into which they were born complicit in their rule â or, at least, to appear to be so. Independent Alawite religious leaders were killed, exiled or imprisoned, swiftly replaced with loyalists. Membership in the Baath Party and a career in the army were promoted as key markers of Alawite identity. The top ranks of the military and security services were almost all Alawite.
In 1982, during their war against the Muslim Brotherhood, Assadists killed tens of thousands of Sunni civilians in Hama. That violence pacified the country until the Syrian Revolution erupted in 2011. The counter-revolutionary war which followed can plausibly be thought of as a genocide of Sunni Muslims. From the start, collective punishment was imposed on Sunni communities where protests broke out, in a way that didnât happen when there were protests in Alawi, Christian or mixed areas.
The punishment involved burning property, arresting people randomly and en masse, then torturing and raping detainees. As militarisation continued, the same Sunni areas were barrel-bombed, attacked with chemical weapons, and subjected to starvation sieges. Throughout the war years, the overwhelming majority of the hundreds of thousands of dead, and of the millions expelled from their homes, were Sunnis. Alawi officers and warlords were backed in this genocidal endeavour by Shia militants from Lebanon, Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan, all of them organised, funded and armed by Iran. These militias â with their sectarian flags and battle cries â were very open about their hatred of Sunnis.
The worst of sectarian provocations were the massacres perpetrated in a string of towns and villages in central Syria, particularly in 2012 and 2013. The regimeâs modus operandi was that the army would first shell a town to make opposition militias withdraw. From there, Alawi thugs from nearby towns would move in to cut the throats of women and children. Itâs important to note that these were not spontaneous outbreaks of violence between neighbouring communities, but rather carefully organised assaults. They were intended to induce a Sunni backlash, frightening Alawites and other minorities into loyalty. This fitted with the regimeâs primary counter-revolutionary strategy. Early on, it had released Islamist jihadis from prison while rounding up enormous numbers of non-violent, non-sectarian activists. For the same reason, it rarely fought ISIS â which in turn usually focused on taking territory from revolutionary forces.
Soon enough, Sunni extremist organisations provided the response the regime wanted. For example, an August 2013 jihadist offensive in the Latakia countryside killed at least 190 Alawite civilians, and abducted many more. When they saw such horrors, many members of minority groups, and some Sunnis too, felt they had no option but to fight to preserve the regime.
But in recent years HTS â the de facto authority since December 2024 â seemed to have abandoned the divide-and-rule strategy. The Islamist militia improved relations with non-Muslims in Idlib, while also sending positive messages to Alawites. It also offered an amnesty to all former regime fighters, except senior war criminals. It looked, finally, as if the new Syria might avoid further sectarian conflict. After all, throughout the revolution, many Sunnis had worked for the regime, and many Alawis had opposed it, at enormous cost, from the army officer Zubeida Meeki to the actor Fadwa Suleiman.
Nevertheless, the ingredients for an Assadist insurgency in Alawite areas were present. Men had lost their jobs in the collapsed regime army, and many feared Syriaâs new rulers. Iranian funds and Hezbollah organisation provided the support they needed to challenge HTS. That led to the attacks last week, with several coordinated Assadist attacks killing up to 400 members of the new security forces alongside dozens of civilians. Some of the victims were burnt alive, while hospitals and ambulances were targeted too.
Across Syria, there was a furious popular response. Impromptu demonstrations condemned the insurgency and chaotic convoys of militants and armed civilians headed for the coast. Government fighters and their allies largely succeeded in clearing the rebels from urban areas, but they also committed atrocities. Disarmed Assadist fighters were summarily executed. So too were Alawite civilians, including women and children.
According to the Syrian Network for Human Rights, the most consistently reliable monitoring organisation, 211 civilians were killed by Assad loyalists, and at least 420 people by Syrian security forces. The latter includes both civilians and disarmed fighters who were killed out of hand. It is difficult to distinguish the two: most Assadist fighters wore civilian clothes. Yet at least 49 women and 39 children are among the dead.
The Assadist assault was never going to restore the old regime â it had totally collapsed, and is widely hated across all parts of society. The true aim of the insurgencyâs backers, rather, may have been to provoke a sectarian response. That, after all, was the strategy of the previous decade. If so, the rebels got what they wanted. It seems that most atrocities were perpetrated by the notoriously ill-disciplined Syrian National Army (SNA) factions, and by foreign fighters including Chechens. The extent of official HTS involvement remains unclear. But in a way, that is already irrelevant. The crimes against innocents could now turbo-charge an insurgency, preventing Syria from stabilising, even as it serves the vultures surrounding the country.
Chief among these are Iran â which lost its most important Arab ally, and its route to Lebanon, when Assad fell â and Israel. The Netanyahu government is assiduously working to partition Syria along sectarian lines, trying, without much success, to exploit fissures in Druze and Kurdish politics. For their different reasons, these enemy states share the same desire to keep Syria weak.
Iran and Israel, as well as a range of Western Islamophobes and âTankiesâ are seeking to fan the flames with disinformation. Commentators from Elon Musk to George Galloway are helping spread claims that Syrian Christians are being massacred. There is zero evidence of this, but like some of the atrocity stories on October 7, including that Hamas beheaded dozens of Israeli babies, the narrative may become fixed in certain corners of the Western mind.
The next weeks and months will determine if Syriaâs future will be something like civil war Iraq, or else something better. President Ahmad al-Sharaa has been doing a good job of giving the impression of stability â stressing that no one is above the law and establishing a committee to investigate the violence. It is now necessary to actually implement real change, not least given Sharaa has yet to bring the opposition militias together under a single disciplined command.
Beyond those crisis measures, Syria urgently requires an independent transitional justice process. After decades of violence, Syrians need to air their grievances, to establish the facts of what happened, and to see justice done. Only then can a national consensus be built on past tragedies and future direction; only then will the lure of vigilante justice be neutralised.
So far, several war criminals have been arrested, but none have yet been put on trial. In some cases, criminals have been released shortly after their arrest. One example is Fadi Saqr. An Assadist commander, and implicated in an infamous massacre in the Damascus suburb of Tadamon, he went walking in the neighbourhood after his release, prompting protests by locals.
Sharaa identified transitional justice as one of the governmentâs priorities in a 30 January speech, yet on 27 February the authorities prevented a conference on the topic from taking place in Damascus. Organised by the Syrian Centre for Legal Studies and Research, the body is headed by Anwar al-Bunni, the human rights lawyer who contributed to the first ever trial of an Assadist war criminal. The government has yet to explain why it prevented the conference from happening.
There are good reasons for Sharaa to feel he canât afford genuine transitional justice. For a start, HTS bears its own share of historical guilt. Perhaps in retrospect, one can justify its gobbling up of other opposition militias for the sake of military efficiency. Itâs much harder to justify the groupâs elimination of revolutionary civil society figures, with some murdered as recently as 2018.
Even if the HTS leadership could be exempted from scrutiny, meanwhile, Sharaaâs stabilisation strategy involves bringing all military factions under one national umbrella. Putting the faction leaders on trial would contradict this effort. But the crimes committed on the coast by SNA militias show that leniency threatens social peace much more than arrests.
The more that Syrian communities are brought into the governance process, the less ability warlords will have to unsettle the country. In this respect, there is still grounds for optimism. On 10 March, al-Sharaa signed a deal with the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) to integrate that Kurdish-led militia into the national army, and to re-establish central control over northeast Syria. If a deal with the Druze militias follows, Israel will find it much harder to destablise the country. To deprive Iran and the Assadist remnants of their power too, military action must be coupled with efforts to appoint anti-Assad Alawites to administrative positions, both on the coast and in Damascus. In short, then, the government must establish sufficient peace for civil society to get to work. Syrians themselves must be able to do the hard work of addressing and overcoming their trauma.
What? No mention of Obama’s Operation Timber Sycamore?
It’s almost as if the author doesn’t want us to know about the West’s responsibilities for the miserable state of the place. And after everything the Assad regime did to help the GWOT, providing torture chambers for those who found themselves under “extraordinary rendition”.
Still at least the author didn’t repeat the debunked “Assad gassed his own people!” claims
In regards to Hamas and what they did on October 7th, anyone who has experienced watching a film of their actions on that day came away with a sober sense of horror. I personally have seen authenticated photographs and could not watch any further. Their action were savage beyond what we soft Westerners today understand or know of. It sounds like something Syria has been undergoing in its own way during the past 70 years or so.
Yes, Biden claimed to have seen “direct photographic” evidence of the “beheaded/roasted babies”… and that turned out to be categorically false.
The Grayzone has done extensive investigations into this, and – beyond the many Israelis mown down by the IDF carrying out the Hannibal Directive – it’s pretty clear the more gruesome claims (like a fetus being cut out of a womb, or the babies nonsense) was manufactured wholesale by the far-right fanatics of ZAKA and other Jewish supremacists.
Add this to the fact that (according to the NY Times) the Israeli government knew a year beforehand the details of the operation, it looks like Oct 7 was allowed to happen as a pretext to mass slaughter tens of thousands of innocent Arab civilians, and not just in Gaza; but in the West Bank, too, who had nothing to do with the Oct 7 attacks.
I have no idea what you just said.
He said he is a retard who will gulp down any revision that makes Israelis look bad.
Certainly there was some hyperbole spewed by Israel, but don’t try to convince us that our eyes are always lying.
I believe modern day Syria is a creation of the Sykes-Picot Agreement. Perhaps split the place up like Yugoslavia.
I don’t think this is a very fair article. The author is amnesiac about the role of Turkey and extremism of the Sunni variety against the Alawite, Christian and Shia communities.
Erdogan is a dangerous and untrustworthy leader who has Neo-Ottomanite ambitions.
The author doesn’t mention the extent to which Turkish military forces are helping the HTS regime in its violence.
I agree. Turkey is the key player and wasn’t mentioned at all.If you really want to understand what is going on you would need to include them in an analysis.
Reading this makes me wonder if there are two species of human; one civilised and one that remains savage.
But then, the even more horrific thought occurs: we are all truly one and the same. It’s just the weapons we attack each other with that differ; some use ideas, others use any means of physical destruction to hand.
Steven Pinker has some interesting data from coroners reports. The murder rate in England was half that of the Low Countries and a quarter of Italian States in the Middle Ages.
If one compares The Jaquerie Revolt of 1358 where there was mass slaughter of aristocrats both men and women and the Peasants Revolt of 1381 where comparatively few were murdered by the mob( perhaps 250 ) , The English display far less cruelty and blood lust.
If one looks at the Civil War of the 1640s there were ferocious battles between men but few cases of rape and murder or women or children. During the French Revolution, Russian Revolution, Spanish period of conflict from 1931 to 1940 and Greek Civil War of 1944-47 there was the rape and murder of women and innocent men. The Dissolution of the Monasteries was carried out with few killings yet the Communist assault on the RC Church including rape of nuns of alters and murder of about 10,000 clergy including castration.
Charles II persecution of those who signed his father’s death warrant was muted.
Wellington said England’s greatest asset was her honesty.
Orwell said Britain was able to undergo social change with far less violence and the British Empire was ruled with few armed men. If examines political challenges such as The Chartists and various strikes from 1840s ro 1940s there are few deaths in the UK compared with the USA and France.
The reality is that some peoples are possessed of a blood lust and cruelty far in excess of others. Cruelty and blood lust has never been considered a virtue in Britain. In Britain the virtues respected are toughness, fortitude and fairplay; the ability to win against overwhelming odds – Sluys, Crecy, Poitiers, Agincourt, The Armada ,Trafalgar , Battle of Britain etc,. The Last battle of Grenville and The Revenge involves the capture of the ship but not after figthing for fifteen hours againsy fifyy ships.
Group Captain Sir Douglas Bader said he had no hate against German pilots or desire to kill them in the Battle of Britain , only shoot down the planes.
Douglas Bader – Wikipedia
This is your life Douglas Bader
At 28 mins one sees Bader and Adolph Galland, The German ace of WW2 embracing.
There will always be those who enjoy murder and rape in a country that is why we have a Police Force and prisons; what is important is to prevent them obtaining power or being used by those who wish to gain power.
If Syria wants peace then the Syrians need to learn to be tough,be honest, enact fair play and control blood lust and cruelty.
Three actually, the English, the semi-civilised and the savages.
Obviously the answer is the return to the Ottoman Empire where the punishment for rebellion was vertical impalement.
Or alternatively flaying alive.
WEIRD morality means there are big psychological differences at scale between cultures which never underwent the same shocks to kinship ties in their social organization as western European countries influenced by Christianity and the Church’s medieval prohibition of cousin marriage…
Non-weird cultures are defined by generally weaker institutions and are much more tribal… also human, just not conditioned by centuries of WEIRD morality.
So âflash to bangâ has taken a fraction longer than expected! But now it starts in earnest, how simply astonishing!
No mention of Saudi âinterferenceâ in all this? As the self proclaimed guardians* of Islam they always regarded Mr Assad as a double pagan/heretic for being both an Alawite and a Baâathist, but their culpability for what has happened seems to have gone completely unnoticed.
As for âIn 1982, during their war against the Muslim Brotherhood, Assadists killed tens of thousands of Sunni civilians in Hama.â Yes they did, because the Moslem Brotherhood were/are as bad as Hamas and countless other demented Islamic factions, and Assadâs actions put them back âtheir boxâ for at least a generation. Now off course theyâre out again. Brilliant!
Finally I used to travel extensively in Syria right up to the beginning of the so called âArab Springâ. Granted I was not exploring modern Syria and searching out detention and torture centres. However I was struck by how remarkably peaceful and friendly the whole place was and there was NO hint that it was groaning under the brutal oppression of Mr Assad and colleagues. On the contrary you hardly ever saw a soldier or policemen, could visit almost any historic site with impunity, could consume alcohol openly, and photograph what you liked. These were the days when a young, attractive, âwesternâ woman could walk right across Damascus at midnight, without any fear of being molested in any way whatsoever,** something that would be absolutely impossible in London, New York, Paris or indeed Rome.
In short this whole business has been an utter disaster for what been âa green and pleasant landâ by regional standards, and must be regretted.
*The Saudis adhere to Wahhabism, a rather parvenu, (18th century) extremely puritanical Islamic cult.
** I knew of at least three such âincidentsâ.
Modern Islamism starts with the Muslim Brotherhood( they murdered Sadat in 1981) being founded in 1924 or perhps earlier with the Salafis. Qutb writes Milestones in 1964 and Madaudi in the 1940s to 1960s rejecting Western culture and secular politics. The defeat of Arba countries in Yom Kippur War of 1973 and massive rise in oil prices afterwards means the loss of support of arab nationalism, increase in support of Sunni jihadism and financial support by Saudis of jihadism.
Butto starts turning away from a secular state in 1970, Zia al Huq increases speed of travel, Khomeini comes to power in 1979, USSR invasion of Afghanistan and seizure of Grand Mosque at Mecca results in the decline of arab secularism and the rise of jihadism.
If one looks at newsreels from late 1960s to early 1970s one can see women wearing mini skirts in countries such Egypt and Lebanon.
Under the rule of Genghis Khan the Silk Route was very peaceful.
The question for the region is whether people can attain a level of emotional maturity such that they do not kill, rape or torture those with whom they disgree.
No, modern Islamism started with the British allowing the creation of Pakistan.1947.
Muslim Brotherhood was founded in 1924. Britain was happy to go along with whatever the Indians wanted. Jinnah and many Muslims did not want to be in Hindu dominated country, Nehru could not persuade otherwise. Pakistan was fairly secular until Bhutto started allowing greater Muslim influence. My Father played cricket in Pakistan in the 1960s, the captain was general in the Pakistan Army and Dad said he was like a WW1 officer
Jihadists were largely ignored by Muslim pre 1973. Defeat in the Yom Kippur war resulted in Jihadis saying both communists and capitalist are products of The West and should be ignored and a return to the days of the First 4 Caliphs should occur.
I think you need to read history more carefully. I would suggest the work of Mushirul Hasan and Venkat Dhulipala who clearly show the British elites giving in to Islamist ideology under the mistaken belief it would help them in 1920s and 30s India. Read the poet Iqbal and the Tabligh Jammat ideology of the 1930s to know how the Muslim League fooled the British.
If Pakistan had been secular the Hindus and Christians wouldn’t have been reduced to a miniscule number soon after 1947.
This is also what has led to Britain’s present issue with Pakistani migrants – the ability to be easily deceived by cricket playing Wahabists.
Like you, I travelled through Syria several times before 2011, primarily for the deep history, although I knew a lot about its history and politics.I too found it a beautiful, hospitable and safe country. I was however aware of the presence of the mukhabarat (dark glasses, leather jackets) and Iâm pretty certain they were keeping our small group – probably because harassment of tourists by the public was bad for business. I was also aware that people were very nervous about being watched by these blokes. A Syrian friend once said to me âyou should never open your mouth to anyone except your dentist!
Interesting slant on some things. Clearly pro-HTS who are not a government but are only the current rebel forces to have limited control of parts of Syria.
Islam canât escape war.
Justice? Like the anonymised voices accusing Sadsam from behibd a curtain?
questioning the veracity of the barbarism and atrocities of Oct. 7th is genocide denial. there is proof enough of the savagery. Including the depraved videos of the perpetrators. what is your evidence for Israel meddling in sectarian Syrian politics and society? perhaps Israel would prefer a stable Syrian government and polity on their northern border…albeit one not unremittingly belligerent, genocidal and in league with the demented genocidal regime in Tehran.
Nonsense! Itâs not decades old; itâs millennia.
The sectarian conflicts between Sunni and Shia factions go back to the battle of Karbala in 680, when the Syrian caliph’s forces massacred the followers of Ali. To save Jim C the trouble, it’s important to point out that this was a false flag operation, arranged by Israel, carried out by Mossad, who were armed by the CIA, on the orders of Netanyahu and Thatcher. Or something. But the sectarian conflicts across the Islamic world are intrinsic to the religion. Islamic texts are capable of an infinite variety of ‘interpretations’, but as all are the ‘final, perfect, and unalterable word of Allah’ each must be held with utter unquestioning conviction, which overrides evidence, intelligence, reason, and conscience. Islam’s clerics’ power bases depend on the submission of their followers to their ‘interpretation’, which cements intolerance, hatred, and conflict in place between them. Until Islam accepts doubt, as its caliphs did in the ‘golden age’, Islam is stuck in a doom loop of backwardness, intolerance, and conflict.
Ibn Taymiyyah said the doors of ijtihad were closed in the early 14th cntury, hence reasoning stopped. This the time when Roger Bacon in Oxford differentiated Faith and Reason.
It started even earlier with: AbĆ« កÄmid Muáž„ammad ibn Muáž„ammad al-áčŹĆ«siyy al-Ghazali or A-Ghazli for short. A native of Tus, who died in 1111 AD*.
*To use Christian chronology.
Thank you, very interesting. It would appear that his writing coincided with the Seljuk Turks who lacked the open minds of the Arabs, resulting in the decline of science, even before the invasion of the Mongols and Timur the Lame.
One-sided nonsense that ignores the fact that ISIS, probably the most brutal Islamic regime in the area, was entirely Sunni.
Yet oddly enough prior to Obama Syria was a multi ethnic nation at peace.
I can only wish them luck and urge the West and Russia to tell Israel and Iran, respectively, to back off and give Syria a chance to recover.