Post-Assad Syria: An easy target for Zionists due to national division and Israeli actions.
The Assad family, which took power in Syria in 1970, faced numerous internal and external challenges. Bashar Assad tried to maintain the political structure of the ruling system and consolidate his rule through political reforms and facing popular protests in 2011 and ultimately the civil war, but his government eventually found itself in a difficult situation and fell on this day in 2024, and he fled to Moscow, the capital of Russia.
A year has passed since the Syrian interim government led by Ahmed al-Sharaa, known as “Abu Muhammad al-Julani”, came to power. However, despite some relative improvements, the Syrian people are still facing many problems, including the occupation of new areas of their land, internal conflicts, and foreign interference, and some groups in the country, such as the Alawites and Druze, are extremely dissatisfied with the current situation.
Since the fall of the Assad regime, Syria has been experiencing unrest and armed conflicts in various regions, and the Golani government has not only failed to calm the situation, but its affiliated militias have also fueled internal conflicts by attacking minority civilians, especially in the coastal region and the Sweida province.

